The 100 (TV Show)
An adult character has numerous sexual relationships with teenage girls. S1E6: sexual harassment (15:37-16:36). S1E9: it is revealed that a man who seems in his early to mid-twenties is in a relationship with a teenage girl. They remain in a relationship until season 3. In season 3, the main character is kidnapped and imprisoned. After that, she chooses to stay and has sex with her captor. S3E10 ('Fallen'): a man is chained by the neck and verbally threatened by a woman. He is subsequently forced to have sex with her in order to avoid death.
There is a scene where a man corners a woman in a public bathroom and they kiss each other. When she tells him she would like to leave, he gets angry and forces her into a stall but an earthquake starts and both leave before anything further happens. A similar instance happens later in the movie with a different girl.
10,000 BC (Movie)
11.22.63 (Movie)
The shows contains a love story between a woman from the 1960s and a man pretending to be someone else since he is coming from the future: he reveals his true identity in S1E5. S1E4: the female protagonist explains that her ex-husband abused and raped her on their wedding night. It is hinted that the abusive husband was himself abused as a child. S1E5: the aforementioned husband kidnaps, ties up and disfigures his ex-wife with a knife. When her lover comes to her rescue, the abuser is mocked for having being molested by his grandmother as a child. Throughout the series, scenes take place in strip clubs and brothels, and there are multiple scenes of domestic violence from various male characters.
The 11Th Hour (Video Game)
It is revealed near the later part of the game (through backstory) that two women characters are raped supernaturally and both become pregnant, one of them having an abortion and the other having the child (02:25:20-02:39:18).
12 Monkeys (Movie)
A homeless man tries to rape a woman but is stopped before starting.
13 Assassins (Movie)
13 Cameras (Movie)
13 Reasons Why (TV Show)
S1E1: it is revealed that a teenage boy lied about having slept with a teenage girl, publicly sharing a suggestive (although not overly revealing) photograph of her. From this point onwards, the girl is subjected to harassment and bullying with a sexual overtone throughout the series. From S1E2 onwards, there is a narrative which centres around a teenage boy having lied about sleeping with a teenage girl in order to punish his girlfriend for not wanting to sleep with him. S1E3: a teenage boy gropes a teenage girl in a store without her consent (42:50-43:15). Following the incident, she is seen crying and describes the emotional fallout. S1E9: a key character is raped on screen. The scene lasts approximately two minutes. S1E9-S1E13: following an on-screen rape in episode 9 the incident is discussed and analysed at length for the rest of the season. S2E13: a teenage boy is attacked and sexually assaulted; the scene is extremely graphic. In season 3, there is a storyline where a teenage girl has conflicts with two other sexual assault survivors. One of the other survivors is a teenage boy who has not told anyone about his assault but is a member of a school group for sexual assault survivors, as an "ally". The teenage girl disagrees with him on something and accuses him of talking over "the only actual sexual assault survivors in the room" and being a bad ally. She later learns the truth and apologizes to him but the initial conflict could be quite upsetting to watch. S3E12: a main teenage character describes both his childhood sexual abuse and more recent sexual assaults. The childhood sexual abuse is far more detailed than what he says about the assaults.
13Th (2016) (Movie)
A clip from '12 Years a Slave' is shown (~33:50-34:00). There is a discussion of rape cases (27:00).
14 Cameras (Movie)
The antagonist routinely spies on, steals personal items from, and abducts women.
The author discusses reports of troops on both sides raping American colonists during the war, including a contemporary account of British and Hessian soldiers forcing male family members to watch the acts.
1883 (TV Show)
This show depicts sexual assault in a realistic way in order to show the struggles of women in the Old West. S1E1: a drunk man breaks into a young girl's room and falls into her bed. Upon noticing her, he removes the sheet from her and tries to unto her nightgowns buttons. She tries to scream but he covers her mouth. After hurting him, she begins to scream and run away, grabbing her younger brother on the way out of the room. The man pulls her back into the room, punches her, and sits ontop of her. The girl's father then shoots the man from the doorway. S1E2: a middle aged woman is distraught when several strange men cross their camp to let their horses drink from the river. The woman throws stones at them and one approaches her roughly: he sits on top of her and punches her repeatedly before verbally implying he wants to rape her. He is stopped before any sexual assault can happen. S1E9: a group of travelers find a Native American camp that has been attacked. One of the victim's bodies is naked and one of the travelers remark that she was raped, and that the attack was done for sport. S1E10: bandits attack a group of pioneers. A woman tries to flee and is attacked and then raped, she is then killed when she tries to flee again.
1899 (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman asks another woman to visit her cabin. She then prompts her to undress fully and then touches her private area which then prompts the victim to begin crying (about 11 minutes into the episode). Further scenes/situations suggest that this could happen again. S1E6: one character (who is likely underage) has a flashback where she wakes up and relives her rape (by an older, adult man). She starts fighting him off but the man becomes violent and punches her in the face before trying to choke her to death (35:25-36:50). After this, the female character has a panic attack and cries.
19-2 (TV Show)
A few times over season 1, rape or sexual assault is mentioned or discussed in the background. An example of this is when a character has to leave early because she "needs to interview a rape victim in 10 mins". S1E4: at the beginning of the episode, a woman reports a gang rape and the episode follows the police officers tracking down the perpetrators. One of the perpetrators calls his arrest "bullshit" as he is getting pushed into the police vehicle: the victim is presumed to be in hearing distance. She is later interviewed in an emotional scene. A cop harasses and invades the personal space of his gay female colleague and makes comments about her having a threesome with him and another woman. He later walks in on her changing and harasses and kisses her. Worthy of note: A female character is in a violent relationship, her male intimate partner is a cop. He is shown living life without consequences. S1E9: a video is shown of a woman being beaten by a group of ambushers. At one point the assailants spread her legs and break her thigh bone with a baseball bat (24:30).
1923 (TV Show)
Throughout the show, an ongoing subplot is a business man’s sadist and abusive relationship with two sex workers. S1E2: a teenage girl is sexually abused after being corporally punished in an Indigenous American residential boarding school. S2E1: a man rapes another man on-screen. S2E4: it is implied that a child “traded” sex for shelter. S2E5: on-screen digital rape.
Sexual violence against female characters is discussed several times, largely focusing on its emotional impact on the survivors. However, in chapter 5 a female protagonist pressures a man into sex despite his continuous ambivalence about it, and this is handled rather insensitively. Child sexual abuse is explicitly described.
2:37 (Movie)
One boy confronts another one in a bathroom: the first starts to kiss the second without his consent (it is established that they have had a secret relationship, and they continue to kiss for a while where both boys seem to be into it). About halfway through the movie, there is an extremely violent rape scene in the form of a flashback: an older teenage brother sneaks into his teenage sister's room at night, slowly escalating from lying in bed behind her while she sleeps, to extremely graphic on-screen rape. The sister notes to an off-screen interviewer that the brother had been sneaking into her room and touching her since she was 13, but that this was the first actual rape. Small hints to this situation are made throughout the movie (the movie starts with her crying in her underwear in her bedroom, she speaks to her mother on the phone and seems terrified when speaking of how she and the brother are home alone, and she takes a pregnancy test in the school bathroom despite her friend mentioning/thinking she is a virgin (the pregnancy test is positive). In scenes written from the brother's perspective, he mentions to the interviewer that, when he and the sister were kids, the parents got home and had sex in the living room when they thought the kids were asleep; he mentions that he was awake and that this impacted him/his view of sex.)
A man is accused of having sex with a 12 year old girl.
2046 (Movie)
The sexual abuse depicted (spying, sexual relationship with a teenager) is depicted as if it is romantic or excusable behavior, which viewers may find particularly invalidating or upsetting.
24 (2001) (TV Show)
S1E1: two high-school girls are lured into a private location by adult men for sex and kidnapped. One is drugged. S1E2: the drugged girl is beaten. The other girl is physically and sexually assaulted and forced to call her mom and lie about her safety. S1E5: a boy is accused of killing the person who raped his sister. S1E9: a kidnapper attempts to rape a girl while her mom is held at gunpoint. The mom forfeits her body to save her daughter.
28 Days Haunted (TV Show)
This show contains discussions of a father having impregnated his 16 year old daughter, as well of a serial rapist assaulting a high school girl. There are also scenes where investigators physically react in shock and report having felt touched by a spiritual force non-consensually.
Two female characters (adult and minor) are threatened with rape and are sexually harassed and groped. The adult woman tries to help the minor by giving her drugs (to help her not care/remember) before they would be assaulted. The adult woman is also grabbed with nonconsensual sexual intent in two instances, one of which includes her having her top removed and touching continues while off. It is said that the relationship between an adult (25 year old) and a teenager (16 year old) characters is child abuse.
3 (TV Show)
The show contains a lot of implications of rape.
In the film, a ghost sexually harasses and molests another character. It is played for laughs. While in bed, a husband says to his wife: "Since you're unconscious anyway...", and begins to take off his shirt like he is going to have sex with her.
30 Rock (TV Show)
A character says that he has had sex with his wife while she slept. The situation is briefly depicted from his point of view. It is presented and treated comedically. A character says “touched by a priest” when he agrees to tell another character a secret about himself. S5E17: it is discovered that a recurring male character was molested by his teacher when he was 14. His friends/co-workers do not view what happened as abuse since the assailant was an attractive woman. He and the assailant later reunite an decide to be a couple.
300 (Movie)
A woman submits to a corrupt official's advances, but only because she believes that it's the only recourse available to her in order to save her husband.
A flashback of the main character's family being raped and killed, with implications that she was later raped by the same people.
3096 Days (Movie)
The film tells the story of a young girl who has been kidnapped and held in captivity for eight years.
31 (2016) (Movie)
There are multiple remarks towards the female characters of the male antagonist wanting to violently assault them. Multiple dead naked women are shown on screen with strong implications of them being assaulted. There are multiple scenes of characters being sexually harassed and threatened.
A woman is kidnapped for a year and sexually assaulted by her kidnapper, who tells her that she has one year to fall in love with him. This is marketed as a romantic drama.
3XManon (TV Show)
S1E2: an attempted rape occurs between 3:40 and 4:25.
A woman is caressed in a sexual manner with a knife before she is penetrated with it repeatedly on-screen, killing her (around 30-32 minutes in).
The two female protagonists are forced to have unconsensual sex to pay for an abortion. The act takes place off screen, but the dialogue slowly leading to it (starting approximately 40 minutes into the film) and its aftermath are depicted. The man who then performs the abortion is the rapist.
A man is raped by his ex-girlfriend and is forced to apologize for it.
The 4400 (TV Show)
There are two relationships in the series with questionable age differences: a non-sexual one between a 17-year-old and a man in his 50s (who were the same age before the woman was sent forward in time) and a relationship between a 20-year-old boy and a girl who is 2 years old, but who aged rapidly to physically be c. 20-years-old. S1E2: an attempted rape is shown, with a character using his powers to step in before anything further happens. The entire scene happens before the credits.
47 Hours (Movie)
A girl describes being raped at a party. Her friend has had graphic pictures both taken and being shared publicly without her consent.
47 Ronin (Movie)
Approximately 30 minutes into the film, a father is bewitched and hallucinates: he sees his daughter being pinned down, raped by another man, and screaming for her father for help. Once the father snaps out of the hallucination, all returns to normal.
57 Seconds (Movie)
The main character gets spiked and we see the start of him being held down by three women as he tries to fight them off: the man who planned it snaps pictures. He is raped off-screen and we see him wake up hours later, naked and alone in bed.
6 Years (Movie)
The main characters killed a man who was about to rape their friend. Rape scenes are scattered throughout the film, and are shown in parts. Rape is discussed by the survivors.
8MM (Movie)
A private investigator is hired to determine the authenticity of a pornographic snuff film. Discussions and depictions of sexual assault occur throughout.
A man tries to force himself on a woman: she clearly says 'no' but he continues. He is stopped when another character walks in.
90210 (TV Show)
90210 is a long-running series that contains sexual themes throughout. There are some instances where the nature of these plot lines may be distressing to some viewers. Rape or sexual assault mentioned, discussed, implied: a student accuses a teacher of sexual harassment. Sexual harassment on-screen: the slurs s**t and w***e are used throughout the series, sometimes in a joking manner but, on other occasions, maliciously. Other episodes feature characters attempting to manipulate others into sex. A sexual relationship between an adult and teenager/rape on screen: in S2E22 a teacher rapes a student, saying 'who's gonna believe you? You're the girl who cried wolf.'
91 Days (TV Show)
One woman marries a man only to keep her family safe. Later it shows them having sex, then it is shown that she is pregnant with his child. Their relationship seems non consensual and he talks a lot of what would happen to her family if she left him.
911 (TV Show)
S1E2: a man's therapist has sex with him during their first session. This is played for laughs and never addressed as an assault. Season 2: a main character who ran away from her abusive/psychopath husband is introduced. Some of the (non-sexual) abuse is shown on-screen in flashbacks. He later tracks her down, kidnaps her, and attacks her: she kills him in self-defense. S2E9: a main character mentions being sexually harassed at work in the past. S2E11: two children are kidnapped by a man calling himself their dad. The older one had been with him for 7 years and no longer remebered his actual parents. The boy is obviously traumatized, but no details of his times with the man who abducted him are revealed. In S3E12, a recurring character goes on a date and his date physically assaults him. S3E16+17: one of the main characters tracks down a serial rapist. His last victim is found in a shipping container, and he brutally beats the main character. They find him, arrest him, and he is taken to trial S4E7: one of the main characters gets slapped on the bottom without consent. It is played for laughs. S5E1+2+3: the rapist from season 3 is put on trial and manages to escape from the courtroom during a blackout. No rape actually occurs in these episodes, but it is heavily discussed. There is discussion of him possibly going back to assault or kill the women he previously attacked, and a decision is made by the police not to warn them so that they can attempt to use it as a trap to draw him out. The rapist murders a woman and kidnaps and attempts to kill the son of a main character; he is eventually killed in a standoff with police. S6E3: a teenage boy tries to get a young girl (roughly half his age) drunk, makes sexual comments towards her, and touches her in a (not inherently sexual) way that makes her visibly uncomfortable. His intention is very clearly to rape or molest her. She runs away and he chases her. He catches her and the scene ends, but the audience already knows this encounter ended with him killing her. Later in the episode, it is revealed he became a serial offender as an adult and killed at least 6 other children, all girls. It is not stated but is not unreasonable to assume he sexually assaulted all of his victims. S6E8: one character briefly mentions pedophiles. In season 8 therei s a man in prison who the main character knows and the man is a child trafficker and rape is heavily discussed.
964 Pinocchio (Movie)
The titular character is described in the blurb about the movie as a "lobotomized sex slave". He is sold to two woman for said purpose, though he is impotent, and unable to perform for them.
Women are chained up and "drug away" without discussion of what happens to them. Later, we find out they are ritualistically raped and murdered by a cult lead by a demon/devil. We see a woman tied down and having clothing ripped off but the assault does not happen on screen.
In a scene strongly implying rape, a man removes a woman's clothing before the scene cuts away, and there is later a flashback to this scene.
Abandoned (Movie)
The plot revolves around a house and its haunted past, that of a father whose abuse of his daughter resulted in children who were themselves abused. It is discussed throughout the movie, and sounds of a woman giving birth happens multiple times. One creepy scene features the main character's hallucination of the father crouching over the daughter in her bed, both staring at the protagonist.
Abby (Movie)
The ABC Murders (TV Show)
A young woman has been forced into prostitution by her mother. S1E1: we can hear the sounds of her with men in the background noise. S1E3: a man walks into a bathroom to threaten a woman while she is vulnerable bathing.
The short "'L is for Libido'" is about men who are tied to chairs and forced to masturbate to various scenarios. One of these scenarios shows an adult man approaching a bed with a young boy laying in it. Nothing is shown, but there are incredibly disturbing noises off-camera. A few other shorts have mild sexual harassment.
The victim describes her sexual assault in explicit detail.
The author discusses how families are the most common site of abuse and sexual violence. She also references the sexual violence perpetrated by colonizers, slave holders, and staff at Indian boarding schools
About Time (Movie)
Worthy of note: Throughout the film, the male protagonist uses manipulative and stalking behaviour to romantically win over the female protagonist. At approximately 48:00, he uses his time travelling ability to repeatedly have sex with her, without her knowledge or consent.
About a third of the way into the movie, a man traps a woman in an alleyway and threatens to knock her teeth out unless she gives him what he needs. He pushes her into a wall and leans into her for a few moments before he is stopped.
Absentia (TV Show)
S2E6: a man attempts to rape a woman in the restroom, but she ends up fighting him off.
Acacia (Movie)
A man sexually assaults his wife.
While making out with a man in the back of the car, a woman says she would rather wait until they get to the festival to go any further: she wants him to stop. He continues to kiss her, and when she tries to push him off, he says that "she'll like it". He is stopped before anything further happens.
Accident Man (Movie)
The book examines the impact of a high school student-run social media account that shared racist memes, often targeting specific students of color, particularly Black girls. Some of the memes were also sexually harassing or body shaming in nature. A father is mentioned to have been arrested for possession of child pornography. A teacher commits suicide after it comes to light that he molested students.
A college student harasses and attempts to rape his female professor.
The movie is loosely based on a true story about a gang rape. The protagonist is gang-raped at a bar. The scene lasts for over five minutes. At one point, a waitress enters the room and is told that she'll be next, at which she appears obviously disturbed and quickly leaves. The rest of the film's plot revolves around the protagonist's attempts to get justice through the successful sentencing of her attackers and the people at the bar who watched the attack happen/egged them on.
Ackley Bridge (TV Show)
A student and a teacher have a relationship in season 1. Another student and teacher have a sexual relationship in season 3.
Acolytes (Movie)
The plot of the movie focuses on two male characters who were raped by a man who then gets out of prison and continues to terrorize them. He is in a large portion of the movie and there are several flashbacks to when it happened. The victim goes on to kill a woman accidentally after trying to inappropriately touch her. A different man harasses and chains a girl in his basement: she has clearly been brutalized and the man says: "she's my girlfriend now." The girl escapes.
The Act (TV Show)
S1E6: a couple has sex, but the girl does not seem to enjoy it. S1E8: on-screen rape (49:45-51:21).
Three women are raped.
The main character is approached by a 13 year old prostitute. She begs for 'work' and offers that he could do anything to her.
Addicted (TV Show)
Up until the very last sex scene of this show, one half of the show's couple clearly does not consent to any of the sex they are having.
The Adjuster (Movie)
A woman on a public train takes the hand of a drunken homeless man and puts it on her crotch. A woman plays strip poker with a group of young boys. A man touches a woman's inner thigh without her consent. She then grabs his hand and pushes it towards her crotch. They both seem put-off afterwards. A woman's job requires her to watch graphic content and rate it. We never see the content but we can hear it including things like women screaming 'no' with sexual sounds.
Adult Material (TV Show)
At the beginning of the film a man chases a woman off camera and it is heavily implied he rapes her. He is aided by another person woman. The man returns later, ties two women up, and plays eeny-meany-miney-mo to decide which woman he will rape. The woman helping him sexually assaults a man and talks about how the rapist cannot find a woman to get pregnant.
This movie depicts various mental illnesses in upsetting and disturbing ways. The main plot involves bestialism, domestic violence and abuse. A man likes dogs so much that he gradually makes his wife behave like one: he starts giving her dog food, he makes her eat outside with the dogs, forces her to get down on all fours permanently until he gets her raped by one of their dogs.
Adventure Time (TV Show)
A recurring theme throughout the series is an antagonist kidnapping women and holding them hostage, threatening them while trying to force them into marrying him. S1E3: the main character (minor) is pressured to be kissed by an older lady but it ends up not happening. S1E6: a big worm inside the house of the main characters hypnotizes them into hugging him. S1E17: another antagonist attempts to force a female character into marriage and he harasses her. In one episode, the main character (a minor) begs for a man to stop touching him and to back off. A few minutes later, he is kidnapped and forced to do stuff like pole dance and is electrocuted. S2E3: the main protagonist forces physically two characters to kiss. In one episode, it is implied that one of the main protagonist's friend sexually assaults him off screen. They stay friends and it is never brought up again.
Sexual abuse in the film is part of its broader thematic exploration of LGBT+ rights, treatment and culture. For example; the uncertainty, for many people within this community, of whether a place they are visiting is going to be safe for and accepting of them or not. The topic is treated relatively sensitively. Most intense/potentially disturbing scenes occur between 0:30:16-0:31:16 and 1:08:35-1:08:59. In the first one (a flashback), one protagonist recalls an episode where his uncle tried to sexually abuse him when he was a child (portrayed on-screen). He somehow turned the tables and tricked the molester instead. The anecdote ends up being empowering for the character. In the second one, another protagonist is assaulted by a group of homophobic men: they restrain him and spread his legs. He is eventually rescued by the other protagonists.
A young adult male main character frequently sexually harasses the female characters, often magically unhooking or removing their underwear, touching their body, or otherwise toying with them. Another young adult male antagonist during the climax of the final series arc pins down and toys with a terrified young woman and taunts her with death while moving in on her body. This however is averted.
The Afflicted (Movie)
This film contains several on-screen rape scenes, all involving minor girls and an adult man. There is also heavy domestic abuse between children and parent.
Afraid (Movie)
A 17 year old girl is repeatedly pressured by her 18 year old boyfriend to send naked photos. When she eventually gives in, he uses the photos to create AI generated pornography and posts it online. Since she is under 18, it is discussed as being child pornography. He is later exposed and punished severely for this. A woman tells a man that she will do anything he wants (clearly sexual) as part of his “compensation package”. The woman is being forced to follow the orders of someone else. She does not seem particularly upset about her situation and her offers are refused by the male character. A woman kisses her married office crush in a hotel room. He pulls away and leaves.
After Lucia (Movie)
In the second segmentm a man forcibly kisses a woman and threatens to rape her at knifepoint. He is interrupted before anything can happen.
After Party (TV Show)
S1E5: a teenage boy tries to pressure a drunk girl to have sex with him. He touches her a bit, does stop, but tells the whole party of all of their friends that they had sex. S2E6: an arsonist lies about who he is, in order to have sex with a cop. He puts handcuffs on her and handcuffs her to the bed and sets the house on fire.
The main male lead has a nightmare about witnessing a close family member's sexual assault. The female main lead, drunk, offers sexual intercourse to the male main (who is not): he does not stop it from having, despite knowing she is not capable of giving full-consent.
A group of men capture fleeing women girls, forcing them into a vehicle - the implication here could be of later sexual assault. Rape and sexual assault feature throughout. A woman is raped by a gang of men, who are shown ripping away her clothes.
Necrophilia - a man gropes and rapes the corpse of a woman.
The sister of the protagonist gets kidnapped and her body reappears after several days: it is strongly implied that she has been kept into the basement and raped during that time. A stranger shows up at the door of the protagonist's house and tries to rape her. He believed that she had a rape fantasy after someone posted an ad for it without her knowing. At the end of the movie, a man who was hiding in her house kisses her while she is chained to a wall.
Again (Movie)
The plot revolves around a rape scene that occurs early on in the film.
In 'Yes Men' (S01E15), a one-time female character can control men and uses her ability to seduce them. While the male characters act as if the resulting relationship is consensual, it is the product of this mind control. There is a scene where she and one of the lead characters begin to kiss passionately in a hotel room and it is strongly implied that they have sex while he is under her influence. For an entire seven-episode arc (S04E16-S04E22), a recurring female character controls a different lead male character and manipulates him so that he believes he is in love with her. While there is no on-screen sexual relationship, it is implied that one occurs. The male character, when he is no longer controlled, confronts the woman for violating his agency.
Agora (Movie)
A man forcefully kisses and gropes a woman against her will. He strips her and throws her to the ground (56:30-57:42). He eventually gives in to his conscience and feels bad about it so he sobs and stops. He then leaves himself to the victim's mercy to decide how she wants to handle him. She realizes his pent up aggression came from being a slave to her father, so she frees him and orders him to leave rather than killing him.
Two children go missing and it is assumed through most of the movie that the daughter was raped: this turns out not to be the case, There are two supernatural assault scenes where women have their clothes ripped off and breasts fondled by an unseen entity. A babysitter tells the mother she walked in on the son and daughter having sex: we do not know if this actually happened.
A.I Rising (Movie)
Incest and child sex abuse are discussed but not depicted.
Many scenes show attempted rape or something that can perceived as rape without seeing it blatantly on camera. All the murders the titular character committs are claimed to be in self defense of sexual assault.
Air Doll (Movie)
The main character is a brough-to-life inflatable sex doll. Although there is no violence per se in the film, we do see her dreading her relationship with her "owner" (although she has a life outside the apartment, she pretends to be a doll there and so "has sex" with her "owner" even though she does not want to and stands it stoically. In one of the scenes, she also takes a bath afterwards even though she might be discovered). In another scene, the owner of the DVD rental shop where she works discovers that, although the main character is currently dating another employee, she also has a boyfriend (the "owner"). Then it cuts to a scene of them having sex, the main character completely stoic and unmoving, while her boss tells her that she would have sex with anyone. Her relationship with the other employee also has a strange scene that, although difficult to classify and technically constented, could be upsetting. She tells him that she will do anything that he asked, since that is what she was put on Earth to do, and he says he wants to de-inflate her and inflate her again (although she had previously said that hurt her). Then he proceeds to do that. It is unclear how the main character feels about this. Overall, although the scenes are not particularly violent, the film does tackle issues of sexual agency and male dominance and abuse.
Akame Ga Kill! (TV Show)
Akelarre (Movie)
Teenage girls are made to undress into what would historically considered their underwear. It is implied that a teenage girl is raped off screen.
Aki Sora (TV Show)
The main female protagonist is in love with her younger brother. She fondles him even though he tells her to stop, then just lets her have his way. They eventually enter a relationship with lots of consensual sex. At one point, the brother is raped by his twinsister, who threatens to cut his penis of with a pair of scissors.
Akira (1988) (Movie)
A biker holds a girl still as another tears off her shirt, revealing her breasts. She is then punched and drops to the floor.
Volume 4: several girls are given drugs so the protagonist can rape them. The direct sexual assault is not shown, but very plainly discussed.
Akudama Drive (TV Show)
The 17 year old male protagonist nearly gets raped. A 10 year old girl almost gets sold as a sex slave. A doctor tries soliciting sex from multiple people throughout the series.
Al-Ard (Movie)
About 20 minutes into the movie, one woman rapes a young boy off-screen: we see her seducing him, and touching him despite his apparent discomfort, before jumping on him. The scene then cuts, and later, she is shown asking the boy not to tell anybody what happened. The boy is portrayed as being in love with her, but he is shown the morning after apparently shocked. The main man character stalks a woman during the first 30 minutes of the movie, and asks her father to marry her several times during the rest of the film. There is violence towards women throughout the movie, notably when they resist men's attempt to seduce them. At approximately 1:24:00, one man even kills a woman who is bathing.
Alba (TV Show)
This show is about a girl who has been raped: it includes images of the rape and also gender violence.
There are two attempted rapes and one on-screen rape in this movie.: all are very violent. The titular character has a sexual relationship with his nineteen year old male servant.
Rape of both men and women are discussed in a historical context as part of war and slavery. Details of gang rape are discussed as it instigated a significant historical event.
A man wakes up to a dog performing oral sex on him and he does not try to stop it from happening. A man has his trousers pulled down and his genitals are exposed to a variety of people including a group of school children.
Alias Grace (TV Show)
Rape on-screen: A flashback during S1E1 shows the rape of a patient who is tied down and unable to resist. In S1E4, a character is sexually assaulted in a dream. Incest, child sex abuse: a character recounts having been raped by her father as a child.
Alice (2022) (Movie)
The titular characte's slave owner forces her to submit to sexual touching of her private parts, which are off-screen. It is implied this occurs often.
S1E6: a man rapes a woman several times and then hits her (about 31 minutes into the episode).
S1E2: a character gets intimate with another one. It feels like the character does not fully consent it (no clear yes, being absent). Also while this happens, the character has a flashback to a scene in childhood. In this flashback, it is implied that a priest secretly takes advantage of a woman and the character saw it. S1E6: four people hold down a woman so a man can rape her. He begins to take off her clothes and licks her, when outside events startle and distract them all, allowing her to escape. S2E2: in the final part of the episode, the man who attempted to assault someone else in the previous season returns. He attacks the protagonist's teammate and knocks her unconsious. The episode then ends. S2E3: the episode starts with the angatonist licking the protagonist's teammate and climbing on top of her. He is then caught and beat up by the protagonist. Later on, there are lots of sound and almost voyeuristic view of a rape for about 5 seconds. S2E5: a man implies that he will help a teenage girl with an immediately life-threatening condition if she has sex with him (23:00-24:15). She agrees but this is not shown on screen. A female character climbs on top of the protagonist and attempts to have sex with him, despite the protagonist repeatedly denying her verbally and trying to push her off of him (16:47-17:05).
A man attempts to rape the heroine three times.
At one point, the protagonist is ends up unconscious at the River Thames. She is then pulled out of the river by two fishermen who planned on raping her. She escapes unharmed. The main antagonist is revealed to be a child sex trafficker. It is also revealed that the main antagonist had a sexual obsession with a girl and made multiple advances towards her. Although she displayed discomfort around the man, he viewed it as her "teasing" him. His obsession escalated and he soon began trying to touch her inappropriately. The girl then told her father about his behavior and to not invite the man over their house anymore. Enraged by this, the man broke into the family's home one night, went to the girl's room, and proceeded to rape and murder her. Afterwards, he left the house and set it on fire.
A subtenant of a family with two little girls makes inappropriate remaks about one of the girls (31:40-34:20) and later tries to rape the other, but she manages to escape (49:35-49:47). The girls is framed as "evil" and at one point before this incident, she makes a suggestive gesture towards the man. A policeman later makes a very inappropriate comment about her breasts and states that he felt like she was silently asking him to touch them. The combination of these incidents creates a very umcomfortable victim-blaming atmosphere throughout the film.
Alien (Movie)
It is implied that a transgender woman is raped by the alien. Worthy of note: phallic/yonic imagery is used throughout the movie in ways which often evoke violent symbolism of rape and assault. The movie's screenwriter is quoted as having said “I’m going to attack the audience. I’m going to attack them sexually,” regarding the choices he made regarding this imagery during the film's creation. It has often been described as a “rape movie” which subverts the common horror trope of ‘vulnerable’ women being sexually assaulted and have the ‘ultra masculine’ marines be completely emasculated and having things that are not consensual and full of sexual imagery happen to them.
A man forces a woman down and kisses her (01:31:07-01:31:35). Worthy of note: near the end of the film, two characters are attacked while having sex. The implicit sexual nature of the attack with the glib tone of the scene may be uncomfortable for some viewers.
Alien 3 (Movie)
The female protagonist crash lands on a planet that functions as a penal colony for men who are explicitly stated to be rapists, murderers and child molesters. A group of men corners her and attempts to rape her (40:30-41:30), but she is saved by another man that has also disclosed to her previously that he is a rapist.
The Alienist (TV Show)
The show features multiple scenes set in child brothels. The main plot revolves around a serial killer who murders children/teenage boys who were forced into prostitution.
Throughout the film, several characters are sexually humiliated and raped.
S1E9: a character gets drunk at a party and another character attempts to rape her: someone else steps in to save her. S1E10: the same character deals with the aftermath of trauma and it is revealed that the same guy has raped other girls on campus. She and another victim decided to report him to the university.
In one of the essays, the author graphically describes an instance of incest they experienced as a kid.
A girl reveals that she was raped. A brief flashback shows the night it happened, with the assaulter eyeing the girl, putting his arm around her and grabbing her wrist. No actual rape is shown, but this moment is interspersed with the girl's assaulter attacking another girl with a knife.
The two main characters, who have a sexual relationship, are revealed to be brother and sister. The male character, in a conversation with his uncle, reveals that their father abused both of the protagonists as children, including sexually assaulting the girl and forcing the boy to have sex with her. The aforementioned father never appears on screen and has died by the time the movie takes place. There is also a mention of him being inappropriately involved with a 15-year-old before his death.
S3E23: a woman is almost raped walking home. There is a lot of victim blaming in this episode. S8E4: another woman is almost raped in her home.
In the first segment of the film, a girl is raped by Satan after his followers ripped her clothing off. In the third segment, a woman is sexually mutilated and carved with misogynist writing.
The segment "Karaoke Night" ends with a graphic and explicit on screen rape of a man by an alien. The scene is long and ment to be played for laughs: it continues by the alien feeding its genitals the brains of the man in just raped.
One of the protagonists (a male in his late 20s/early 30s) masturbates with a sex toy that looks like a baby doll. He seems to be in a drug induced psychosis, believing that this baby was alive and his own.
Late in the novel, a group of women prepare to be (and are) assaulted when the allied forces take Berlin. The passage is few pages long.
It is heavily implied throughout the book that a main character was sexually assaulted as a child.
All Rise (TV Show)
S1E1: a serial rapist is briefly mentioned. S1E4: a female lawyer is harassed while visiting prison. S1E15: this episode deals with revenge porn. S1E18: this episode deals with sex trafficking (one of the victims is 15). S3E2: a trial involves battery during sex that may or may not have been consensual. S3E9: date rape, sex trafficking and sex workers not being able to report crimes are mentioned. Footage is shown of a person sexually assaulting a stripper while she is unconscious. It happened three times, but the scene is cut before the actual assault is shown (only groping). S3E11: rape is mentioned.
One of the protagonists has suicidal ideation because her mother's boyfriend molests her.
The novel explores a toxic, inappropriate relationship between four teenagers an adult author they idolize. One of the teens defends her behavior and refuses to see she did anything wrong, while two of the others feel used, manipulated, and hurt. One of the character's parents specifically calls the relationship the author had with the teens, and the way the teens would spread her message to others, as being cultlike. The author's behavior is manipulative and has a lot in common with grooming, although nothing physical happens on-page. She is inappropriately familiar and emotionally close with the teens, including having them over to her house and giving one of them a key, and gets one of them to tell her details of her romantic and sexual relationship with one of the other teens. She encourages the teens to share intimate and personal details with her, with the intent of using it as fodder for her writing. It is deliberately murky whether she cared about the teens at all as people. One of the teens admits to having suspected the author was having a romantic or sexual relationship with one of them, but it's never entirely clear if she's right. A major event in the backstory is an instance of sexual assault and hazing that took place at a high school. For much of the novel, one of the characters is assumed to have been the victim of the hazing; however, it is eventually discovered that he was actually a perpetrator. The book-within-a-book that dramatizes the in-universe events (written by the author who has been basing her work off the teenagers she's cultivated a relationship with) portrays the perpetrator as remorseful of his actions and being a good person who did something terrible. The characters all have different opinions on this, and we never see the perpetrator's actual thoughts, or hear from him directly, only seeing him through other's eyes. The victim similarly never makes an appearance.
S1E1: assault and implied rape (24:00-27:00), as well as harassment (33:00-35:00). S1E2: there are flashbacks to the previous assault and harassment (13:20 - 13:40).
All We Had (Movie)
About halfway through the film, a transgender character is gang raped: the scene is graphic and unexpected.
Allen V. Farrow (TV Show)
The protagonist is the stepdaughter of a mommy blogger/influencer. This stepmother became famous by recording and writing about her family life, mostly through intense focus on the protagonist, who she started blogging about when the protagonist was a baby. As the protagonist gets older, she becomes less and less comfortable with being the subject of her stepmother's successful media empire. The protagonist gets emancipated as a teenager. As an adult, the protagonist has a sexual experience where her partner knew her from her stepmother's social media, but didn't tell her until after they'd had sex. Specifically, he comments on how a scar on her hip, which he first saw in a video by her stepmother when the protagonist was a child, looks different in real life. In the climax of the book, the protagonist learns that people have uploaded photos of her younger sister, who is the new subject of her stepmother's social media, to pedophilia-oriented areas of the dark web. The protagonist also learns that her stepmother has known about this fact for a long time and hasn't told the protagonist's father. Nothing bad happens to the sister, but the last quarter or so of the book deals with the fallout from the protagonist confronting her stepmother about these photos.
A woman is raped with an alien appendage, both vaginally and orally. The scene is very long and graphic.
Almost Mercy (Movie)
Almost Paradise (TV Show)
S2E2 deals with a sex trafficking ring. S2E8 mentions grooming and involves a cult where a man brainwashed young women.
The movie opens during a police sting operation to catch a serial rapist and murderer. Whilst driving, the rapist unbuckles his belt and tries to force his victim's head into his lap. His attempt is immediately averted. The primary antagonist kidnaps a little girl, but has no sexual interest in her whatsoever.
The movie follows a serial killer who rapes his victims (all young children). Rape is mentioned and discussed by the police, and two young boys taunt and joke about a young girl being raped and murdered.
Altar (Movie)
The protagonist's husband, who is slowly going mad, massages his blood onto her back. When she realizes this, she runs to shower it off (24:00). He follows and takes pictures of her in the shower without her consent, and she is greatly emotionally distressed and tells him to stop - he does not. The protagonist is in a creepy room and is surprised by her husband entering (41:00). He initiates sex, which she initially consents to, but asks they go to another room as she does n't like this one. He does not listen or stop, and she becomes more and more distressed. The scone cuts to outside the door to the room where you can hear her cries, and it is strongly implied he raped her.
Altered Carbon (TV Show)
Many episodes involve nudity, sexual abuse, and rape, but the most graphic assault is in S1E9 (45:46-46:10) and S1E10.
Always a Witch (TV Show)
S1E2+3: a character is blackmailed by an abusive ex-boyfriend with a sex tape that was filmed without her consent. There is an attempted rape of one of the characters, who successfully fights off but ends up in a coma for several episodes following.
S1E5: a character talks about being abused by a stepparent during their childhood.
In several chapters, the author discusses his experiences of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of his stepfather. There are no on-page descriptions of what those specific instances of abuse entailed. There is also passing mention of the rape allegations against Mike Tyson and Harvey Weinstein.
There is a description of the events immediately before and after a coercive rape committed by a police officer against a gay man. Non-graphic.
A man is drugged and thinks he is having sex with his girlfriend, but it is actually his mother in a demonic like form. There is brief discussion or implications if it was incest throughout.
Season 2 - The Assassination of Gianni Versace The scenes in question are featured in episodes 7 and 8. Season 3 - Impeachment This season is about the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal so sexual misconduct is a central theme. S3E1: a woman explains how Bill Clinton sexually harassed her by inviting her to his hotel room, kissing her and asking her to perform oral sex on him. She is visibly distressed while explaining it, and has to do a press conference with male journalists asking details on the scene despite her clearly stating that she would not comment on it (she again appears very distressed). Later, another woman explains that the same man assaulted her (forcingly kissing her). Throughout the episode, it is hinted several times that he is a sexual predator. S3E2: the harassment mentioned in S3E1 is discussed again in this episode, and the victim is shown being instrumentalized about it for political purposes. The relation between Clinton and Lewinsky (featuring a power imbalance) is depicted: the female protagonist is also shown being instrumentalized by another character, who encourages her to pursue this relation. S3E3: the female protagonist dismisses the sexual harassment allegations made by a woman against Bill Clinton (relating to the events in S3E1) several times throughout the episode. S3E4: the nature of the relationship between Clinton and Lewinsky is discussed (the female protagonist denies that it is sexual harassment or power abuse). A man touches a woman's butt as a 'goodbye' without her consent (around 29 minutes in). One of the female protagonist explains that an adult (an authority figure) tried to have sex with her when she was 14 and only stopped when she said 'no'. She also explains that her first romantic and sexual relationship was with a teacher while she was in high school. Incest is briefly mentioned as a joke. S3E7: in the opening scene, a woman who was sexually harrassed by Bill Clinton is in a room where he denies having ever meeting her. She is visibly distressed and leaves the room. This episode demonstrates how Clinton's denial of having a sexual affair with Lewinsky psychologically destroys her. A former high school teacher of Lewinsky, who had an affair with her when she was a teenager publicly slut-shames her. S3E9: in the final scene, someone explains that a woman testified that Clinton raped her. Because she initially said that he did not, this claim is brushed aside and disqualified by all the characters. Throughout this episode, Lewinsky is asked to describe her sexual encounters with Clinton in details twice (the first time in public): she is visibly very distressed. S3E10: during an interview, a woman described how Clinton raped her. A woman who has sexually assaulted by Clinton and instrumentalized politically, is forced to do erotic/nude photos for money: she is shown being visibly distressed by this situation. Descriptions of the sexual encounters between Clinton and Lewinsky are made publicly available: Lewinsky is visibly distressed by that.
American Gods (TV Show)
S1E2: an omniscient god informs a slave that his relative has been murdered for refusing to submit to a rape. S1E7: a character (early 20s) is forced to accept the sexual exploitation offer of an elder warden to trade favours to escape a death sentence (~30:00-31:23). The bargaining and the act is shown for approximately 10 seconds: she becomes pregnant with the sexual predator's child and raises the kid during her servant sentence. A main character frequently flirts/sleeps with very young women. A female character attempts to coerce a male character into accepting oral sex after he explicitly declines her offer. He eventually manages to rebuff her despite her physical attempts to force herself on him.
There is one passing mention of rape, metaphorical (i.e. 'rape of our country,' 36:25). A prison guard threatens prisoners, collectively, with sexual violence (01:07:00). A man is gang-raped in prison, scene is relatively graphic (1:21:00-1:23:00). The direct aftermath of this attack (the victim lying in a prison hospital ward) is depicted until the 1:23:49 mark. The attack is alluded to on multiple occasions in later scenes. Between 1:26:50-1:27:16, the victim walks through the prison canteen, obviously injured from the previous attack, while his attackers jeer and mock him.
It is established at the beginning of the movie that the main character's father sexually abuses her, and implies it has been going on for some time. Her father gropes her on screen while she is visibly distressed. A teenage girl of colour is in a relationship with a white adult man who is her boss. Though it is never discussed, there is obviously a strong power imbalance present in the situation. The protagonist is paid money to go on dates and perform sexual acts, though little is shown. A man mentions that a woman was raped and murdered in a town they were passing through. An 18 year old woman comes across three men who take her to a house and try to get her drunk. It is implied that they are attempting to get her drunk enough where they can rape her. A man comes and saves her before anything can happen.
Season 1: a teen couple is making out in bed and the boy tries to unzip the girl’s pants, but she stops him. He tries a couple more times and she stops him again and then tells him she is not ready yet. Later, he and his friends have an uncomfortable conversation about how to get a girl to have sex with them. S2E4: a man pushes a woman against a wall and attempts to rape her, but is stopped by someone else. S2E7: a woman has sex with a man who she thinks is dead, although he is not. S3E6: a character attempts to rape another character while both are intoxicated.
Season one (Murder House): S1E1: a woman is raped by a teenage boy wearing a rubber suit which conceals his identity (she ostensibly consents to have sex but believes him to be her husband). She becomes pregnant as a result of this, and the pregnancy is an ongoing theme throughout the season. Discussions and depictions of miscarriage and abortion also occur throughout. The man in the rubber suit appears frequently and his identity is ambiguous until S1E8. S1E2: a woman is held captive by a home invader and told first to undress and then to put on a nurse's costume. S1E3: a man violently rapes his maid, on the premise that they two had had consensual sex in the past, until he is interrupted. In the same episode, a maid repeatedly makes sexual advances towards a man who expresses that he wants her to stop doing so. He accuses the maid of spiking his coffee with an opiate which causes memory loss. S1E4: near the beginning of the episode, it is implied that a man is raped using a fire poker. This scene is revisited near the beginning of S1E8. S1E8: the woman who was raped and impregnated by the man wearing the rubber suit is institutionalised because her husband and peers do not believe that she was raped. In S1E9, this is resolved when her husband learns she was telling the truth, but she is forced to lie and say that she was not raped in order to leave the hospital. S1E9: near the beginning of the episode, a woman is raped by her doctor while she is under general anaesthesia for a dental procedure. Season two (Asylum): S2E1: one of the characters introduced as an inmate of the asylum is diagnosed as a 'nymphomaniac' and has sex with the orderlies at night - this could be considered an unequal power dynamic and might make some viewers uncomfortable. A woman signs a document committing her partner to the asylum under threat that she and her partner will be outed as lesbians if she does not submit, ruining their careers. Homophobia is a theme throughout the season. A man is diagnosed as a chronic masturbator and is seen masturbating in some scenes; could be interpreted as threatening behaviour. S2E2: a woman is called a 'slut' and a 'whore' by one of the doctors overseeing the asylum. It is revealed that she was committed to the asylum by her husband who punished her for engaging in extramarital sex by accusing her of nymphomania. Shame with regards to sex and 'promiscuity' are recurring themes in this episode and throughout. A doctor hires an escort and attempts to engage in non consensual intercourse with her before she escapes from him (36:40-37:30). S2E3: near the end of the episode, one of the asylum staff attempts to rape a patient and then surgically mutilates her. S2E4: it is revealed that one patient killed her father for sexually abusing her. In the same episode, a lesbian woman is forced to undergo a form of conversion therapy where a doctor attempts to make her feel revolted by images of nude women and then compels her to touch herself sexually while also touching a naked man. S2E6: a woman is kidnapped and made to play a 'motherly' role for her kidnapper; this could be seen to have sexual overtones. In S2E7, her kidnapper rapes her. As a result, she becomes pregnant. When she escapes, she is picked up by a man who begins a misogynistic tirade against women in general and his wife specifically, refusing to take her to the hospital and eventually pulling out a gun. S2E8: in a flashback, it is revealed that one of the patients was raped in jail. At the end of the episode, a man intends to rape a woman in revenge for her treatment of him but before he can do so she kills him. S2E9: near the beginning of the episode, there is a relatively graphic scene in which a woman attempts to abort the pregnancy which began when she was raped. S2E10: a woman rapes a priest. S2E11: a man tells a woman about how he killed her partner and had sex with the corpse. Later in this episode, the woman gives birth to the child of her rapist, despite multiple failed abortion attempts. Season three (Coven): S3E1: it is revealed that a black slave and a white woman have had an affair. He swears that she initiated the sexual contact as he loves somebody else, but is tortured anyway. In another scene during this episode, a young woman is drugged and gang-raped by a group of men at a fraternity party. A friend of the survivor violently rapes and kills one of the frat boys, who is in critical condition and unable to move or consent, as revenge. Discussions of and references to this incident occur periodically throughout the season. S3E3: a woman makes sexual advances towards a minotaur. At another point in the episode, it is revealed that a woman has been sexually abusing her college-aged son. She is shown kissing him whil he stands unmoving. Eventually, he beats her to death when she makes sexual advances towards him. Scenes of this murder continue into S3E4. S3E6: a man lies and tells other characters that he killed a woman whose corpse they discover in order to feed his necrophiliac appetites. At another point in the episode, a young man relives the trauma of sexual abuse by his mother when a woman who is caring for him tries to clean his genitals, lashing out as a result. S3E7: it is revealed that a character has been secretly watching a woman he is obsessed with since she was eight years old. S3E8: near the beginning of the episode, a homeless man is killed because he is accused of being a paedophile. Later in the episode, a man's mother forces him to strip while chastising him. Season four (Freak Show): S4E1: a woman is coerced into remaining silent about her experiences and not going home because she is threatened with the potential release of a sexual video in which she features. S4E3: in a flashback, a woman is made to give birth in front of a crowd of paying spectators as part of a 'freak show.' S4E4: in a flashback, it is revealed that a woman once worked in as a dominatrix catering to extreme and violent fetishes and that she was abducted to be the object of a snuff film. In another flashback in the same episode, a man is accused of sexually abusing young patrons of his show, although this does not seem to be true. S4E5: a reference is made to the fact that an upper-class family is particularly prone to mental health problems due to inbreeding. Season five (Hotel): S5E1: a hotel guest is shown taking heroin and then being violently raped by a faceless demon. As he is on the verge of passing out, a woman appears and tells him that she loves him. The guest's body is hidden and his ordeal continues until S5E3. S5E8: a character is said to have checked in and molested a 10-year-old boy, leaving behind polaroids of this crime. S5E11: a woman is violently raped by a faceless demon in a flashback. Season six (Roanoke): S6E3: a character is found having sex with a witch while local people look on and touch themselves sexually; he claims to have no memory of this incident after the fact. If this is the case then one implication might be that he was magically compelled to take part in this act. S6E4: in an attempt to gain more information, one character offers somebody another character's sexual services. Later, she turns up and demands what was promised to her. S6E7: a woman manipulates a man into participating in sexual activity with her until two other characters intervene. Season seven (Cult): S7E1: a woman wakes up to find a clown in her bed. S7E1-2: several scenes show masked man masturbating while watching the main character (non-consensual). They are shown moving their arms and grunting, without nudity/genitalia. S7E3: a couple's address is posted online by an unknown party, alongside an invitation for strangers to walk into the house and have sex with them. Video footage is posted online of intimate moments between two characters. S7E4: two women handcuff a man in retaliation for him groping one of them during a heated argument. A man's boss degrades him by making him clean up semen on multiple occasions. A man openly masturbates in a communal shower stall. A woman attacks a teenager when her speech is interrupted by bystanders saying 'grab her by the p***y.' S7E7: a woman sleeps with a man for money and he refuses to pay her the agreed amount. S7E8: a man attempts to rape a woman, but she kills him before he can further assault her. A cop blackmails a criminal into sex acts, though this is not shown on screen. Season eight (Apocalypse): S8E2: the man in the rubber suit has sex with a man who thinks he is somebody else. Season nine (1984): S9E2: a man attempts to coerce another male character into starring in homosexual pornography and threatens to end his potential acting career by sending tapes of these movies to various people in Hollywood. Later, one character spies on men and makes sexually suggestive comments and a woman unexpectedly kisses another woman. Worthy of note: one of the main antagonists of the series is a real-life serial killer. At some point, he makes a comment about abusing women. S9E5: a woman's corpse is shown, with the implication that one character raped and disemboweled her (2:50-5:32), before taking pictures of her that he displayed on the wall. He then kills himself. Season ten (Double Feature): S10E3: a man is kidnapped to be the victim in a snuff movie where he would be sexually abused. He is able to escape the situation unharmed. One character forces a group of college-age men into a hazing ritual involving peer-pressured group groping (24:00-24:40). Season eleven (NYC): S11E2: a man is invited to have kinky sex with a stranger and accepts, but is then imprisoned and keeps explaining that he did not agree to the imprisonment. S11E6: two characters are taking turns having sex with another character in a hood, and the character in the hood suffocates (by accident). The characters continue having sex with him after he is dead. Season 12 (Delicate): The main female character is vaginally probed by a physical therapist who she repeatedly tells to stop. Later she tells her husband she was molested and he does not believe her.
American Mary (Movie)
A woman is drugged and raped by her professor; it is very graphic and the emotional impact is reflected in the rest of the film as the woman exacts her retaliation.
American Me (Movie)
A woman is heavily implied to have been gang raped. A teenager is raped at knifepoint, only faces are shown. Another teenager is also raped. A scene of consensual sex slowly turns into rape as the woman begs her lover to stop. A man is shot in the genitals off-screen.
A female character is sexually abused by her mother's boyfriend as a child.
The main character learns that his daughter was raped. The rape is not described in detail, but the main character’s feelings toward the event are explored in detail. There is a description of his own imagining of the rape.
S1E1: a young girl is sleeping when her father comes in and attempts to assault his daughter (18:00-22:00). It is implied that this happens often. Before the father assaults her, the daughter stabs and kills the father. S1E3: the main character is raped off screen. A struggle is shown before she is taken off to a shack off screen.
There is a brief mention of sexual assault over the phone. The protagonist coerces one of his woman friends to have sex with the sex worker he payed for, despite her saying 'no' multiple times. While she is distracted, he drugs her drink, and the next scene is the women getting taken advantage of by the sex worker while he watches. Worthy of note: there are several scenes in which the main character is having sex with two sex workers. He physically hurts them during these encounters and later pressures one of them to come back and have sex with him again.
"Battery" : a man drugs a woman's drink at a bar, then he takes her home and rapes her.
The film revolves around a woman trying to get a provocative tape back from a man who films women flashing. There is mention of bestiality. A man receives a handjob from a woman whilst he is asleep. She is unaware of what she is doing and he does not seem to be in distress at the event. The scenario is played for laughs.
The protagonist, desperate for money, answers an ad for a man who wants someone to help him "relax." He claims that he wants her to massage him, but he requests that she come to his house and lie down in his bed with him. He touches her sexually and makes her uncomfortable. She accepts his payment, leaves, and never returns. This experience, in addition to the alienation she had already been feeling, causes her to go into a deep depression.
The Americans (TV Show)
During a flashback in the pilot episode, a woman is pinned down and raped. More generally, nearly every episode has sexual activity that lacks enthusiastic, fully informed consent. In many cases, it can be likened to reluctant sex work for the spies. The people they seduce do not know they are consenting to sex with a Russian agent and are unaware of the spies' underlying reasons for pursuing sex with them. The male and female lead were assigned to play the role of a married couple by the USSR. They were told to have sex and produce children. Early in their time together, they were not at all in love and only had sex because the job demanded it. During the series, their degree of romantic attachment to each other waxes and wanes. As spies, the main characters frequently seduce and have sex with others to gain access. This happens very frequently. The level of deception involved in these sex acts varies. Many sex-spying acts involve seducing a stranger for a one-night stand with few implicit or explicit promises to be broken. However, in a very long-running storyline, the male lead convinces a woman that he is in love with her and marries her, while already married to another woman. The purpose of this is to use her for information and access. She is tricked into betraying her country, losing her job, as well as risking her life and freedom. Sex is the weapon used to cause these harms, rather than being a harm in and of itself. The male lead meets with a young, attractive female informant. She is "assigned" to gather information from a foreign dignitary who chokes her to death during sex. To avoid law enforcement, she is cut unto pieces and carried out in suitcases. There is a threat to out a gay servicemember. To gain access to a computer system, the female lead tricks a married man into believing that he had sex with her and impregnated her. To maintain an information source, the male lead is directed to seduce a 15-year-old girl and maintain a sexual relationship with her. He begins to seduce her, but refuses to have sex with her, though he does maintain a boyfriend-like relationship with her. The spies often do not like having sex with strangers for access. This is their job and they are often resentful. They appear distressed at times. They also get jealous of each other. The male lead attends emotional encounter seminars which involve participants loudly expressing their feelings or sharing very personal information, including sexual fantasies. Some fantasies expressed are violent and/or non-consensual. The female lead is assigned to seduce a sexual sadist who beats her with a belt. The male lead is angry and wants to punish the sadist. The male and female leads role-play consensual sexual sadism with one another. The female lead lies that she was raped by a military servicemember to a low-level navy sailor to manipulate him. The spies frequently use sex as a source of blackmail material or in order to get blackmail material. The spies convince a young (but presumably adult) collaborator to drug and have sex with an aide to congress. There are flashback scenes to the spies learning how to seduce people as part of their spy training. We see the male lead initiating sex with (presumably) undesirable partners, including an elderly woman and a middle-aged man. He is clearly reluctant. In the final season, the spies' daughter (now an adult) has sex with a source to get information. The spies are extremely disturbed by this.
Amulet (Movie)
Rape on-screen: this is shown briefly and from a distance. There is also a brief mention of incest (father marrying his daughter).
Rape is mentioned numerous times throughout. During a flashback scene, the main character is attacked at knifepoint; rape strongly implied but not shown.
The main characters in this romance are a free Black woman and a white Scottish man who are fellow spies for the Union during the American Civil War. When the two first meet, she is worried that he will rape her. She does not know that he is a fellow spy at this point. Later on, the two have real conversations about the power dynamics of a white man being with a Black woman. Nevertheless, their relationship is presented as wholly consensual. The main male character's mother was gang raped prior to the events of the book and bore a child as a result. There is a scene where the main female character is undercover as a man, and when she is found out by slave catchers, the men start touching her body and trying to remove her clothing. They are stopped before they get very far. An antagonist female character accuses the main male character of attempting to rape her. It is very clear in context that she is lying and trying to get him in trouble.
In several places, this book details how sexual violence was used (and continues to be used) as a tool of warfare by European settlers against Indigenous peoples in North America and around the world. Towards the end of the book, the author includes personal accounts by people who were sexually assaulted as children in the Indian boarding school system. She also discusses the current epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls (MMIWG), many of whom are victims of sexual violence.
The male protagonist is forced to watch while another inmate is gang raped by a number of other inmates, and he is threatened that they plan to do the same to him (55:00-57:00).
The main female character is consistently sexually harassed and used by the men around her. This is depicted with the aim of shaming the men who have hurt her or sexually abused her.
This book takes place during the United States Civil War. The couple in the book consists of a Black American man and a dark-skinned biracial Cuban woman. The male protagonist saves a slave girl from being raped by the slave owner. The female protagonist was born from a union between a slaveholder and a slave woman. The protagonist's mother somehow persuaded the slaveholder to free her, marry her, and treat her and her daughter as equal members of the family. There is a suggestion that he may have fathered another child with a different slave woman because the protagonist notices a slave girl who resembles her. The female protagonist's home gets taken over by soldiers who flirt with, attempt to touch, and otherwise harass her and her sisters. At the start of the book, she has a white sweetheart whom she believes she loves, but it becomes clear to her that he is using her, and she describes their sexual encounters as him "taking his pleasure" from her. There are instances where he initiates sex with her when she is visibly upset. Finally, she mentions that people often think that she is her father's mistress. A side character relates how his wife was raped by a slave owner. Two male characters openly contemplate "sharing" the female protagonist, assuming that she does not understand their language, which she secretly does. A group of Confederate soldiers threaten to rape the women present in a group of traveling slaves, but they are stopped.
The book centers around a generation spaceship with a large enslaved population. The genderqueer female main character and her enslaved kin experience systematic physical and sexual abuse from their captors, both heavily implied and simply stated. However, many before-and-after details drive home the horror and intergenerational trauma of this abuse. Child sexual abuse is shown to be widespread through pregnant teenagers, children's play that acts out rape, and brief flashbacks during PTSD episodes.
The protagonist endures repeated rapes, assaults and mutilations while she is being held for ransom over a 13 day period. The second half of the book chronicles what happened after her release, the impact of her traumas and her attempts to reclaim the life she had before she was kidnapped. Everything is described in vivid detail in first-person POV.
The female protagonist is a governess in a house inhabited by three middle age brothers. In one of the first scenes of the film, one of them makes continuous sexual advances despite her clear disinterest. He then develops an obsession with her, sexually harrasses her at multiple occasions, and writes her anonymous obscene letters throughout the movie. The two other brothers also develop a perverse relationship with her, and she progressively decides to deal with it by playing along. In the final sequence of the film, after she rebuffed them all, one brother attempts to rape her, in presence of the rest of the household. After a brief relief (she is fakingly told to leave the estate), she is violently grabbed, pinned down by the three brothers and raped on-screen, before being killed.
Anakhot (TV Show)
S1E2: the whole episode is around the creator of sex robots that watched her mom work as a sex worker all her life. Later there is a flashback that strongly implies that her mom sold her very young child to sex work too.
The series follows arape accusations from the rapist's perspective. S1E1: the episode opens with an on-screen rape, depicted as if the victim is enjoying it. After that, the accusation of the survivor is framed as insane and not credible S1E2: the rapist is depicted as being 'sucker-punched' by the accusation of his victim (03:30-04:30).
Andor (TV Show)
S1E1: the first scene of the episode takes place in a bar which is supposedly a brothel. We only see a "waitress" asking the male character what he is looking for (which is not sex). S1E11-12: a mother is obliged to arrange a meeting (and presumably a wedding) between her teenage daughter and the son of someone who makes her a favour. S2E3: an Imperial officer keeps suggestively invading the space of one female character, making her uncomfortable (34:33-35:09, 36:04-37:33, 38:47-39:14, 39:26-40:48, 41:08-41:26). It is implied that he wants a sexual relationship, despite her clear disinterest and blackmails her. He corners her when she is home alone and tries to rape her.
Andrei Rublev (Movie)
A woman kisses a man who is tied up against his will. A woman has her robe pulled off by people who are pursuing her. We see a woman being dragged away by a group of men who are going to rape her. From a distance, a group of soldiers watches a woman lying with her dress pulled up.
Angel (TV Show)
In the past, the main protagonist had a sexual relationship with the woman who turned him into a vampire. The language used to describe this transformation and her role in it mirrors the language of birth and motherhood. While they are not related, the relationship can easily be read as incestuous. Throughout season 2, an antagonist infiltrates the main protagonist's dreams, and while doing so, assaults him while he sleeps in the real world. He is unaware of what is actually going on. S2E4: the entire plot of this episode centers around the main cast helping a character who has repeatedly been the victim of sexual violence. A major episode revolves around domestic abuse, and a lot of women are abused. A female character is graphically hurt and almost raped by three of the main male characters, who ends up forgiven. A main male vampire threatens to rape a woman "to death", implying he has done this before.
Angel Heart (Movie)
The protagonist rapes his adult daughter while possessed. A woman is found dead and it is revelead that she was shot up the vagina (off-screen).
Apart from explicit violence against women during the first half of the movie, there's also a scene where one of the main characters, after burgling a house and keeping its two female occupants under threat, drags them to bed and starts getting on top of them and hitting them with a belt while they squirm and try to defend themselves. The other main character looks on as this happens. Although no nudity is shown, it could be implied that the scene continued further beyond what is shown.
Angelic Layer (TV Show)
A 17 year old guy is in love with a 12 year old girl (her step sister). They are not biologically related but have been step siblings for a long time. There are other instances of sexual harassments in this anime and manga.
it is implied that a woman is raped after losing a fight: her clothes are ripped off. Multiple women are groped by men.
Angry Mom (TV Show)
Angst (Movie)
A man rapes a dead woman's corpse (off-screen): we see the man asleep on top of the corpse with his pants down.
The Animal (Movie)
A man pulls a bag of drugs from another man's rectum. A man tries to have sex with a goat.
Animal Room (Movie)
SPOILERS: The sexual violence in this title is handled very brutally and violently. There is one scene where a group of boys force another boy into the bathroom and beat him up, one of the boys mounting the boy when he is kneeling and thrusting into his back before shoving his head in a toilet filled with feces. Another scene, the group of boys break into a house and the main antagonist forces a kiss on his girlfriend’s mother before dragging her into another room, his girlfriend being aware and seemingly okay with this. In the private room, he pushes his face into her breasts and licks her while making sexually explicit remarks to the crying woman. He backs off but when he goes to meet up with the group of bullies, one of them says something to him before going back to the woman, grabbing her by her hair and dragging her off to another room as she screams - rape is implied as the antagonist slams the front door shut before leaving so she could not be heard. The scene is violent, brutal, and intensely frightening and can be disturbing to viewers.
Animale (Movie)
A woman gets assaulted by her male friends while she is drunk and half unconsious. She forgets at first but slowly start to remember and we are shown a flashback of what happend. The assault is a big part of the plot as she (unconsiously at first) gets revenge on them, killing them all.
Anna (Movie)
Domestic rape and violence early in the movie.
S1E1: an inappropriate relationship is implied between a teenager and a grown man. The main character's mother is seen drinking at a party where she then dances with a boy her uncle is trying to set her up with. She is drugged and falls pregnant after the one night stand in which we can visibly see her unable to consent to anything. It is later revealed she fell asleep and that her uncle killed her date: he then raped her. Towards the end, a woman tries to seduce a man with her magical powers to get her way: it does not work. S1E2: a mother has sex, and is magically linked to her daughter, who randomly has a sleep orgasm on the plane. S1E4 mentions at 8 year old being possibly propositioned by a adult demon ghost thing. S1E8 mentions the previous rape.
Anne With An E (TV Show)
S1E2: a man approaches the protagonist in a train station while she is unaccompanied and tries to deceive her into leaving with him - it is unclear what his intentions are. When she realises that he is lying and escapes he is seen approaching two young boys with the same lie. S1E3: the protagonist discovers that one of her 16-year-old schoolmates is engaged in an illicit relationship with their schoolteacher. The protagonist describes overhearing a rape, although she describes this in coded/euphemistic terms. S1E5: the schoolteacher is seen to continue his advances towards the 16-year-old girl he has been engaged in an illicit relationship with. S2E5: a group of boys assault girls by lifting their skirts behind their back (5:50). A girl has a flashback where another girl corners her, pulls her hair, licks and kisses her face. We then see the effect on the girl, and it is insinuated that it happened often. S3E6: a boy tries to pressure a girl into having sex with him. She pushes him off after he touched her breast. Later, the boy spreads rumors about sleeping with her, causing people to look down on her.
In versions that include the section “Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis, and Development,” the author discusses how child marriage often arises out of endogamy requirements within castes.
An adult man sexually harasses a teenager and attempts to coerce her into having sex with him. Her classmates spread rumours that she is a prostitute following this incident.
Another Life (TV Show)
Season 1: the main character orders an AI that appears to be sentient to change into her husband. This AI believes they are in love with the main character. The main character then has sex with this character. The impact of this scene is that a white female who is the superior officer of a male subordinate played by an actor of color is raping him. The male AI character is traumatized by this experience.
Another Period (TV Show)
A woman drugs another, unsuspecting woman (01:37:45). It is heavily implied that the aggressor molests the drugged woman as the victim is immobile on the bed they are sharing. There is very obvious non-consensual touching and groping. There is a side storyline about child pornagraphy as well as constant jokes about brothers having sex.
Antebellum (Movie)
The Black women in the film are presented to a group of white men as being able to "fulfill all their desires." The protagonist (a slave woman) is shown being raped by a civil war soldier. Later on in the film, a character keeps touching and flirting with an Uber driver. The driver seems visibly annoyed and tense.
Anthracite (TV Show)
It is repeatedly implied that a cult leader has sexual relationships with very young women, some of them probably minors. A man is raped on screen by a woman: the scene is long. In guise of a plot twist, it is revealed that a character was, in fact, killed by her brother because she was beginning to remember that he had abused her for years when she was young.
Antichrist (Movie)
There are a few scenes between the dysfunctional husband and wife in which they perform sexual acts on each other while the other is unconscious or having a panic attack. The woman masturbates the unconscious man.
Antidote (Movie)
This movie contains multiple instances of attempted assault. In one instance, a male character gropes a female character with the intent to rape her, but she escapes.
Antiporno (Movie)
In this movie, the line between imaginary and real is blurred, making any existing consent very dubious.
The movie is a speculative film about a company in the near future that sells viruses contracted by specific celebrities to the public. For several characters, the act of injecting these viruses and the discourse around it feel incredibly sexually charged and to have a lot of metaphorical parallels to sex. About halfway through the movie, someone forcibly injects the protagonist with a virus, in a tone reminiscent of rape.
Antlers (Movie)
There is a brief mention of child sex abuse during a teacher’s flashback. A boy take a doll in the class and keep moving in a sexual way like he is having intercourse with it to tease and harrass another boy. The next scene shows the boy who was harrassed found the same doll in his bag. He turns around and see a the first boy who was mentioned doing a sexual gesture to him (09:12-10:04). It is discussed how two of the main characters were siblings who were abused (the girl sexually but the brother is implied to be as well) by their father for years. In one (non explicitly graphic) scene (PTSD flashback), the daughter says things like: "Stop that, dad” or “You’re hurting me”.
Antonia (Movie)
The father of a developmentally disabled woman tries to get local men to marry her by showing her off at a bar, slapping her on the behind and fondling her breasts for others to see. Later on, there is a scene of her being raped by her brother. One of the protagonists intervenes on the victim's behalf, and the rapist is shamed into leaving the community. The rapist later returns and rapes a teenage girl.
There are flashbacks of a young boy (about 10) being sexually abused by three women.
Aoki Hono (Movie)
Apartment 407 (Movie)
The whole film is about a woman who is kidnapped and used as a sex slave. It is based on a true story.
Apartment 7A (Movie)
Around the 29 minute mark, the protagonist is seemingly drugged, and tied up by the man she was with. A jeweled demon is shown creeping up onto her while she it tied up, although not shown, it is heavily implied that she is raped by the demon. The rape is a central theme to the second half of this movie. It is revisited several times and there is non-consensual touching as well.
Apocalypto (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, a long scene shows a tribe attacking a village, with implied rapes and uses of prisoners as sex slaves.
Apokawixa (Movie)
The Apology (Movie)
The plot revolves around an uncle raping and murdering his niece and graphically describing it. No assault is ever shown visually.
The show is set in ancient China and a large exploration of it is the treatment and expectations of being female set in the era. This includes trafficking, kidnapping, concubines (including those that are underage), and the exploration of the likelihood at being assaulted. That said the show does not romanticize or fetishize this instead seems set to explore just how women suffered. S1E1: the main character is kidnapped by men and sold to work for forced labor at a palace. S1E3: a concubine escapes a marriage she did not want. There is a brief discussion between female characters about how trapped they feel in the situations they live in as women. S1E5: Aafemale character explains to a male character that she uses cosmetics to hide her appearance because she is afraid and aware of the likelihood of being sexually assaulted . This scene is done very respectfully with the male character being visibility distraught, asking her gently about her experience, and being angry that those that treated her to feel this way were not punished. S1E6: there is a discussion about women and girls becoming concubines and having children when they were underage. One character in particular is discussed to have been sexually abused by the emperor and had a child around the age of 9: the main character is disturbed by learning this. S1E15: a man describing a woman he was once infatuated with casually mentions that he seriously considered sexually assaulting her on multiple occasions. S2E7: a man who is a known pedophile preys on a young boy. His mother protects him before anything happens and the man leaves. S2E8: there is discussion on a previous emperor preying and abusing numerous young girls, including one who had to be cut open to give birth because she became pregnant at age 10. S2E9: the entire episode is about a woman who was the victim of child sexual abuse by a previous emperor. It touches on her parents selling her as a political offering because she had her period early, having to give birth as a child, and other young girls also being abused by this man. Later in the episode, it is shown she later rapes this man as an adult in revenge and hoping he had never touch another child. The episode has no explicit rape, but there are scenes of the emperor putting his hand on young girl's shoulders, and the woman over him in bed as an adult just before she rapes him in revenge.
A gang rape scene is shown and referenced throughout.
Apple Tree Yard (TV Show)
This show contains a long and intense on-screen rape scene, as well as flashbacks to the assault throughout the following episodes. The rape is discussed repeatedly and in court. When it is recounted, the camera often focuses on portraying the survivor's distress and horror, both during the rape as well as when recounting the assault. In one court scene, the survivor is subjected to victim blaming (for being familiar with the rapist and being intoxicated at the time of the assault), and other cruel interrogation tactics are used against her, forcing her to supply extensive details of the attack. Other social interactions are understanding and the survivor's acquaintances treat the matter very sensitively.
Early in the movie, the male protagonist's sister enters in the bathroom while he is using the toilets, despite his protest. She briefly looks at his genitals and he tells her to stop. About 20 minutes into the movie, there is an abrupt cut to a scene with an attempted rape scene playing on a television set. We see a man assaulting a woman who screams 'rape': he eventually stops.
The protagonist rapes his wife as a punishment for her wanting to feel more passion in their love life, after he tells her he does not feel attractive to her anymore.
S1E16: a man mentions that he is obligated to tell the people on the boat he is working that he is a registered sex offender. S4E5: the whole episode is based on a man getting repeatedly raped by a dog. It is discussed throughout and no one helps him to stop it, instead just watching it happen. S7E12: a man asks if he can take another characters girlfriend into the woods and rape her before killing her.
The main character's mother was blackmailed with the death of her son and partner into a marriage (and a child).
Archer (TV Show)
In several episodes, it is implied that male characters have been sexually assaulted or raped while unconscious.
A character runs away as she processes her trauma of being raped by her cousin. This graphic novel handles this with care: no rape scenes are showed/drawn directly just her feelings throughout, which can be triggering to some.
The plot revolves around a trial regarding torture being covered up by the government, including discussion and testimony from rape victims.
A serial killer who rapes and tortures his victims is a major player in the story, and he mentions how his father sexually abused him as a child. He later rapes and murders another character's wife and young daughter and tries to claim that the child made sexual advances. Another character implies a sexual attraction to young girls. Allusions to the movie Psycho and insinuations of incestuous mother-son relationships are included throughout, though nothing of the sort is directly discussed or depicted.
Towards the end of the film, all the women of a village get captured by an army of skeletons. Several of them are shown with their trops ripped off: their kidnappers forcefully kiss them. It is implied that they are raped and transformed into demons.
Army Wives (TV Show)
S2E13: the episode features a stalker.
A man rips his girlfriend's shirt whilst trying to get her to take it off. She storms out of the room. A woman makes inappropriate comments about her teenage step-daughter. A demon goat holds down a woman whilst another man is about to perform oral sex on her. It is implied that she is raped off-screen.
A teenage boy is sexually abused by an older woman, and forced to have sex with her. An elementary school aged girl (secondary character) has already arranged to be a nobleman's concubine when she comes of age. She is unhappily resigned to this. Society is structured such that this arrangement is the only way she can access the medical care she needs to survive. Season 2: a young girl is a concubine of the high priest, and when she starts to serve him, she thinks that her job is to seduce men. Child sex abuse is mentioned. The head priest asks an adult man if a young girl is his lover (which is not the case). S2E7: it is mentioned that a female gray robe priestess was raped by a blue robe priest and that is why she is afraid of men. S3E5: a young girl is asked if she has ever received a gift from a man when she did not know how to receive a necklace. She later blushes after an adult man says that he will saver her. Another young girl is told that someone who will visit her will "like young children". She asks herself if she can become his mistress in order to leave the cathedral.
Ash and Bone (Movie)
After capturing a family, the female kidnapper rapes the husband. It is implied through conversation that the kidnappers have also raped other people that they have captured, and that the siblings have had sex with each other.
The titular school girls are drugged and gang-raped on screen: this leads to one of them committing suicide. The other three are later forced into sex slavery, but manage to escape. A man also asks the girls to kill the man who is implied to have raped and killed his young daughter.
Ass Backwards (Movie)
S1E4: a group of men harass and threaten a woman. An alien stops them and locks them in their car. A female teacher kisses a middle school boy. Later, the same teacher is harassed. A woman is harassed on the street. The implied rape of a teacher is treated as a joke. Repeated child sex abuse in the form of kissing and touching by a teacher. Thugs plan and kidnap young female students and discuss plans to have a 'photoshoot' with them.
Attempted rape between ~ 1:19:00 and 1:24:00.
Assassin's Creed II (Video Game)
Sequence 1 (memory 10): a woman is heavily implied to have been raped by guards. Much of the conversation around her character for the remainder of the game is about her fragile mental state due to trauma from the event.
A female side character is raped off-screen. Later, the male protagonist's uncle steals his body to go and sleep with his wife. This is treated quite confusingly by the narrative.
When one female character is in an ambulance, two men joke about raping her and one gets on top of her and tries to strangle her. The driver also asks when its his turn. She beats them all up and escapes.
A man is raped by a woman, who holds power over his ability to have a child ((01:08:29-01:12:25). She is in a position of power. He repeatedly says no and tries to get her off, she slaps him when he refuses. No characters within the film acknowledge the fact that a rape was committed and they actively blame the survivor (he is described at many points as having cheated on his partner).
In the second part of the movie, the protagonist approaches a young woman to ask if he can paint her (a scene which is also the first of the movie, as a flash forward). He firstly touches her to show her how to pose and she protests. It is then implied (off-screen) that he raped her: when detained, a priest later asks him if he ever molested children before (which he answers negatively). A side character (a former soldier) says that all officers are murderers and rapists.
Athlete A (Movie)
This documentary discusses the abuse USA Gymnastic tried to cover up regarding doctor Larry Nassar. There are discussions of grooming, sexual harassment and sexual assault throughout.
Atiye (TV Show)
S1E5, 31:21-33:11: the protagonist has flashbacks to her boyfriend raping her while she was drunk in college (while she kept begging him top stop).
Atonement (Movie)
A 15-year-old girl is raped by an adult who is never caught or punished for his crime (42:00-42:45).
Atroz (Movie)
One hour into the movie, a voiceover describes that the tomatoes are "pillaging and raping" and we hear a woman scream.
Attack On Titan (TV Show)
The series contains a child sex trafficking and several scenes of sexual harassement. One of the main characters gets molested in season 3 and season 4 features a young child being forced to marry and procreate for the king of her village.
In the beginning of the movie, the main female protagonist is followed and harassed by a gang of young criminals. Some of them go to her farm at night and touch her without her consent. She flees. Later, she accepts to be groped by the leader of the gang in order to retrieve her donkey. She cries and tries to flee, but he catches her again and rapes her off-screen. She then engages in an abusive relationship with him. Later on, the girl runs away from her abusive boyfriend to an old man and asks for shelter against sex: he accepts (we see him hugging her and then it cuts to her, dressing up the morning after). Near the end of the film, the girl breaks up with her boyfriend. He and his gang strip and beat her, leaving her traumatised.
In a flashback, we see a ballet teacher inappropriately touching his very young female student and burning the inside of her thigh with a stick of incense. Due to the 'unreliable narrator' nature of the film, the reality of the victim's trauma is reapeatdely questioned. It is also noteworthy that the premise of the film is a group of casting directors holding a fake auditions for a nonexistent role that serves the purpose of one of the men choosing his future bride. A ballet teacher masturbates in the same room as his practising seven year old pupil.
The documentary is about a teenage girl being sexually assaulted, so sexual themes are discussed heavily.
A home-movie-style pseudo snuff movie, following three people torturing, murdering, raping and sexually assaulting people. Two of the main protagonists (siblings) are in a relationship.
A home-movie-style pseudo snuff movie, following three people torturing, mudering, raping and sexually assaulting people. It also includes sexual self mutilation, necrophilia and pedophilia.
A home-movie-style pseudo snuff movie, following three people torturing, mudering, raping and sexually assaulting people.
Aurora (2018) (Movie)
After sharing a few drinks, a man and a woman goes to the latter's hotel room. After the woman goes to the bathroom, she returned to the man almost naked and asking her to "punish" him with a whip. She tries to flee but he grabs her several times. After a brief relief (during which he is crying on the floor), he beats her unconscious and presumably rapes her. However, in one of the last scenes of the film, it is revealed that he did not, because other men intervened and killed him.
Austenland (Movie)
Avenged (Movie)
A woman is raped: this is not shown in graphic detail but the man's behind is shown. The rapist talks at length about the assault.
The Predalien orally rapes a pregnant woman in labor on screen.
A man violently attacks a woman, attempting to rape her. She struggles during this, and is eventually knocked unconscious. He begins to attempt to rape her again but is stopped (1:19:04-1:20:48).
Chapter 8: a teenage girl is trafficked to a group of male vampires. Both them and the girl make references to having sex but nothing happens.
It is implied via flashbacks that a man raped his sister-in-law: there is a very brief scene early in the movie, and a more long one just before the end of the film. In this latter scene, the victim also tries to have sex with her future husband (her cousin) just before their wedding, against his will. There are several non-consensual grabbing, touching, etc., throughout the movie.
Awoken (Movie)
The movie opens with a boy laying crying in his bed and a man doing up his pants. It is clear he had just been sexually abused, and that it was not the first time. At 01:12:00, the boy (now a grown man) tells the protagonist his backstory, which includes mentioning his sexual abuse.
Ayakashi (TV Show)
There is an attempted rape scene on screen. A pair of siblings are in love with each other. S1E12: a woman is kidnapped, captured and raped off screen. She is also being abused and that is shown on screen. A father kisses his son's bride against her consent.
B4 (2012) (Movie)
This movie is about how a woman was coerced into having sex with someone else, because her boyfriend wanted to have sex with another woman
Bab El Hadid (Movie)
This movie is about a sexually frustrated man who develops an obsession with a woman: he eventually tries to kill her but kills another woman instead. Early in the film, the man hides in the woman's room and tries to sexually assault her: she screams and the man escapes when other people are alarmed. He later tries to convince her to marry him. The woman is depicted as making fun of him and arousing him: she is beaten by her fiance. Throughout the film, women are catcalled, followed, spied on, etc.
Baby (TV Show)
The protagonists are two teenage girls engaged in prostitution, and there are multiple sex scenes between them and adult men.
Baby Blood (Movie)
Baby Boy (Movie)
Baby Face (Movie)
The lead character speaks of her childhood abuse, strongly implying incest at the hands of her father, who then forced her into prostitution as a teenager. There are also scenes of sexual harassment.
Early on in the film, it is implied a woman is sold into sexual slavery. There are scenes in which characters exploit a child perceived to have supernatural gifts for relics, that while not sexually abusive may still be upsetting. There is a gang-rape sequence towards the end which results in the victim's death. While only the early moments of the rape are depicted, and the rest takes place both in shadows behind a curtain and off-screen, the scene may have potential to cause severe distress.
Baby Raindeer (TV Show)
The premise is about a male protagonist being stalked by a female stalker, who sexually assaults him in S1E2. The show also goes into his past trauma of extreme sexual abuse throughout his life. S1E4: this episode has rape and sexual assault scenes and and off screen throughout.
Baby Reindeer (TV Show)
The show is about an adult female stalker stalking a male protagonist. She gets sexually aggressive for the first time in S1E2 (24:56): she makes unwanted sexual advances to him and touches him without consent. It is very blatantly non-consensual, but is played seriously. A scene features grooming by a mentor and a large age gap between mentor (55) and victim (mid 20s): inappropriate touching and sexual assault. S1E4: this episode explains the main character’s hesitation in reporting his stalker by explaining how he was raped in the past. A man he idolized grooms him by promising him success in his career and giving him drugs. There are several scenes in this episode of the main character being fingered, groped, kissed, unclothed, and penetrated non-consensually while subdued by drugs. The episode also shows the aftermath/trauma of the rape—including sexually risky behaviour in which the main character puts himself at risk of being raped a second time.
The Baby (TV) (TV Show)
S1E5: a woman is forced into sex by her husband. A woman is kidnapped so she cannot have an abortion and is forced to have her husband's child.
Throughout 3/4 of the movie, sexual harassment (verbal and physical) is almost constant. Various characters (men and women) kiss, fondle, cat-call or grab other characters (men and women) without their consent, often for laughs. The first 30 minutes of the film depicts a party/orgy, where it is said that female teenagers are at the disposal of men. We see one of them performing sexual acts with a naked older man (peeing on him and then sitting on him): we see her later having overdosed in the arms of the man. The men responsible for the party manage to have her escorted out without anyone seeing, and brought to an hospital. During the party, many intoxicated characters have sex in public: one brief shot shows a man having an object introduced rather brutally in his anus. Later, during a reception, the main female character mentions that the hosts have sex between cousins. Earlier, she explains that a whole sport team lost a bet and has to be her 'slaves' for the night. In the last part of the film, characters go to an underground "party" in the sewer, where people are held (presumably sexual) slaves: BDSM practices and rapes are shown on-screen.
Babylon Berlin (TV Show)
A woman if frequently cat-called throughout the series. The show contains a gang-rape scene. S2E4: a man forces another man to perform oral sex on him after beating him with a metal rod.
An adult man grabs a teenage girl and tries to silence her, implying that he plans to assault her. He stops her from being able to escape by holding her on a bench. He is stopped by the main male character, then he attempts to attack them saying he will "gut them like a fish". He is interrupted by Sonia, who subsequently says "Silence, rapist".
Marty's young mother is attracted to her own future son without realising they are related. Off-screen, she removes his trousers while he is unconscious and makes an open sexual advance. She later kisses him. Marty's father is shown to have spied on his future wife undressing without her knowledge. In another scene, a teenage boy attempts to force sex on a teenage girl in a car before she is rescued.
Bacurau (Movie)
A sex worker is forced to do a job without her consent, despite the opposition of other characters. She comes back really disturbed and beaten. Worthy of note: one antagonist mentions that after his divorce, he went to kill his ex-wife, but she moved out of town.
The Bad Batch (Movie)
A young girl is groomed to be one of the wives of a cult leader. She is saved before the cult leader does anything to her. Worthy of note: there is a scene where a character frantically and tearfully pleas that she "can't do it again" as a man slowly approaches her. The "it" that she is referring to is not rape, but the framing of this scene could still be triggering as it mimics how someone would react if they were trying to prevent themselves from being raped.
Bad Boy Bubby (Movie)
The main character and his mother have sex on screen multiple times. There is also a lot of animal abuse.
Bad Fish (Movie)
After trying to get away from a woman who has been pursuing him, a man is drugged so he is unable to move but is still conscious, and she rapes him with the purpose of getting pregnant. A few scenes later he is shown restrained in a chair and likely drugged, as she rapes him again. The main character is drugged and raped by mermaids by the end of the film, who then sever his legs to keep him prisoner and continue to rape him.
Bad Girls (Movie)
Outlaws take turns raping a female hostage. A man forces a woman to change clothes in fron of him. A man beats a woman with a whip off-screen.
Bad Hair (Movie)
The protagonist's landlord attempts to rape her. She is able to fight him off. The next day, another tenant in her building comments that the landlord is a rapist.
A woman is raped on-screen: while the audience only sees fragmentary glimpses of what is happening, it is still fairly graphic. The rape becomes a major plot point for the rest of the film, and is discussed (including graphic details) and referenced many times. A man uses his position of authority to force two underage girls to perform sex acts while he masturbates.
One of the protagonists is coerced into having sex with a man in exchange for his help to get her and her father passage to the United States. He then uses the fact that she had sex with him to control her in other ways, including forcing her to become engaged to him. Another character describes his experience of being tortured. One of the torture methods was anal rape with an object. Worthy of note: there are many detailed scenes of domestic violence of a daughter at the hands of her father throughout the book.
Bad Seeds (Movie)
This film contains major amounts of physical child abuse, animal abuse, sexual harassment against teenagers by adult men, self harm, and teenage drug abuse.
A character is the leader of a pedophilic cult. Nothing is explicitly shown, but rather heavily implied.
Bad Trip (Movie)
The main character is shown having on screen sex with a gorilla in an enclosure: the rape is graphic. It is staged and part of a hidden camera prank and played for laughs.
Badlands (Movie)
A 25 year old man and a 15 year old girl are shown kissing (about 20 minutes into the movie): it is implied that he rapes her.
Bag of Bones (TV Show)
A woman is assaulted on screen (about 50 minutes into the movie).
Baise Moi (Movie)
Bakemonogatari (TV Show)
One character's biological mother is deep into a fanatical cult. One of the adult men in said cult convinces her unstable mother to let him "have her," and she is almost raped as a child. There is a lot of incest via the main character having a fetish toothbrush scene with his younger biological sister where they are caught last minute before the MC tries to fondle said sister's breasts on his bed. The other sister he kisses on the lips and strips her naked to, "check for a wound." There is a little girl the MC repeatedly gropes multiple times. He also becomes the boyfriend of another character, meaning each time he does these things he is cheating on her. Aside from his bio sister, 95% of the girls are uncomfortable with him groping them especially the little girl. There is also a lesbian underclassman where he ogles her privates (camera pans up close) because she wears bike shorts with no underwear underneath.
A female character is captured, bound and forcibly impregnated. This is a major plot point in the series, and there is later discussion regarding the child. In another episode, women are kidnapped with the intention of impregnating them but are saved before this can happen.
Ballerina (Movie)
The rape scene shows a man groping a woman and unziping her jeans. The rest is implied through a piece of clothing left behind, bruises, etc.
Balthazar (TV Show)
The above-mentioned scenes occur in episodes 2 and 5 of season 1.
Banana Fish (TV Show)
One of the main characters has extensive sexual trauma and it is a part of the storyline. Two huge plot points of the show are a child sex trafficking ring and rape which are both brought up in most episodes. Videos and pictures of child abuse are shown (not graphically) or discussed. There are other things that may be distressing to viewers such as frequent sexual harassment and forced prostitution, as well as incestuous flirting/suggestive hinting between siblings. S1E2: a video is played during a police interrogation of an adult man raping a young boy. A 17 year old boy receives sexual comments from other men in prison. S1E3: a man finds a 17 year old boy naked and tied up after being raped. S1E4: a character being held hostage is told he will be drugged and raped. S1E6: it is discussed that the main character was raped as a young boy (flashback is shown, but no rape occurs on-screen). S1E7: one of the teenaged male main characters briefly catcalls a woman in the street. The woman does not engage/respond. S1E8: a woman is raped off-screen. This is mentioned later. The rapist also briefly caresses a teenage boy's crotch. A man flirts with his 16 year old half-brother. S1E9: a 16 year old boy is sold by his half-brothers to an older man. A scene shows them and another boy tied to a bed half naked. The man soon leaves the room out of urgency. S1E11: a 17 year old boy vents to another teenage boy about his past sexual abuse as a young boy and breaks down crying, the other teen comforts him. S1E16: an 18 year old boy disguises as a woman and and gets sexually harassed by a man. The scene is brief and is played for laugh. S1E17: an 18 year old pretends to be 15 so he can prostitute himself and get information from a pedophilic man. They are seen in a bed together but the boy stops the man before anything happens. S1E19: an 18 year old boy gets a mental breakdown after his abuser announced that he is legally adopting him as his son and tells him of how much he suffers in the hand of many men. S1E21: this episode is about an investigation of a child sex ring. Two characters converse about being sexually harassed in a gay bar. A brief flashback shows a young boy sexually abused. S1E22: a man beats up and rape an 18 year old boy off-screen. The boy visibly struggles after the experience. A woman briefly speak up about her rape to the boy later. S1E23: in a flashback, a 10 year old girl is made a concubine to an older man, said that she gave birth at 15. Years later, she is raped and killed by her half-sons off-screen.
00:00:37-00:02:07: A priest rapes a woman. This is first heard by the viewer and then shown on-screen.
Banshee (TV Show)
Season 1: almost every episode features sex between a teenager and an almost 40 year-old man. S1E1: sexual harassment by a teacher of a child is mentioned. An incest joke is made. S1E3: the episode depicts a very violent rape scene. The scene starts off with consensual sex that escalates. S1E5: a woman is catcalled by a group of men. Later, she is assaulted and is nearly raped before the man is stopped. S1E6: a prisoner keeps other men as his sex slaves. He forces a character to give him head and 'ask for it' but a fight ensues and prevents it from occuring. S4E6: a female character is raped on her own bed on-screen.
Barabbas (Movie)
During one of the first scenes of the movie, the main protagonist rapes his ex-wife/girlfriend off-screen after she repeatedly rebuffed him. Around 45 minutes into the movie, rapes committed by Roman soldiers are mentioned.
Barbara (Movie)
The titular character, a woman under police surveillance, is subjected twice to a body search (naked), the first time off-screen, and the second time on-screen (after pleading a police agent not to be). A side character (an underage girl doing forced labour) is said to be pregnant: it is implied that she was raped. This is confirmed in the final sequence of the movie, when the protagonist sees blood between the girl's thighs.
The Barbarian (Movie)
The female lead is kidnapped, tortured, and raped off-screen.
The movie is about two strangers (man and woman) stuck at an Airbnb: the woman is wary of the man but he does not assault her. The film's antagonist is a feral woman who is a product of incest. Her father was a serial rapist who taped his crimes. We see the labels of many (1:25:17-1:25:39) with names and some descriptions of the victims, such as "Wouldn't Stop Crying' or "Puker". It is also told that he would force his victims to carry pregnancies to term and do the same to those children. There is a reaction shot of the protagonist watching one of the rape tapes and the vocal ending of one tape is heard (a woman screaming and crying), with rhythmic sounds of penetration (1:26:13-1:26:16). A main protagonist is accused of rape by an actor on one of his projects. This is discussed repeatedly. When asked what happened by a friend, he admits to coercing her into sex after she refused his advances but tries to wave it off. He later calls this woman and drunkenly apologizes. This same protagonist is forcibly breastfed by the antagonist. Another protagonist is made out to be a potential predator at first, but is later revealed not to be. He at one point mentions waiting for a woman to get out of the shower to pour her a drink because he did not want her thinking he had drugged it. A woman forcibly breastfeeds people she took as hostages. A hidden room is found that contains a mattress, a video camera, and a bucket. There is a bloody handprint on the wall.
An evil king gives women he captured to his people: the women are seen screaming and being pushed into a hut by a bunch of men (16:10-16:20). The queen of a peaceful group of wanderers is captured by an evil king who forces her to be part of his harem. She is kept in a cage and while no sex is shown, it can be assumed that he probably assaulted her over the years. One of the two protagonists gets a bit handsy with a sleeping woman in the evil king's harem: his brother pulls him away and they put a blanket over her (50:25). Later in the scene, the harem women awaken and excitedly jump on the barbarians to have sex. One of the two men says "no" at first because they are on a mission, but then changes to "yes" after all the women pile onto him.
Barbarians (TV Show)
A man attempts to sexually assault the female main character, who then attacks him and fights him off.
The first few pages of the book are a nightmare of the female character about a past rape. She wakes up just before clothes come off, and it begins in earnest. However, before she wakes, she is dragged by her hair to a bed and the implication is strong.
Barracuda Queens (TV Show)
S1E3: one of the main characters (17 year old) is raped at a party. The scene only shows the beginning of the assault. A man keeps groping the teenager maid.
This film contains vivid verbal depictions of child sexual abuse and threats of rape towards the main character throughout.
The male protagonist forced himself on a woman while she clearly says "no". The movie seems to dismiss it as "rough sex".
Basket Case (Movie)
A sport coach tries to pay his student for sex: the student rejects and hits him (00:45:10-00:47:07). A teenage drug addict gets paid by a much older man for sex (01:23:19-01:25:08). Prison rapes are briefly mentioned in a dialogue at the end of the movie.
Baskin (Movie)
Throughout the film, women are kept in cages and used as sex slaves by a cult/paranormal beings. They are shown in glimpses, as well as in drawings, and are referenced on multiple occasions. In one scene, a man is forced to have sex with one of these slaves against his own will, and under threat of death. He is clearly in emotional distress.
A man molests his 9- or 10-year-old stepdaughter in the car. It is implied that he does this repeatedly throughout the course of the film, culminating in a violent and graphic rape scene.
Bates Motel (TV Show)
S1E1: a character is graphically raped on-screen after being handcuffed by an angry man (22:30-25:28). S1E2: two characters discuss how four women were kept/sold as sex slaves (32:33-33:32). Two teenagers searching for one of their graves is a plot point for the rest of the episode. This sub-plot continues throughout the season. S1E3: from this episode onwards, a character is tacitly blackmailed/coerced into a sexual relationship. S1E10: a character discusses being raped by her older brother when she was a child. In the same episode, a teenage boy is coerced into sex with his high school teacher. References to sexual assault, incest, sex slavery and violence against women occur throughout the series.
The first chapter features a scene where a character is trying to murder one of the protagonists (protagonist 1) while both are naked and in a private bath house room in a way that reads reminiscent of rape, even though there is not any. In protagonist 1's backstory, we find out that he was once in an abusive relationship where his partner at the time attempted to rape him. Protagonist 1 escaped the same night as the attempt. He hitchhiked, and the driver who took him where he wanted to go demanded that protagonist 1 show him his genitals. Protagonist 1's abuser kept trying to contact him for years, eventually showing up in the town where the former lives and inviting him out for coffee. In the climax of the book, the abuser shows up in the protagonists' social circle with a different name, and only Protagonist 1 knows who the abuser really is. It's a very tense set of scenes. Protagonist 1 often experiences other queer men leering at him and touching him without his consent. Protagonist 2, Protagonist 1's partner, is very controlling. We find out over the course of the book that he monitors Protagonist 1's finances, location, and phone activity. Towards the end of the book, he wakes up Protagonist 1 in the middle of the night for sex. Protagonist 2's internal monologue indicates that he wasn't going to give Protagonist 1 a chance to say no and that he was using Protagonist 1's body to masturbate. An antagonist of the book reveals that he was sexually assaulted by adult men while a child, and that his foster mother facilitated these assaults.
A potential rape involving main male and female characters is implied.
There is a scene towards the end of the film where a father is forced to look at picture of his paralyzed assaulted daughter.
A man grabs a woman on the street and forces her into an alleyway: he pins her to a wall and puts his hand over her mouth. As he reaches down to undo clothing, he is stopped by another character (43:20-43:40).
It is heavily implied that the titular character is the product of the rape of Batman by a woman. An antagonist (who kidnaps children and keeps them in cages) hints that he was abused as a child.
The female characters endure (and have endured) lots of implicit, attempted sexual violence, though they all swiftly retaliate against their abusers.
Volume 3: graphic rape scene of one of the adult female characters. Volume 8: a teenage girl has sex with adult men, and it is implied that she was raped by her father as a young child.
Not long after the start of the film, a group of American soldiers gang-rapes a Japanese woman.
S1E3: a male prisoner attempts to rape a female officer. She bites his ear off. S2E5: female humans are captured by Cylons and forcibly impregnated in a 'baby farm.' S2E10: rape is used in the interrogation of a female Cylon prisoner by a group of human men. Assault is off-screen but the aftermath is on-screen and references are made to the attack. The sexual assault and attempted rape of another female Cylon are also shown on-screen. [This scene was cut out in the TV editing process, but the DVD edition has it restored]. S4E17: a male character is manipulated into sex with someone who appears to be his partner but is not. His partner is tied up and forced to watch this happened as a form of torture. Incest in the series is between Cylons, not humans.
A character's backstory is about her relationship with a Cylon prisoner: sexual abuse is strongly suggested and talked about.
A major character's backstory involves being indoctrinated into a cult; after being love-bombed, he is forced into a ritual that involves a forced orgy. This is shown in graphic detail both in a flashback scene and as a major part of the character's development.
Be More Chill (Movie)
A teenage boy is forcibly held down by a separate and sentient computer program in his brain, in order to allow a girl to attempt to touch him sexually.
A woman's clothes are changed and she is tied up and unconscious (27:00-30:00). The attacker makes comments that could imply he is going to do something worse than just that.
This book takes place during the U.S. Revolutionary War. The romantic leads are a Black woman who escaped from slavery and a Black man who is still enslaved but expects to be freed after the war. Towards the beginning of the book she fights off and kills a white man who chases and attempts to rape her. She makes several allusions to having been raped or sexually assaulted in the past by numerous men, including her former slave master.
Beans (Movie)
A girl is forced to engage in oral sex but fights and runs away before any actual act occurs. It is also implied that another underage girl is being molested by her father.
Chapter 8: a woman's ex breaks into her house and pins her against the wall. He kisses her neck and begins to tear her clothes off when he is stopped by her new boyfriend
The story follows the events leading up to the rape of a 15-year-old girl by a star junior hockey player, and the consequences for the victim, the players, their families, friends, and the community which has a long-standing reputation as a hockey town.
Beast (Movie)
Worthy of note: the movie contains a lot of violence against women (with numerous images of dead young women).
A woman running through the woods is knocked unconscious. The creature finds her, rips off her clothes and rapes her. The same thing happens again to another woman later in the movie.
Rape is mentioned several times, and a quick flash shows a woman being raped before a young boy shoots her in the head. A young boy is forced to please the an adult. It is strongly implied that others boy have to do it too.
The protagonist, a child, is forced to become a child soldier. The commander rapes him multiple times, and it is implied that he also rapes other boys in the group. There is a scene where the protagonist helps force a woman's legs open so that other soldiers can rape her. In another scene, the soldiers visit a brothel and make harassing comments and gestures towards the women there.
On multiple occasions throughout the show, a friend of the protagonist gets sexually harassed by her male colleagues because rumors has it that she is sexually active and does not like to wear a bra. They "accidently" spill something on her to see her chest, just plain stare at her chest multiple times and try to make advances. S1E2: a landlord abuses his power and lets himself in the house of the female protagonist at night. After brief conversation (as he is her secret crush) he suddenly jumps on her and tries to rape her. She manages to escape.
Becoming (Movie)
A woman's partner wants to have sex and gets aggressive after she says she does not feel well: she has to tell him no repeatedly and she pushes him off.
The protagonist tries to kiss and initiate sex with his love interest, who then literally "screams rape." A police officer character says that women bring rape on themselves by wearing skimpy clothing.
Several graphic scenes of on-screen rape. Implied child molestation.
The Beekeeper (Movie)
A woman has sex with a man in a room where another man, clearly uncomfortable, is also staying (she looks him in the eyes). The protagonist, an elder man, tries to engage sex with his wife when she is crying. He seems to completely ignore her distress, but eventually stops. Later, the male protagonist sexually assaults a much younger woman (the female protagonist), despite her protests (she keeps saying 'Not like this'): she escapes but immediately comes back to embrace him. Later, when drunk, she starts a sexual relationship with him but stops, as he is unresponsive. A few moments later, he engages sex while she repeatedly asks him to let her go: he presumably rapes her off-screen.
Beerfest (Movie)
This movie contains some sexually gratuitous comedy, like girls accidentally getting their shirts ripped off. There is also a scene where a man talks about when a group of men forcefully put a ping pong paddle up his bottom. The man is traumatized from it, but the scene is played for laughs.
One of the female teenagers in the film is cornered in a room and nearly raped.
The movie contains some flashbacks of a violent rape.
Beginning (Movie)
About 40 minutes into the movie, a man visits a woman who is alone at home, presumably to interrogate her. He progressively asks inappropriate sexual questions and ends up sexually assaulting her by forcing her hand into his pants. She seems visibly distressed during the whole long scene. There is a violent on-screen rape and attempted murder (1:07:30-1:13:55), followed by a scene where the survivor cleans herself (blood is seen between her legs). Later, he husband (ignoring the assault took place) begins touching her, but stops when she seems not to like it. Both assaults are discussed at 1:30:00 (with an audio recording of the first encounter being played), and the husband blames her wife for being raped. She seems very distressed (1:36:00).
This film is about a psychologically abusive relationship between a male star musician and a much younger man (involving an evident power imbalance). The latter, who lacked a father figure in his youth, is shown engaging in increasingly destructive behaviour as a result of this situation. Early in the film, as their relationship begins, the younger man is visibly uncomfortable (flinching when the older one comes next to him) and the older man does not care about this: after promising to stay away while sleeping in the same bed, he unpredictably engages in oral sex with the other man when he wakes up. After this, the younger man agrees to move in with the older one. The two men have a sexual relationship but the older one begins a legal process to adopt the younger one (with his consent): however, this does not come to fruition. The older man pushes his young lover into practices that he disapproves of (having multiple partners, going to a peep show, etc.)
At several points in the film, people use John Malkovich's body without his permission to have sex with people. At one point, one of the main characters pretends to be another while in Malkovich in order to have sex with someone without their knowledge. Worthy of note: in a fit of jealousy, the protagonist tackles his wife, threatens her with a handgun, and forces her to make a phone call. He then locks her in a cage, ties her hands, and puts tape over her mouth. Though the actions themselves are upsetting, they are presented as ridiculous and inappropriate, and the protagonist later faces consequences for his actions.
The main theme of the movie is the kidnapping of a seventeen-year-old girl, who is raped by her captor on-screen and off-screen. We also learn that she is sexually abused by her grandfather. All instances of sexual assault in this movie are quite graphic and are shown mulitple times via flashbacks, etc.
Worthy of note: a man takes a woman to bed who describes herself as being very drunk. It is unclear how drunk he is so it can be read as an unbalanced power dynamic.
There are several rape scenes, which, while cartoony, are graphic and violent.
Belle De Jour (Movie)
Mentions of human trafficking throughout the book, some of the girls noted to be teenagers. The female main character has several flashbacks to the time that she was kidnapped when she was 14 and was forced to witness other women being raped. The descriptions range from being semi-graphic to more detailed. The female main character is kidnapped again as an adult and the man attempts to rape her. She fights him off before he is able to.
There are mentions of human trafficking throughout the book. The main characters are fighting against and working to take down a rival mob family that runs the trafficking ring. The two main female characters are kidnapped and auctioned off as brides, but are able to escape before they're taken away by any of the men. A man attempts to rape his female cousin. He touches her and is able to get her underwear off before he is stopped and killed.
A main part of the story is the repeated past rape of the female main character's sister. It is described in detail several times and referred to throughout the book. She was also raped multiple times as a child/teenager by the man who they both believed to be her father. There is an attempted rape against the female main character. He gropes and threatens her but he is killed before anything further happens. There are other references in the book to human trafficking and non-graphic rapes that have happened in the past.
A prince attempts to rape the protagonist during an appointment. He grabs her by the wrists, bruises her cheek, and forces a kiss on her. When she tells him to stop, he calls her feisty. He tries to take off her clothes. He hints that he may have also assaulted the protagonist's sister. She is able to defend herself, almost killing him, until someone else intervenes. Authorities say that they will banish the prince, but the princess, his cousin, arranges for him to marry one of her ladies in waiting. It is likely, though not confirmed, that the princess would know that the prince tried to assault the protagonist.
Beloved (Movie)
The film contains racialized sexual assault, intense trauma post sexual assault, and chattel slavery era rape/dehumanization.
A rape scene is described in a particularly violent way: the book explores the complexity of violence and its effect on people as a theme.
Ben 10 (TV Show)
S3E13: the main male character is in the form of an alien dog and a female character casts a spell on him that makes all the animals in the vicinity want to ‘mate’ with him. He is every visibly scared and runs from the animals chasing him and climbs up a tree. He then accidentally switches back to his human form in which he is a 10 year old and the animals continue to approach him still wanting to ‘mate’ with him. The screen cuts to black and you see the male character covered in what looks like saliva from the animals licking him but could be interpreted as ejaculate but it heavily implies the animals did not let up and went on with what they wanted to do to him the scene is mostly played as a joke and is not addressed much after.
Benedetta (Movie)
A young woman recounts how her dad and brothers started raping her after her mother died. A woman touches another woman's crotch without her consent. She also sneaks peaks of the woman when she is nude. A woman is almost gang-raped until a man saves her, but then he proceeds to mutilate her breast. A woman is stripped naked, strapped to a table, and raped violently with a medievel sexual torture device as she screams.
There are multiple explicit references to a female character being repeatedly raped by villagers and threatened physical harm . A female character is raped on-screen: she describes how the rapist only "took her once", in defense for why she mourns his death. The main character immediately following has sex with her and is portrayed as a romantic act.
Worthy of note: the plot of the film centers around a man working on sound effects for a film which contains sexual violence.
This film contains violent rapes scenes.
Berserk (1997) (TV Show)
S1E1: a young girl is sexually harassed by a group of armored men, but it is mostly through heavy implication (04:51-06:28). There is a revenge right afterwards. S1E2: a man has a trauma nightmare that is later revealed to be due to a prior sexual assault he suffered as a child, but the aforementioned event is not shown (12:10-14:00). S1E11: a man reluctantly undresses a woman while she is unconscious, but it is strictly in the effort of saving her life (19:12-20:02). It is revealed that the female character fainted due to weakness caused by menstruation. S1E12: a woman is physically restrained by a man (while she is nude) for lashing out in a fit of anger, and she shouts in distress (04:29-04:48). A young girl is tackled and has her shirt slashed open by a much older man who intends to further sexually assault her (07:21-09:00). She gets revenge on him. An older man is holding several young boys captive. It is strongly implied that he sexually assaults them. One of the main characters has consensual intercourse with the same man for money. He feels violated afterwards. S1E13: a woman is pinned down and verbally threatened by men who intend to sexually assault her (19:46-21:20). S1E14: continuing the previous scene, the woman once again has her shirt torn open by one of her assaulters (00:55-01:23 + 02:42-03:28) . Cue more revenge. S1E19: an intimate scene occurs between a man and a 16-year-old girl. Though this was considered culturally appropriate in the world's setting, there is a moment where the girl initially does not consent to a kiss, but appears to consent to the rest of the encounter (18:50-19:38). S1E25: a woman is explicitly molested and raped while barely conscious (18:28-20:53).
Berserk (2016) (TV Show)
This serie contains a lot of sexual assault and rape-content. The rape of the female protagonist is shown in flashbacks. S1E1: a main character is raped as a child. This is a big part of his arc. S1E3: the protagonist's horse tries to rape a woman. S1E6: a woman almost gets gang raped. S1E7: a man tries to rape a woman, but gets saved by the protagonist. S1E14: a woman almost gets gang raped by bandits and by a possessed protagonist.
The film contains graphic and upsetting scenes of sexual violence.
The film contains an extremely graphic rape scene.
Sexual violence is a huge part of the plot: there are a lot of intense graphic rape scenes.
Bessie (Movie)
A woman is raped and then dragged down the stairs.
This short film depicts the tortures Íngrid Olderöck inflicted during the military dictatorship in Chile. In one scene, we see a woman naked and blindfolded, lying on the floor. The main character turns several musical devices on and then the main character's dog approaches the woman. The next scene is the body of this woman being pulled into a car trunk. The following scene is the main character having a sexual, graphic moment with her dog.
Better Call Saul (TV Show)
S1E1: three men are tried for a sexual offense involving a corps. CCTV footage is shown. S1E10: the titular character and a friend are implied to trick two women into sex (30:08-31:31). The protagonist is woken up by a woman realizing that he is not the man he pretended to be.
Chapter 16: attempted rape.
Better Than Us (TV Show)
The series contains several attempted sexual harassment scenes (notably in episodes 6 to 8), in which women refuse to be touched and quickly stop the situation. S1E6: a man approaches his ex wife in a sexual and quite offensive way but she pushes him away.
Between (TV Show)
S1E4: two people go hunting together. After a rape attempt, the assailant plays dead than makes another attempt when the victim checks on him. A third party intervenes.
A serial killer's crimes are discussed, and his rapes of young girls are described in detail.
S1E3: a character claims to be a self-taught 'expert' in sexual harassment law; the joke makes light of his ongoing problematic behaviour. S1E9: wireless webcams are attached to remote control cars and are used to look up a female character's skirt. S2E7: two characters spy on a house filled with models. They later visit the house under the pretense of being 'cable men'. S2E12: a woman is pressured to apologise to a man for pointing out his frequently predatory and misogynistic behaviour and language. S2E20: a woman enters a room full of men and everyone in the room stares at her. S3E23: a character has sex with someone who is obviously highly intoxicated. S4E4: a character reveals that she has found a hidden webcam in her teddy bear, placed there by one of the male protagonists. S4E16: a character is kissed unconsensually when he first meets up with his university's sponsor. He is coerced by his friends into having sex with her to get equipment for the physics department: he does not give consent and she coerces him to have sex with her. The man is slut-shamed three times after that. S4E22: a character drunkenly strips completely nude in public in an attempt at seduction, exposing himself to a woman. S6E11: a comment is made by one of the characters making light of the time that she passed out at a 'frat party' and woke up 'with more clothes on'. The implication is that nobody wanted to rape her because she was sexually undesirable. One of the main characters in particular repeatedly engages in lude and inappropriate acts directed at women. This is not only unchecked but often encouraged. There are numerous instances throughout the series where women are objectified by the four male protagonists. This varies from ogling from afar to making inappropriate and sexist comments.
Big Driver (Movie)
The main character is graphically raped and nearly killed on-screen, and is unable to report the incident after the fact for fear of being victim-blamed by the media (she is a famous author and it would become a major story). When she attempts to find the culprit, photos of her and other women being raped, taken by their assailant, are also shown.
The Big Hit (Movie)
A man attempts to rape a teenager, wearing a schoolgirl uniform: he overpowers her in the back of a limo, rips ger clothing, tells her she wants it and spouts racist vitriol. The victim is rescued, but is later pursued by her “rescuer”.
Big Little Lies (TV Show)
Abusive relationships are a major theme of the first season. The depictions of domestic violence vary in intensity throughout the seasons and occur in most episodes and rape is discussed and depicted in detail. S1E2: a character is raped on-screen following an altercation with her emotionally and physically abusive husband. S1E3: one woman grapples with the emotional implications of raising a son who was conceived when she was raped. This conflict is revealed partially through flashbacks to the rape itself.
Big Love (TV Show)
The show follows the life of a polygamist family that has close ties to a mormon cult. If all the wives of the main family are married by choice, there are many characters who are forced into marriages by their prophet. While most of the cult members "consent" it is a result of their upbringing in the cult. The main wife struggles with being in the polygamist marriage, and it is often suggested she agreed to it because she could no longer have children. Sex is frequently viewed as a measure of worth in the relationship. During the first few seasons the teenage son is in a relationship with an older teenage girl who pressures him into having sex, and he eventually does cave in. He goes through a period of feeling guilty and impure because of the loss of his virginity. There is a story line through S1-4 which involves sexual and romantic tension between the youngest wife, and the teenage son of another wife. This story line comes to a head in S3E6 when they see each other naked, and in S4E3 when they kiss. There is also a 16 year old girl who is engaged to the elderly prophet, and a scene vaguely impliying that they have sex. The same girl runs away from the cult in S2. There is a scene in S3 where she is hitchhiking with a truck driver who tells her to scoot closer to him. In S2 the 18 years old daughter dates a man who is 28 but it is treated as if it is normal. Because the daughter wont have sex with him, he sees other women. The daughter is given advice from one of the mothers to make herself more desirable around him so he won't leave her. She eventually gives in to having sex with him, but the two break up and she finds out that she is pregnant. The two get back together and eventually get married. In S2E9 a former coworker makes rude sexual comments about the youngest wife. One of the wives who is the daughter of the prophet grapples with her sense of agency, and it is revealed in S3E3 that she was forced into a marriage with a grown man at 16 by her own father. It is revealed that the two had sex and had a child together that the mother had to leave when she left the marriage. In S4 her mother is forced by her son to marry the same man. In S4E7-9 there is a storyline about a sudden abundance of children of incest. It is revealed in S4E9 that a man has been using in vitro fertilization to force women to carry children of incest. In S4E9 the wives are forced to publicly out themselves as part of their husband's plans, though they are all reluctant to. In S3 there is a storyline about the prophet being put on trial for forcing underage girls to get married. The prophet's team actively tries to prevent victims from standing trial. In S3E4 one of the victims is humiliated while standing trial and the prophet is declared not guilty. In S4 a character stalks a man and the two become a couple. In S5E3 it is revealed that one of the wives was only 16 when she married the husband.
Big Mouth (TV Show)
S1E8: a teenage boy and girl are lying in bed kissing. The teenage boy attempts to push the teenage girl's head towards his genitals, indicating that he would like her to perform oral sex. He does not stop doing this when she shows obvious resistance and continues to pressurise her until she verbally refuses and ends the interaction altogether. It is revealed that the boy involved has a history of attempting to pressure girls into performing oral sex on him. This scene opens up a wider conversation about consent during the course of the episode. In the same episode, another teenage boy and girl kiss one another, getting carried away so that their crotches accidentally touch. The teenage girl is ashamed of herself for being too forward, although the boy has no problem with what happened between them. The teenage girl's parents assume that the boy assaulted her. S3E10: one of the main characters gets groomed by one of her teachers during a school play.
The Big Ugly (Movie)
One of the main characters is revealed to drug women at bars and talks of how women put up a fight.
The main female character is harassed in the very beginning of the film by a few of the bikers. They cat call her, touch her (smack her on the behind), and follow her when she tries to leave the bar. Later, the same woman is dragged away by several men who intend to sexually assault her. She is ultimately rescued by other men. Later in the film, she discusses how she would have killed herself had anything happened to her.
Billy Jack (Movie)
A 13-year-old girl has sex with an older man: they are interrupted by the protagonist. A woman is raped on screen. A man uses a knife to cut off a woman's bra, exposing her.
A group of drunk soldiers attempt to rape a teenaged girl who they think is a teenaged boy (01:18:56-01:19:59). They remove her clothes and she escapes when they realize she is not a boy.
A man becomes aroused on stage and attempts to force himself onto his partner without her consent. A character described sexual abuse, he and his sister experienced from his father as a child.
Birds of Prey (Movie)
The movie contains lots of sexual harassment, violence with sexual undertones, general violence against all women and very specific violent threats centered around a young girl. A man forces a woman to dance on a table, then has her dress cut off to reveal her underclothes to a club full of people. It causes a main female character to cry and try to escape the room. A group of men attempt to abduct the extremely intoxicated main character with implied intent to sexually assault her: she is rescued.
A black man sexually harasses and attempts to rape a white woman.
Multiple rape jokes are made. The main character unconsentingly comes into contact with a species of worm that reproduces with the first DNA it comes into contact with. The main character refers to this as rape, as well as when supernatural/extraterrestrial beings filled all of his orifices with coffee grounds. Worthy of note: Every single female character immediately wants to have sex with the main character, or have sex with someone else for the pleasure of the main character.
Bit (2019) (Movie)
A character engages in survival sex work with adult men while she is a teenager. She is later hypnotised against her will to be a sexual partner for a male vampire, despite the fact that she is a lesbian. A different character pretends to be asleep to lure a would-be rapist. She, a vampire, bites and kills him. The female vampires often target rapists or those who make rape threats.
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. There is a content advisory in the beginning of issue 6 that reads “The following is a flashback issue, covering the events that led to Meiko Maki’s incarceration. It contains plot elements and images relating to sexual assault. We encourage you to evaluate your comfort level before deciding to continue. Bitch Planet’s main narrative resumes with issue 7 and does not recount the assault.” As a teenager, the character named above killed an adult man who was attempting to groom her.
Bite (Movie)
A woman is intoxicated or possibly drugged and then taken by a man back to his room, where he presumably rapes her. A 'friend' lets it happen and encourages it.
Bitten (TV Show)
Two key characters are rapists, which is often referred to. S1E1: this episode eludes to rape and shows sexual harassment. S1E4: this episode mentions women who have been raped and murdered. S1E5: this episode introduces a pedophile getting out of prison and who goes straight to a playground. A man mentions "ordering" a woman as a prostitute. S1E6: the pedophile torments the women he used to assault as a child. S1E8: this episode features castration. S1E10: the main character is confronted at her work by the pedophile who assaulted her as a child. A man mocks her be saying "she never once told me no". S1E11: a man talks about looking forward to forcing the main female character to be with him and have children with him. This episode mentions a rapist serial killer. S2E1: a man seduces a woman so he can distract her and hack a bank account at her work. S2E8: the main character's husband is possessed by another man who attacks her, trying to force sex. He kisses her roughly and forces her onto a table before she is able to get away. S2E9: a man seduces a woman to tie her up and then steal her body.
Chapters 4 and 12: mention of a man being a pedophile . Chapter 5: a man fears his partner could be gang raped as punishment against him. Chapter 6: mention that a man was born from rape. A club owner states that under his management they will no longer allow underage club performers.
Bitter Daisies (TV Show)
Season 1: a teenage girl is dragged from the street to a car by random guys, she manages to escape. Season 2: a child trafficking gang holds teenage girls and a little girl hostage in a basement. They take a girl away and the others hear her screams. In another scene, one of the girls is tied to a table and raped on a live show on the dark web while camera is in her face.
The manga's main premise is about a boy discovering that a girl in his school had been sexually abused by her stepfather. There is heavy exploration of themes of child sexual abuse, teenage pregnancy, abortion, and the effects of this on one's physical body and mental state. There is also an attempted rape from a man who is not her step father, but the boy saves her. The manga's handle of the topic matter is done respectfully with showing symptoms of abuse that are not usually explored and her not be sexualized by the boy or the narrative.
Black (2015) (Movie)
Long and graphic scene of a 15-year-old girl being raped by multiple men. This occurs about 2/3 of the way through the film, just after the girl's boyfriend leaves the abandoned church where they made love.
Black Bird (TV Show)
Detailed retellings of rape occur intermittently throughout the series (not necessarily graphic). Some of the victims are young girls.
Black Butler (TV Show)
S1E4: A child character is sexually propositioned by an adult man. The child is drugged, locked in a cage, and about to be sold on a black market before being rescued. The same episode includes a scene that seems to be implying sex between a child and an adult, but it's a fake-out; the scene is merely the adult putting the child in a corset. Both seasons of the anime heavily imply child sexual abuse and sex slavery in the backstories of the main characters. This is more graphically depicted in the latter half of Book of Circus through a series of flashbacks, and in Book of the Atlantic. In the manga, the main character, (who at the time is 10) is taken by a cult and gang raped: no nudity is seen, but it is obvious what is happening.
Black Butler II (TV Show)
Black Cake (TV Show)
S1E1: about 30-34 minutes in, a man breaks into the main character’s house (a minor) and touches her without her consent while threatening that if she is not ‘nice’ to him he will destroy her father’s property. About 35-37 minutes in, the father discusses forcing the daughter to marry the man who was harassing her. At 40 minutes in, they start wedding planning, S1E3: about 45 minutes in, a rape occurs on screen by main character’s employer. These scenes appear in the recap as well.
Black Cat (Movie)
Two women are raped and killed by samurai soldiers in the opening scene. Soon they reappear as vengeful ghosts who seduce and brutally murder the passing samurai during the rest of the movie. The antagonist kills women and then rapes them (off-screen).
It is heavily implied that a woman rapes her 10 year old son and we later find she becomes pregnant from it. In the 'Unrated Version', an additional scene heavily implies a sleeping woman is molested by the killer.
The main character's past sexual assault is mentioned throughout the movie, including her encountering her attacker. The main character walks in on a man attempting to have sex with an extremely drunk girl who is clearly unsure and shaking her head no, but stops the attack before it happens. The main character has flashbacks of her sexual assault in a dream near the beginning.
During one of the first scenes of the movie, the male protagonist sexually assaults his ex-wife (he tries to kiss her and ends up laying on top of her in a train station). A bit later, he also sexually assaults a female colleague at work, encouraged by his coworkers, who watch him trying to kiss her and ends up laying on top of her: they laugh without doing anything. Both times, the woman protests vehemently in vain. The protagonist stalks a woman throughout the film, despite her asking him to stop following her. At some point, he assaults her (laying on top of her and kissing her) and she reluctantly accepts to go on a date with him. Later on, he follows her again and pins her to a wall, but only to talk to her. Eventually, when he manages to get her alone in a Ferris Wheel, they have sex: it is ambiguous whether she consents or only accepts to avoid speaking to him. A man is shown fondling a prostitute he paid. A boss sexually harasses his female employee: one scene shows him fondling her while she is working, visibly distressed and unable to do anything against him. In the final part of the movie, the female protagonist explains that she was coerced into a sexual relationship with a man, whom she eventually killed.
It is revealed that in the past, an antagonist made a career of grooming and abusing young ladies (ages unclear, but implied to be older teens to young twenties). Few details are given and none of his victims are characterized or appear "on-screen." The grooming included hooking them in drugs and luring them into prostitution in an era when the legal system had no interest in listening to "fallen women." It is a plot point that the police knew for some time and could not make charges stick.
Black Lagoon (TV Show)
Underage twins (~10 years old) are in a traumatised state due to constant sexual abuse. These characters feature prominently in S2E1, S2E2, S2E3. S5E3: a woman recalls being raped by a police officer as a young girl. There is a brief but graphic flashback to the incident. Later in this episode, a young boy kisses a grown woman on the lips in a way which appears to have romantic/sexual overtones.
Black Lightning (TV Show)
There is a recurring location where it is well known women are kidnapped and forced into prostitution.
This film contains a short (non-graphic) attempted rape scene. This is overall a very sexual film with voyeurism.
Black Mirror (TV Show)
S1E1: character is coerced into publicly engaging in bestiality; this act is partially shown on-screen. S1E2: a character is given a drink called 'compliance,' which leads her to agree to be part of a sex ring. There is sexual harassment before she is pressured into going into the ring and taking off her shirt by two men and a woman, who also make other sexual comments. While she says 'yes' in the videos of her sexual encounters, which are distributed throughout the community, she is hesitant to do so, and it is clear that saying 'no' is not an option. S1E3: a husband makes a joke about having to pick up his daughter from 'the paedophile-babysitter'. This claim is not based on any evidence and is only said as a joke. S2E3: mention of paedophilia. S3E3: Discussion of child pornography, violations of the privacy of a teenage boy used for the purposes of coercion. A character is shown masturbating to child pornography (although nothing on his laptop is shown) and is later arrested. This character also interacts with (but does not assault) a child. S4E1: two women are forced to kiss a man several times. A third woman is tortured when she refuses to kiss someone. There is one suggestion of a main character forcing a woman into sex. S4E2: the woman coerced into doing porn by the judges of a talent show is referenced. S4E6: A man is shown spanking his girlfriend during sex, despite her repeated requests for him not to do so. In the context of the episode, it is made clear that he is doing this specifically to cause her pain, in order to utilise a device that turns her pain into his pleasure. S6E2: the main characters visits an underground torture chamber where victims of a serial killer were sexually assaulted, tortured, and killed years prior. Dildos appear on screen as one of the devices in the chamber. It is later revealed that one of the serial killer's partners in crime is the main character's mother. This string of killings and assaults is central to this episode's storyline. The main characters sing a song making jokes about the sexual assaults, rapes, and physical and mental tortures that people would suffer by a man in a sex dungeon. S6E3: a main character is bound, tied up, tortured, burned, and dismembered. Sexual violence is also implied. We see this happen from the character's POV. A man (a main character) tries to kiss and pursues a woman. Most interactions, physical and emotional, are consensual, but he continues to pursue her after she asks him to stop. It is revelead that he had been drawing pictures of her naked without her knowledge. He later murders her and her son. S6E4: a man attempts to take up skirt photos of a woman while callign her a 'slut' and a 'whore'. S6E5: a man (who is killed) is shown on camera in the moments before he sexually abuses his 8 year-old daughter (20:30-20:50). This is then mentioned multiple times. S7E2: a woman gets revenge on another woman for spreading a rumor that she gave her teacher a blowjob in high school. This was not true.
The antagonist, who kidnapped the protagonist (a boy), touches his hair and his face. but assures him that nothing will happen to him that he would not like. At several points, spirits in the movie talk to the protagonist about the antagonist's "favorite part" of a game called "naughty boy". It consists of him waiting at the top of his stairs without a shirt on and with a belt to beat the boys he kidnaps. It is heavily implied that he may be sexually molesting and/or raping the boys he kidnaps before he kills them by the spirits and by the game "naughty boy". The general consensus among viewers and movie reviewers has been that he is sexually molesting and/or assaulting his victims before he murders them, and he is implied to be a pedophile. This is all implied to be taking place off screen and is never shown, but it is implied that it happened to all the other victims who did not escape. Worthy of note: A man beats his daughter by whipping her bottom with a belt repeatedly. She is screaming and crying in pain. She threatens to break his liquor bottle if he does not stop. He threatens to beat her twice as hard if she drops it. She drops the bottle and he beats her again. After he is done beating her, he yells to her “no ice on that bottom young lady”.
Since this book covers the growth of online white supremacy movements in the 2000s and 2010s, it goes into detail about the rampant misogyny of those groups. In particular, the author covers instances of rape threats, rape apologism, and the tradwife movement. The author also briefly touches on the origin of the Qanon movement.
Black Ransom (Movie)
Black Robe (Movie)
Rape scene on-screen is followed by immediate repercussions for the rapist carried out by the victim. A woman engages in intercourse with a man who is keeping her prisoner in order to distract him and then kills him by hitting him over the head.
Black Rock (Movie)
S1E1: the aftermath of a cult leader raping a woman is shown, however, the context that it is nonconsensual is not discussed until S1E3. S1E2: when a young boy asks an older man if he has a lot of experience killing people, the man sarcastically replies that he brutally murders people and rapes the corpses of his victims, presumably to hush the boy. Later, a woman says she wants to inspect the protagonist (a robot/human hybrid), while she is visibly sexually aroused. The man calls her out on the indecent behavior, but she rebuts that she is simply interested in providing technological repairs. S1E3: a cult is revealed to keep several women captive as part of a ritual, which involves the cult leader raping each woman to see which one is worthy of reproducing. Another woman has an abusive romantic interest in the protagonist; she stalks the protagonist, insists that the protagonist only belongs to her, and later tells the protagonist that she wants to "kill and defile [her]". S1E4: a woman tells the protagonist she wants to "pleasure [herself] with [her] corpse". S1E5: the aforementioned cult abducts a young girl; at the very end of the episode, it is revealed that the cult leader has raped her. S1E6: the cult leader states he intends to make the young girl his bride. He forcibly re-dresses her in a wedding gown and plans to have her undergo non-consensual surgery for the specific purpose of bearing his children (she is rescued before that). In another scene, two major characters find the corpses of several women who were raped and killed by the cult. S1E9: in a backstory scene, it is revealed that a cult leader abducted a teenage girl and her mother. After forcing both to undergo unethical human experimentation, it is revealed that he forcibly separated them and groomed the teenager into becoming his sex slave while brainwashing her to believe he is her biological father (which is false). Later, the teenager apprehends her actual biological father who is trying to save her and chokes him: she accuses him of being a pervert when he does not resist her attacks (as he wants to avoid hurting his daughter), even though there is no actual sexual intent.
Black Sails (TV Show)
A sex worker is repeatedly gang-raped as a punishment and as part of her work. The scenes are incredibly graphic and despite getting revenge, it leaves her traumatised. After being raped, the sex worker endures the Madame of the brothel forcing boiling hot water into her privates through a large metal syringe in order to prevent her from becoming pregnant. A female pirate describes the day she was saved when her partner found her (aged 14) being beaten by her husband (likely past his 40s) in a pub. It is implied that she, as a young girl, was forced to marry him and have sex with him. There are also multiple scenes of domestic violence, manipulation during and through sex, unhealthy sexual relationships and severe homophobia. No adult/teenage relationship appears onscreen, but it is stated that two main male characters met their female love interests for the first time when they were 13. Worthy of note: S3E1: a line could be interpreted as implying that a main male character was sexually abused by his slave master as a child/young teen ("a visit from the taskmaster in the dead of night"): this is never referenced again.
A woman talks about being molested by her mother's boyfriend as a child. Her mother accuses her of lying.
Black Summer (TV Show)
S1E6: a man non-consensually touches a woman in a sexual manner while checking for weapons and later attempts to rape her.
Two significant secondary characters' husbands (now dead) used to be physically and sexually abusive. The narration shows flashbacks of the women desperately fleeing from domestic violence. The female main character is kidnapped by a group of men who mean to murder her. One of them attempts to rape her first, getting as far as starting to remove her clothing before she is able to fight back and escape. The scene is brief but vividly detailed, including her emotional distress.
A woman is heard screaming off screen and found naked after. She later gives birth to a creature's child.
The opening credits feature lots of fictional footage of girls lined up in trailers to imply the involvment of human trafficking. A man involved in this human trafficking touches the face of a woman: this is not explicitly sexual in nature, but she slaps his hand away and is upset by the contact. Shortly after, he moves to slap her and she cowers away, then she is punched in the face several times. One hour into the movie, widow soldiers are given forced hysterectomy: the procedure is described in details by the victim, in a comic manner played for laughs, but clearly from the point of view of a victim who has accepter her trauma and can not do anything about it.
Blackadder (TV Show)
S1E6: rape on-screen.
The Blacklist (TV Show)
Season 1: a woman finds out she has been married to a spy for her whole marriage. S1E12: brief mention of child molestation in church. S2E1: the past child sex abuse of a character is discused throughout the episode. Viewers are made to believe another character is going to be raped when she is forced onto a bed, but instead a photo of her face is taken (34:50-35:50). S2E12: a man reads from the Bible that a father should have intercourse with his daughters. S3E4: a character is stated to be responsible for aiding and facilitating the kidnap and rape of another character. S3E5: a character is dragged and pinned to a table by a group of men; it is implied that their intention is rape. S3E8: a male character is captured and a female character grabs something around his groin area which is a bag but in the moment could be seen as her grabbing his groin. S3E12: this episode deals with people killing pedophiles. S3E15: a programe that hacks into any webcam is leaked. It is mentioned that it can be used to watch people change, etc. A main character breaks into a woman's home without her knowing and she comes downstairs partially dressed. S3E21: an operative pretends to be into someone to gain intel and makes out with her while hacking her computer. S4E3: the main character discusses her husband initially tricking her into loving him and having sex, and how her mom also did that to someone. S4E6: a main character's girlfriend is revealed to be a spy. She was having sex with him, just to gain access to the FBI. A spy has to kiss and then fight off sex with a woman who is dating him. S4E10: a character discusses being found guilty of rape while he was at university (29:50). Another character discusses the use of child brides and mass rape as a means of control (11:00 and 28:30). S4E11: the boss of a character forcibly attempts to kiss another character. When she declines, she states that she must do as she says to keep her job. The victim complies but is saved by another character who leaves with the boss (26:50-27:50). Past assault is also implied. S4E15: a man keeps a woman hostage. She is sedated but he shows her a pregnancy test that is positive implying rape off screen. S5E17: child brides and rape are discussed throughout the episode. A man is shown getting into bed with a teenage wife (14:00). Another former child bride talks abour her experiences (31:30).
Rape occurs off screen (31:00-32:30) and is avenged. The woman attacked defends herself and kills the man. We later are told that he tried to rape her but was unsuccessful.
Blade Runner (Movie)
There is a very controversial scene in which a man forces a crying woman to kiss and (it is implied) have sex with him (1:10). Worthy of note: the troubling implications behind replicants, who look and act like humans but are not considered truly human. Within the context of the film, this means that it is not seen as necessary for them to provide consent for sexual acts.
The whole plot of the movie is centered around the moral dilemmas about Replicants, and if they are actually not thinking/feeling beings. Within the context of the film, this means that it is not seen as necessary for them to provide consent for sexual acts as they are described as machines that fit a purpose e.g pleasure, entertainment etc.. A creator of human-like androids (Replicants) forcibly kisses his latest creation after slashing her body where a caesarian would be. It is very violent and tense (around 40 minutes into the movie). There are two instances of non-consensual kissing.
Blame (2017) (Movie)
An autobiographical account of the author's own childhood assault by a teenage babysitter. The author is also unable to protect his little brother. It's also a graphic novel. The relevant scenes occur between pages 29-32. Worthy of note: aggressive or domineering - but not sexual - physical interactions (looming, grabbing, dragging) are regular features throughout the book.
Bleed (Movie)
A woman hallucinates a sexual assault while having sex with her boyfriend.
All of season 1 follows a search for a serial rapist/murderer. S1E2: attempted rape. S1E3: a woman is held hostage by the aforementioned rapist/murderer. Season 2 revolves around human sex trafficking, and this is discussed in every episode. S2E3: a man violently grabs a woman and forces his hands up her skirt.
Most of the female characters are raped on screen throughout the film.
Blindspot (TV Show)
A main character investigates undercover in a sex trafficking situation. She does not get assaulted, but many rapes that took place are mentioned and her team is not really in control of the situation. Season 1 contains many PTSD related flashbacks that suggest child trafficking. S1E1: the episode begins with a woman, likely drugged, stuffed into a bag naked and held at gunpoint. A second scene shows the FBI taking down a man who has several women handcuffed, pregnant or just having had his babies. A third scene discusses more about the woman in the first scene. S1E3: the main character calls out how her entire life (and thus the plot of the show) is an intimate violation. S1E4: it is implied that one main character's dad was accused of being "too close" to the other main character as a child. The father was subsequently accused of kidnapping and murdering the main character as a child. S1E5+6: the main character is subject to sexual harassment by the main antagonists. S1E14: a violent rape and murder is discussed. Crime scene photos are shown. A main character investigates undercover in a sex trafficking situation. She does not get assaulted, but many rapes that took place are mentioned and her team is not really in control of the situation. (This episode contains no major overall plot points other than the main character wanting to quit the agency and her mission). S1E16: the main character (who is amnesiac) is kissed by her old boyfriend from before she lost her memory. She turns out to like it, but he did not ask first, and they were fighting. S1E17: a woman is sexually harassed at a bar: a main character saves her. A main character is kidnapped and her face is sensually rubbed. A reference to Buffalo Bill (from The Silence of the Lambs) is made as a joke. S1E18: sexual harrassment. This episode is about a school shooter motivated by the fact that his school coach is a serial child rapist. This triggers memories of snother main character who was abused as a child. S3E5: a tattoo leads to a case regarding untested rape kits, and uncovers a secret heir to royalty conceived by rape.
Blink Twice (Movie)
The entire plot hinges on the systemic drugging and abuse of women. These crimes are shown graphically, while they are happening, in flashbacks, and in photos discovered by the protagonist. It is not handled sensitively at all, there are POV shots and the victims’ pain is relentlessly emphasized. There is also an allusion to a main character being sexually abused as a child.
A male character gets a female intoxicated and, thinking she is passed out, starts to unbutton her blouse. When he reaches to touch her breast it is revealed she is already dead: the blob then kills the man.
Blonde (Movie)
Early in the film, the female protagonist is raped on-screen during a movie audition. Short flashbacks of the scene are shown later, when another character asks her about her debut in the industry. The husband of the protagonist is violent towards her after learning she did nude photographs early in her career, and later again after she has shot a scene revealing her underwear. When the protagonist is almost unconscious because of her use of drugs and alcohol, she is transported to an important male character, who forces her to perform oral sex on him, and rape her (off-screen). She is shown afterwards, completely confused and shocked.
In the past, a minor female character was tricked and coerced into sex work. Before the story begins, she maneuvered her way into running a brothel centered around treating its sex workers well. A major teen female character finds out, just before having sex for the first time, that her (teen) boyfriend has been doing love spells on her since before their relationship started. After she breaks up with him, he acts threateningly towards her.
Along with the above, there is frequent sexual discussion directed at underage girls.
Blood Games (Movie)
A male baseball players grabs a women's butts and thighs several times while playing the game. Degrading talk and catcalling. A guy sneaks into the locker room and watches the women while they are showering. There is an attempted assault where two women are held at knifepoint and their tops are cut off - the men are stopped in this instance. There is a graphic on screen rape later when the men are chasing the women through the woods.
Chapter 16: attempted rape of the main character.
There is an imagined rape sequence in the beginning of the film, and different rape attempts from a man on his wife later during the movie.
Blood Surf (Movie)
A woman makes a joke about being 14, but then says she is 19: after having sex, she confesses that she is only 17. When the group is captured, one of the man takes the woman with the intent of raping her. He opens her shirt but is stopped before anything further happens. The same man later corners the same woman and he taunts her but she is able to stop him before anything further happens.
Blood and Water (TV Show)
S1E2: there are a number of close ups and the character remembers the incident throughout the episode.
Blood of Zeus (TV Show)
A woman is in a forced marriage and it is implied she regularly endures marital rape. A man disguises himself as the woman's husband to sleep with her. However, when he reveals his identity she does not seem bothered.
BloodRayne (Movie)
The entire movie is full of the torture of naked women for the sexual pleasure of the main antagonist. A young girl of unconfirmed age (implied to be a teenager) has her breasts and butt exposed and is caned. She is later decapitated and it is implied that a man has sex with her head (though not shown on screen). A woman has her breasts fondled while tied up before having her teeth removed. A man is shown laying under the covers with another man's dead body; it is unclear if he is supposed to be having sex with it.
There are no graphical scenes, but it is strongly implied that a man was molested by a female teacher in elementary school. This has left him traumatized and struggling with substance abuse.
Blow Out (Movie)
A man murders a series of women, and frames the deaths to look like the actions of a serial rapist and murderer. A man attempts to rape a woman, but she knocks him out. Her clothes remain on, and the scene is short, but tense. Worthy of note: A woman's final moments before her death are recorded and played back. Although there is no sexual violence, the sounds of her screams and the grunting of the man who killed her could be triggering.
Blue Bloods (TV Show)
S1E2 + 3: rape is discussed. S1E6: a relationship between a high school teacher and a 17 year old student is discussed. S1E9: rape is implied and an attempted rape is shown on screen. S1E16: an adult pretends to be a teenager online to get into a relationship with a teenager.
Blue Eye Samurai (TV Show)
Sex trafficking, prostitution and forced marriage are mentioned or hinted throughout. Off-screen or hinted rapes are also present.
Blue My Mind (Movie)
The protagonist wants to stop having sex in the middle of intercourse, and the man pressures her to keep going, but she does not and leaves (1:01:00). The protagonist is under the influence of drugs and alcohol when she is brought into a room, blindfolded, and forced to give oral to a gang of men during a party (1:25:00): they make her think it was her idea. Men hold her down and attempt to rip her clothes off, but she runs away (1:26:00).
Blue Steel (Movie)
The rape scene is very violently done for 30 seconds towards the end of the film between the antagonist and the protagonist (01:27:00-01:28:00).
S1E2: this episode contains unwanted touching the action moves off-screen and screaming is heard.
Blue Velvet (Movie)
Sadomasochism and other non-mainstream sexual acts are a consistent theme throughout along with elements of violence and coercion.
One of the central events of the novel is an 11-year-old girl being raped by her father, which happens twice (one only alluded to and one explicitly depicted). The other characters discuss this throughout the book. Two black teenagers are caught in a field by two white men, and the men force one of the teenagers to assault the other for their amusement. Another character, a pedophile, describes memories of abusing multiple young girls.
S1E1: three male students try to rape the titulat character. They jump on her when she is alone, two of them hold her still, while the other slices her blouse open with a knife, exposing her bra. A man intervenes before anything further happens.
This film contains humor that tends to condone sexual commentary and bad treatment towards women. Two men attempt to switch places during sex without the woman knowing: it fails.
Bob's Burgers (TV Show)
S1E1: the burger of the day is called 'the child molester' because it comes with candy. The show moves away from this kind of humor quickly. S2E6: a male character is sexually harassed by a female character who then seemingly attempts to rape him. He is blamed for it in the end. It is played for laughs.
Boccaccio '70 (Movie)
The film is divided in four episodes. 1) A (secretly) married woman is harassed by her employer. 2) A man is obsessed by a woman featured on an ad billboard. He hallucinates and sees her harassing him. It is very briefly implied that he had been traumatized by the vision of her naked aunt as a child. 3) A woman leaves her husband who cheated on her with call girls. Finally, she choses to stay with him, by making him pay for her sexual services. She seems very distressed by this situation. 4) A woman is forced to prostitute herself out of misery: she is the 'winning lot' of a lottery. She is constantly harassed by a crowd of men. Finally, the one who 'won' her is too shy to do anything.
Body (Movie)
Three girls formulate a plan to accuse an injured man of attempted rape to cover up the fact that they broke into a house and injured him. Whilst a man is unconscious, a girl takes his hand and puts it in/around her genitals (this is not shown on-screen) so that have evidence for the 'crime'.
Body Bags (Movie)
The third short story has a scene where a man rapes his wife while possessed.
A woman is forced into handcuffs and raped on screen.
This book is about the neurological and physiological effects of trauma, especially trauma from sexual violence.
A woman is very visibly uncomfortable when left alone with a preacher. It is later revealed that he assaulted her before. It is a central aspect of the film.
The Bodyguard (Movie)
There is a scene in which a woman invites a man in a bedroom. As they are about to make out, she asks him to stop, but he insists. She manages to get out of the situation by calling someone. It is said that a man broke into a woman's house and masturbated on her bed without her knowing.
This book largely consists of literary analysis of selected works of Black women's speculative fiction. Consequently, sexual violence is referenced to the degree that it shows up in the source materials. Chapters 1, 3, and 4 are the areas where sexual violence are primarily discussed. Chapter 4 in particular discusses themes of incest. These discussions are not particularly graphic, but they do go pretty in-depth into the feelings of characters who have experienced sexual violence.
Bojack Horseman (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman says that when she was a child, she received letters from people telling her that they were masturbating while thinking about her. S1E8: one character kisses another character without asking for consent (1:41-1:43). S2E3: it is implied that a child was sexually abused by her stepfather. This implication comes up again in later seasons, and notably in a flashback in S6E5, where the child can't be in her dressing room because her" stepdad is being weird". Her stepdad is most likely a parody of Terry Richardson, a famous photographer accused of rape. S2E7: sexual harassment is implied in discussions throughout the episode, though nothing is ever described. S2E11: in the final minutes of the episode, a 17-year-old asks an adult man to have sex with her, and we see them getting undressed before getting caught, though nothing graphic is ever shown (22:31-23:19). This incident is discussed in detail in S3E1+11 and S5E4+10+11. At one point, the adult man turns up at the young girl's college and she appears shaken by his appearance. S3E6: a character gives a handjob without asking for the consent of the other character (we don't see below their torsos). The victim seems unnerved but aroused until she strangles his penis and cause him a lot of pain. S3E11: a couple sees the protagonist drunkenly talking to their son. The mother asks her husband if he might be 'inappropriately interested' in the boy. The father says 'No, but if he is, i could also be a big break'. Later, a woman calls the protagonist 'a father figure who was sexually inappropriate' to her. S4E5: a character is catcalled and threatened after leaving a restaurant. At another point, a character off-handedly implies that he had to hitch a ride with a paedophile when he was in middle school, though it's stated he came home 'unscathed'. S5E1: a director pressures and initmidates the protagonist into undressing for a role. They fight briefly, but no forceful undressing is shown on camera. The protagonist is later depicted naked but seems fine with it. S5E3: an asexual couple goes to meet one of the partners family, the family being known for pornographic material. As the couple attempt to conceal their sexuality. nothing is explicitly done however through out the episode both become particularly uncomfortable during scenes (the male character being cornered by his girlfriend's mother who strips infront of him, touched in a way he clearly is uncomfortable with and his girlfriend's sister attempts to seduce him). This is all resolved by the end of the episode. S5E4: a character briefly mentions sexting a 12-year-old.
Boku No Pico (TV Show)
Bokurano (TV Show)
S1E6: attempted rape. S1E7: on-screen rape of a middle schooler by her adult teacher. Through the character's eyes, the only thing her abuser did wrong was to cheat on her by sleeping with other underage girls. A young girl is in a relationship with her teacher. The teacher ends up blackmailing her into getting gang raped by multiple men. She ends up becoming pregnant by the teacher. Her sister, who is a minor, was also in a relationship with the teacher. There is multiple mentions of sexual abuse throughout the series and other forms of abuse. The series discusses heavy topics.
The Bold Type (TV Show)
S1E10: the effects rape has on women are discussed. Several characters discuss in minor detail their own experiences with sexual assault. S2E6: another woman reveals she was raped by the same man discussed in S1E10. S3E3: mention of sexual coercion.
Though the themes are dealt with in a very conscientious way, it is worthy of note that the entire series is about the investigation a web managed by sociopaths, that allows for all kinds of abuse, torture and people and drug trafficking.
Bone Tomahawk (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, it is revealed that women are kept as reproductive slaves of tribes men. They have their arms and legs cut off, as well as their eyes removed. They are pregnant on a bed, and clearly have no choice in their situation. The pregnant slave women are not redeemed by the main protagonists, so they are left there without any hope for salvation.
Bones (TV) (TV Show)
There are several episodes where child abuse is discussed. These topics are discussed in a way that always condemns them and the perpetrators are always punished in some way (e.g. jail mostly). S1E5: this episode is about a young boy who was sexually assaulted and then murdered. S2E13: a murder victim is raped and killed after rejecting the sexual advances of a character who is charged for filming underage girls in a pornographic way and taking advantage of girls too drunk to consent (to film them). Two men notice what he did, but did not do anything about it. S8E16: this episode is about a teenage girl who was drugged and raped at a party. A witness discusses with her psychocologist that she felt like she had been rape. S10E6: he plot revolves around human trafficking. The victim of the episode was human trafficked to America, and in China, she has been sold into prostitution by her father. Throughout, the idea that the victim was sexually assaulted is discussed multiple times at length and in great detail.
The main male character is raped by a fellow male inmate while incarcerated.
Boogie Nights (Movie)
First mention is a woman saying she was raped as a child, the second occasion is attempted rape which results in the woman heavily bleeding after trying to fight them away.
Rape is ambiguous/implied. The main villain is overpowering women throughout the book, and there is an interaction between the main female character (who is 14), where he is on top of her. Then the next scene blood is seen trickling down her inner leg, implying rape or abuse.
The protagonist, a lesbian, is required by social custom to get married at least twice. Both of the protagonist’s husbands rape her. It is implied that in other marriages, rape is widespread and happens at least some of the time.
All the female characters in this film are either victims of sexual assault, rape, or attempted rape, either from men who ambush them, or from coercive/abusive relationships.
This is a great book about surviving sexual trauma but it has very vivid details of rape throughout, which can be triggering.
A man is abducted by a group of women. He is chained up, stripped naked, and assaulted multiple times, including being forced to masturbate, being forced to receive oral sex and being anally raped with a strap-on dildo.
Chapter 2: the main character is forced to marry a violent man decades older than her. There are brief but frank descriptions of two marital rapes before the man dies. Chapter 3: the main character aborts the pregnancy which resulted from her rape. The event is a brief mention in a summary of other activities of her life moving on. In subsequent chapters the trauma of her rape and pregnancy are periodic themes. Chapter 4: a man stalks the main character, forces a kiss clearly and intends more. She escapes. Chapter 14: her stalker dies while hiding on the main character's property (without touching her again). She can't speak out without retaliation, and reflects on women she's known who were blamed and ostracized after men had assaulted them. Chapter 16: the main character is coerced to change into a hospital gown, sedated via suppository, restrained, and subjected unwillingly to medical tests by indifferent male doctors and female nurses. Chapter 27: a drunk stranger gropes and attempts to assault the main character. She is rescued before he succeeds.
The Boondocks (TV Show)
The series features a physically violent pimp, a homosexual rapper who is shunned by others when they find out about his sexuality, a child singing along to sexist songs without properly understanding them, and a man having sex with his wife while possessed by the ghost of an old man. The same man is scared of getting raped in jail and has a dream about getting raped in the shower (though the dream ends right before the action). Later on, he almost gets raped in jail for real. Additionnally, a young boy has to take "sexy" pictures of his grandpa, who is only wearing a string. Throughout the serie, women are often referred to as hoes or bitches. S2E1: a grandfather comments on how he would let his young grandson go into a bathroom to get molested by an adult man. S3E8: a large portion of the episode deals with the discussion of prison rape, adult prisoners talk to young boys about it. At some point the boys ask if they were about to get raped due to the aggressiveness of the prisoners: a prisoner says no. S3E10: one of the main character's ex-girlfriends attempts to kidnap his grandson, stating she did so because he was "just adorable". Her intentions with the grandson is questionable. S3E14: a character exclusive to this episode is known for kicking men in their testicles to get answers out of them.
Boot Camp (Movie)
A teenage girl is violently raped by one prison guard.
Border (Movie)
About 30 minutes in, a character attempts to rape another character: the victim pushes them off and they are unsuccessful. There is also another sex scene which is quite aggressive in tone but seemingly consensual. The theme of child pornography runs throughout the film.
Bordertown (TV Show)
Rape and sexual violence are themes throughout the series. Young women (some of whom are underage) are drugged and posed for photos while naked (leading to the accidental death of one and the furter abuse of another). One story arc features a paedophile character who needs to prove that they haven't committed any new assaults (this features flashbacks of the paedophile sexually abusing another character when he was a child). Violence, both sexual and otherwise, is frequently shown on-screen.
The Borgias (TV Show)
Gangsters beat and rape young adults and teens throughout the film.
Bosch (TV Show)
S1E1: someone is suspected of killing sex workers, and a murdered sex worker is mentioned. It is said that they are often "victimized". S1E5: photos found in a drawer strongly imply an incestuous relationship between a father and daughter (35:41). The daughter is in underwear, the father seen shirtless. The images are not explicit and are not shown for a long time onscreen.
Boudica (Movie)
A mother has consensual sex with her young adult son (23:42-25:27). It is implied this was not the first time, though how far back it goes is unclear. Slaves being used for sexual purposes are discussed and implied. After an altercation, the protagonist's daughters are raped on-screen (42:22-44:32). After the rape, she unties her daughters and makes them get up and walk home (44:56-48:46): their reactions and movements are graphic.
The film follows a homeless man who was saved from drowning and sheltered by a married man. Throughout the film, the homeless man sexually assaults the man's wife and mistress (the maid) at several occasions, and rapes one of them off-screen. The scenes are played for laughs, and both women are depicted as growing fond of him.
This film revolves around a woman kidnapping children and trafficking them to her pedophile friends. No assault is shown on-screen, though pictures are shown of a young boy's naked torso and a video camera is shown in one of the rooms, implying the creation of child pornography.
Boy Erased (Movie)
The on-screen rape scene takes place at 00:37-00:39.
In the opening of the film a woman is heard screaming. She is then seen cut up and naked after several men leave were she was held. The main character is living in the apocalypse where women are a commodity and talks frequently talks about what is implied to be unconsentual sex. The main character tracks down a woman and holds her a gun point. Later in the film a character is forced into a human breeding program and is used for his semen.
The attempted rape of woman by a man is shown. The film also features stalking and revenge porn.
On-screen rape; hate crime committed against a transgender man.
S1E1: the female protagonist is ambushed in the locker room by a group of boys at the behest of the lead bully. The camera freezes on her struggling to get away while the frame around the shot turns sparkly and cutesy pop music plays. S1E2: the episode begins with another boy, clearly in the know about what is happening, walking in and diffusing the situation in a very awkward and trivializing way. No consequence seems to follow from this and the lead bully also later becomes the main love interest of the show, somehow. S2E2: towards the beginning of the episode, a group of men attempt to rape a woman as she exits a shower/locker room. She is rescued and it transpires that this attack was an attempt to frighten her.
The Boys (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman who starts a new job is welcomed by a male colleague (a recurring character) whom she confesses to having had a crush on when she was younger. He immediatly puts his pants and underwear off without warning her and asks her to perform oral sex on him. When she rebuffs him, he blackmails her and threats to have her fired. It is then strongly implied that she was forced to accept as she is shown vomiting in the toilet. The incident is vaguely discussed later in the episode and in the next one. A man who can turns invisible uses his power to spy on women going to the bathroom: this is referred to in later episodes. S1E2: two men attempt to (date) rape a woman in an alley, but they are stopped by a female character. The character who fought off the would be rapists is later chastised by her employer because someone recorded her and made her secret identity more prominent. A man uses his abilty to see through the walls to spy on his female boss using a breast pump: he is shown visibly aroused. S1E3: a female character is forced to wear a sexualized costume that she feels uncomfortable with, and pressured to accept it as a "feminist" choice. She is later catcalled while wearing it by men. A group of men watch a live video footage of a woman seducing a visibly uncomfortable man at her home, and forcing him to perform oral sex on her while she is on drugs: she ends up killing him. The main antagonist acts threateningly with his ex-girlfriend while talking about their past relationship. The protagonists hack into the camera in the smart tv in a female character’s apartment without her knowledge or consent. The purpose is to find intel on a superhero she is dating, but they do watch her having sex with that superhero. S1E5: the survivor of the rape from S1E1 mentions it in front of a crowd. The woman the antagonist was spying on in S1E2 is revealed to have a security feature informing her when he is watching. She uses his sexual attraction to her in order to control him. S1E6: the rape from S1E1 is mentioned several times throughout the episode. The rapist has to make a public excuse (scripted by the firm) and a film/show based on the survivor's experience is produced. It is revealed that a main character's motivating factor is the rape of his wife by the series' antagonist. This is discussed heavily throughout the series. S1E7: the rapist from S1E1 gets sexually assaulted on-screen by a woman. Scenes before and after the rape of a main's character's wife are briefly shown. It is then revealed that she became pregnant with her rapist child, and died while giving birth. S1E8: the rape of the main character's wife by the antagonist is discussed. Throughout seasons 2 and 3, the rapist from S1E1 goes through a (fake) redemptive arc, and tries to make amends for his actions in order to get his job back. Sexual assault is thus implied or mentioned in several episodes. S2E1-3+7-8: the antagonist regularly visits the woman he raped and got pregnant, to connect with their son despite her clear disconfort and protest. S2E2: the rapist from S1E1 experiences an introspective moment making him realize that he 'violates women's bodies' because he cannot accept his own. S2E3: the rapist from S1E1 makes amends for his behaviour to his victim in order to regain his job: she rebuffs him. S2E4: a main male character tries to kiss a recurring female character when she is vulnerable. She rebuffs him. The rape of a female character by the antagonist is mentioned. S2E5: the rapes committed by two recurring male characters are mentioned. S2E8: the sexual assault from S1E1 is mentioned. S3E1: two characters have sex in public bathrooms, and at some point, the reaction of the man makes it dubious that he is enjoying how rough it gets. In the opening of the episode, a man is accidently killed by someone (with the superpower to shrink) who entered his urethra with his consent for sexual purposes. It is mentioned that the main characters are often involved in situations with "dead prostitutes". S3E2: the fact that one male character was molestd by another male character when he was a teenager is mentioned several times. The victim denies it happened. S3E3: in the opening of the episode, the antagonist is naked and his female superior walks into his room. He tells her not to mind and to go along, despite her clear uncomfort, especially when he has an erection. The rapist from S1E1 gains his job back, meaning the survivor (the main female character) has to work with him. A woman forces a man to speak by crushing his testicles with her knee. A man hits on a woman despite her clear disinterest: she rebuffs him. At the end of the episode, the antagonist forces the main female character to pretend she is his girlfriend in public. S3E4: at two different moments in the episode, the antagonist makes inappropriate comments to women. One main female character is forced to pretend to be a prostitute in order to kill a man. We see other women already with him in the room. She kills him before anything happens. S3E5: one character mentions an 'underage prostitute' (implying he may have had sex with one when he was younger). S3E6: One character coming from the 1980s makes elogious comments about Bill Cosby. A female character mentions that her political adversaries made deepfakes videos of her giving oral sex to Usama Bin Laden. The last part of the episode takes place at an orgy: - the main cast is visibly uncomfortable to be there; - two characters are greeted by the giant penis of a man; - one man accidentally receives semen on his body against his will; - the rapist from S1E1 has sex with an octopus: the female lead takes a picture of him against his will.; - it is discussed that the host of the orgy put a camera in the toilet to film his guests' genitalia without their consent (footage of a man's private parts is shown). S3E7: flashbacks show how one of the main male character was abused by his violent father when he was a child. The rapist from S1E1 pressures his wife to have a threesome with an octupus. He gets angry when she leaves after having tried to go along with it. S3E8: it is reminded that one character had sex with an octopus, and that the antagonist raped a woman. S4E1: a woman is non-consensually sent an explicit photo of an anus under the guise that it is something she has requested to see. S4E4: a man mentions that when he was a young teen, he was caught masturbating by an older man, and subsequently the older man gave him a related nickname in order to sexually humiliate the child. A man is forced to masturbate in front of a group of people, under threat of injury and/or death. He is taunted while he does this, and later grievously injured and then killed for his perceived "failure to perform". There is a brief mention of an unnamed young teen runaway being used by a company to incubate a baby. She did not survive the birth, and was likely coerced into the entire situation given her vulnerable status. S4E4: an inappropriate reltionship between an adult woman and a young boy is discussed (around 27 minutes in). S4E6: while pretending to be somebody else, a character has to partake in various BDSM activities to avoid blowing his cover. The scene is played humourously but the character is clearly distressed by the situation. Later, when the character has his cover blown, another character threatens to injure him and sexually assault him via his wounds: they are interrupted before this can happen, but we do see the character restrained and struggling while his attacker prepares to assault him. This particular scene is very vivid and distressing, played far more seriously than the previous scenes. S4E7-8: a man is tricked into having sex by a memory reading shapeshifter who pretends to be his fiance. The incident is treated in a humorous way, with the man's fiance scolding him for having sex with the imposter "20 times".
Brain Damage (Movie)
A woman opens a man's trousers and a monster jumps into her mouth, simulating a penis. This scene intended to directly recall oral rape. A man kisses a woman deeply and the monster jumps into her mouth; she struggles to push the man off as the monster kills her.
Braindead (Movie)
In addition to an attempted rape, sexual harassment and mentions of sexual assault, this movie features bestiality and necrophilia mentions.
A woman is hypnotized and has sex with the titular character against her will. She cannot remember what happened after. A man is held down while three female vampires perform sexual acts and eventually feed on him against his will.
Brat (Movie)
A woman is beaten and raped off-screen by two men (1:12:30): we see them ripping off her clothes and then the smiling face of their boss watching the scene. Throughout the film, it is implied that this woman is beaten by her husband, with a scene of domestic violence in one of the final scene (which it stopped by her lover). Early in the film, two men catcall a woman in a bus.
Brave New World (TV Show)
The basis of this show is that there are different classes to the society, which are forced to fulfill the roles given to them. One of the social classes primary job is to engage sexually and give pleasure to the higher up class of people. While it is not violently enforced and no obvious discomfort is shown by the characters, it is implied and talked about that they have no other choice but to never say no to any sexual advances. S1E8: the main protagonist has angry, demeaning sex with his lover after he secretly watched her have sex with another man without her knowledge. This scene was made to show dominance from the main character "punishing" his lover.
Braveheart (Movie)
A man attempts to rape a woman, she fights him off and escapes. One king institutes a "prima nocta", meaning that lords have the right to sex with any woman on her wedding night. In one instance, a lord is seen coming to claim this "right": her husband fights the soldiers but she stops him and goes with the lord, as otherwise they would both probably be killed. Nothing is shown on-screen but it is made clear that the woman is raped, and it is implied that this happens to many other women. This is referenced several times throughout the film.
There is an imaginary sequence that includes the rape of a servant by their employer. It is implied that the transgender main character becomes a sex worker as a last resort in order to survive. A man, expecting the main character to be a sex worker, attempts to rape her and strangles her with a necklace. She then escapes from his car by spraying perfume in his face. It is also of note that there is a lot of violence and brutality toward the transgender protagonist, perpetrated by people who have power over her in some way. This mistreatment includes parental child abuse and abuse by implied romantic partners and police.
Breaking In (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, one of the antagonists tries to rape the protagonist's daughter, but he is stopped.
Breaking Bad (TV Show)
S2E1: a character forcefully attempts to initiate sex with his wife. He stops after she screams for him to stop. S2E7: sexual harassment is mentioned in details (30:00-30:33). S4E3: a man finds his house filled with people high on drugs, dancing, fighting and two are in the middle of having sex (21:59-22:54). The woman is probably high on drugs, but she is not catatonic or paralysed, she is fully awake, thus capable of giving consent: she scratched the man's back, impliying rough sex. The scene is intended to be disturbing, with people doing drugs, fighting and having sex in public, but there is no evidence of sexual assault. S5E2: it is implied at the end of the episode that a character engages in sexual activity with his wife and that she is too afraid of him to refuse to comply (44:03-46:27).
The main plot revolves around a married woman who turns to prostitution to feed the sexual fantasies of her critically injured and bedridden husband.
The Bride (Movie)
Bride Killa (TV Show)
Bridgerton (TV Show)
S1E1: attempted rape (49:00-50:00) and physical violence from a man towards the female lead. S1E6: on-screen rape, where the wishes of a man not to have children are disregarded by the female lead, his wife (48:00-54:55). This rape of a Black man by a white woman is presented as a midsunderstanding between husband and wife. The victim is blamed because he 'lied' to his wife. Season 2: no rape depicted or mentioned. Season 3: no rape or sexual assault. Worthy of note: the female lead, who is in a relationship with a 29-year old man, is 21.
A character says he was passed around as a plaything among adults when he was a child. Another character, in his internal monologue, refers to the first character as a “former concubine”.
Brimstone (Movie)
There is an explicit and violent rape scene, which a young character is forced to watch.
The protagonist's mother is threatened with rape. It is implied that the main character may have been raped before another character intervenes, but this is not clear.
It is implied that a man is involved in the trafficking of teen girls. Later, a character mentions that her ex was found with 14 year old girls.
Broadchurch (TV Show)
Rape is a recurring theme throughout the entire show. Some men discuss the drugging of a woman with the intention of raping her. There is one instance where a woman tell others that she is willing to have men rape her to get her son back. In various instances, married men are shown engaging in sexual acts with teenagers. A woman discusses how her husband used to regularly rape their daughter. In another instance, a man confesses his 'love' for an 11-year-old boy. In season 1, a 15 year old girl says her relationship with her 17 year old boyfriend includes sex. S1E4: an old male character is revealed to have a conviction for “underage sex.” It turns out that when he was 38, he was the music teacher of a 15yr old girl and slept with her. A past case is mentioned where a 10yr old girl was raped and stabbed. One woman threatens another woman by saying she can get men to rape her S2E4: a woman is assaulted (choked) against a wall by a man. She begins to undo his belt and take off his pants in the hope that he will let her survive if she performs sexual favors. Season 3: the crimes of a serial rapist are a major plot-point throughout the season.
Brokat (TV Show)
S1E1 features a woman sleeping with a woman for espionage purpose. Pictures of her are taken without consent. She may also be being blackmailed to do it. Another prostitute has to sleep with a client despite not wanting to, because she hit a guy and has to make up for it. There is also an attempted rape on-screen.
One of the protagonists initiates anal sex with his wife without making any effort to gain consent or even indicate that that is what he was going to do. She looks visibly surprised and uncomfortable but this brief scene is not depicted as violent or forced.
Broken Trail (Movie)
The plot revolves around rescuing young women from being trafficked into prostitution.
BrokenLore: LOW (Video Game)
The main character is drugged, raped off screen, impregnated, and victim blamed. During a cutscene, a voiceover describes the act of a women being raped, impregnated, and blamed for it. The main character is instructed to "take care" of the pregnancy or risk losing her career. It is heavily implied both women take their own lives.
Brotherhood (TV Show)
A rival gang member comes in to intimidate a main character by raping a member of his crew, warning the same will happen to him if he does not do what was asked (42:00-43:00). The rapist holds his victim against a sink, demanding he be quiet if he does not want to be shivved, then inserts himself while his victim clearly tries not to yell out and remain "strong".
Child sexual abuse is only implied/spoken about as something in the character’s past: nothing is shown on screen. It is the same with the implied rape.
Bruno Reidal (Movie)
This film, based on a true story, is about a boy explaining how he became a murderer. The protagonist, a 16 year old boy, is asked to explain how he was sexually assaulted by an older man when he was younger. The scene is shown as a flashback with the boy's explanation as a voiceover: the older man forces him to lie down and masturbates him. This is implied to be a pivotal moment, leading to the boy's compulsions to kill young boys to whom he feels sexually attracted.
The Brutalist (Movie)
The main male character is raped on-screen for several minutes (midway through the second act): it occurs while he is under the influence of drugs. Several antisemitic statements are said during this. His wife later accuses the rapist to his face in front of his family and friends. The protagonist tells his wife that he does not wish to have sex with her and she ignores this: she stimulates him with her hand despite him repeatedly saying no and asking her to stop. The main character's niece is approached by a drunk man after a conversation where he implied wanting to have sex with her. It is suggested that he assaulted her off-screen.
Btooom! (TV Show)
S1E2: the female lead is introduced through her past. After befriending a guy in a band. she took her friends to meet the boys but arrived late. When she returned, two of the girls were laying on the floor unconscious with marks on their skin and with their shirts lifted up whilst in a separate room, another one of her friends was actively being raped. The female lead was able to escape. On the island she is forcefully groped, touched inappropriately and had her clothes ripped open by a former teammate while he attempts to rape her. S1E2-3: the main character silently watches her as she cleans herself in the river partially undressed. S1E4: it is stated that a character who is a minor killed and raped three women. S1E5: the female lead falls unconscious on top of the male lead after accidently tasing herself. The male lead then takes off her weapons but hesitates with the thought of undressing her to which he lifts up her skirt but does not do anything further. S1E7: she is tied to a bed, threatened, and cut on the arm.
The vampires in the show are presented as sadistic and evil and it is heavily implied that they rape some of their victims. A number of their on-screen attacks are clear metaphors for sexual assault. One of the main romances in the show occurs between a teenager and an adult. Their romance starts when the female lead is 16 and the male character is over 200 (he looks like he’s in his mid-20s), and their sexual relationship starts when she is 17. S1E4: a monster disguised as a teacher imprisons boys with the intent to breed with and murder them. S1E6: attempted rape. S2E2: threat of assault. S2E5: episode plot is a metaphor for rape/sexual assault - villains use methods which are evocative of those used by real-life predators. S2E13: the main character (just turned 17) has consensual sex with a vampire more than 200 years older than her. They also have a relation prior to this. S2E16: one of the main male characters trys to cast a love spell on a female character and accidentally casts it on every female character in the entire show making them all want to be with him. Some of them kiss and touch him despite his clear want for them to stop: this includes some older female characters despite the male character being a teenager . S2E19: relationship between teacher and student. S2E20: attempted rape, victim-blaming, threat of assault. A gang rape is attempted, and another is referenced and played for laughs. S2E22: a female character hypnotises a male character into seeing her as his ex girlfriend and kisses him. S3E1: a man gropes the protagonist. S3E3: an antagonist makes a side comment using language that mirrors the language used when speaking about teenaged sex trafficking victims ("if you get the hankering for the blood of a 15 y/o filipina, then I'm on the net and she's here the next day, Express Air"). S3E10: the language used preceding a murder is evocative of the language used by real-life predators. S3E12: the 17 year old main character is cat called by 2 middle aged men (24:25-24:40). S3E14: a grown man is visibly attracted to a high school girl and mistakes her for a teacher. After he is corrected, he makes a comment about her and it is obvious, knowing she is actually underage has not changed his feelings towards her. His attraction to her is apart of the show moving forward and is usually mentioned at least once in any scene where they both appear. S3E15: sexual assault. S3E17: a character (who is 17) tries to seduce the main character's boyfriend (who is over 2000) and he declines, stating that he has a girlfriend. She then uses a spell to rid him of his soul and get him to cheat. S4E7: strongly implied attempted rape, eventually played for laughs. S4E16: two female characters swap bodies. One of them has sex with the other's boyfriend, who does not know about it. He is later blamed for it. S6E2: a demon says that he is going to rape the main character. S6E13: antagonists create a device that can turn women into compliant slaves and attempt to use it on an ex-girlfriend. S6E19: attempted rape at the 22:18-25:26 mark. A man violently assaults the main protagonist because he wants to be in a relationship with her. She repeatedly states that she does not want this throughout the duration of the assault. She fights him off and, realising 'what he's done,' leaves. The protagonist is already vulnerable due to a back injury when the assault occurs, and her attacker is aware of this. S7E6: multiple adult women are magically compelled to fall in love with a minor character. This leads to a sexual relationship. S7E7: incestuous implications between a mother and adult son. S7E9: a character makes reference to past times he has assaulted women, including minors.
Bug Buster (Movie)
A man mentions that his mother was raped when she was a child. A professor makes suggestive comments to a woman who had been one of his graduate students. A man lurks outside the window several times while a young woman is bathing.
A character is drugged against his will with psychedelics and sexually assaulted by his friends. What exactly is happening to him is not made clear, and the visuals and sound design are made to be trippy and disturbing. Worthy of note: A character spies on his crush in the showers at school.
Bulbbul (Movie)
The film contains a graphic on-screen rape after the 1 hour mark.
Bull (TV Show)
The series is about a trial consultant firm representing defendants, so there are several episodes discussing rape, child abuse, and episodes showing the beginning and aftermath of rape. S1E3: the episode involves the defense of a survivor of sexual assault from a murder charge. Her assault is never discussed in detail, but it is the premise of the episode. S1E11: the episode revolves around a sexual relationship between a teacher and a student and the court case litigating it. The relationship is not discussed explicitly, nor is it shown explicitly S2E20: the beginning of the episode shows a woman trying to escape from her abusive husband, being caught, and raped off screen. It shows him throwing her on the bed, taking off her clothes, and then the aftermath where she has bruises on her face. The rest of the episode is her on trial for her murder and talking about how he abused her.
Bully (2001) (Movie)
Rape scene also features unsimulated sexual intercourse.
This film contains gratuitous sexual violence scenes. Some are portrayed as a joke and lot of the sexual content in the movie has undertones of sexual assault, even if not otherwise explicit.
There are incestuous overtones to the main brother/sister relationship of the film as they are very close and the brother is at times mistaken for her husband. This relationship is never implied to be sexual. As the main conflict of the film involves a missing child, the police discuss the implications of the child going missing and the potential for child sex abuse. There is no child sex abuse depicted or actually implied to have happened to the child in question.
Bunnyman (Movie)
One of the killers rapes a victim who is bent over a table.
A man sexually assaults a woman who is tied to a mattress with chains.
Burden of Truth (TV Show)
A character is revealed to have had a sexual relationship with a underage girl: she ends up pregnant and raising her child.
Burial (2022) (Movie)
Soldiers discuss the "spoils of war" before leaving camp to find women. A bar maid is taken to a barn and presumably raped: we hear her screams and briefly see her fighting her attacker before escaping. A man then tries to rape the female soldier that stopped him, but he is stopped.
The sexual abuse it not detailed but implied. Four of the characters experience rape: all are children/teens, with an older abuser.
Burn (Movie)
The relevant scene occurs between the 40:00 and 44:00 minute marks.
A man creeps on women and watches them in the shower. A man tries to force a women into sexual activities while swimming. Another woman has to tell another man no repeatedly in the forest. During sex, a women has to repeatedly tell her boyfriend to stop and slow down, although the sex is consensual.
The main protagonist is regularly beaten by her husband and is raped by him one night offscreen.
The relevant scene occurs on pages 171-172.
Burning Days (Movie)
Roughly halfway into the film, a rape occurs off-screen. From this point onwards the plot revolves heavily around the assault.
A character worries that a sound in the night is a man coming in her home "to do what men do." Later on, her mother is robbed and sexually harassed. Guards in a prison clinic in the book are notorious for sedating women prisoners and raping them. A mob of men rape the wife of a Muslim neighbor they are targeting before murdering them both.
As a husband and wife are swimming together, the man tries to initiate sexual contact, but she declines and leaves the pool. He then kisses her on the lawn and pins her on the ground, trying to initiate sexual contact again. She screams and begs for him to stop, but he continues to kiss and touch her. He eventually lets her go.
Bushwick (Movie)
Two men attempt to rape a woman at gunpoint at the beginning of the movie.
The whole series centers around a romantic relationship between a boss and an employee. S1E5-6: a woman discovers a hidden camera in her home that a man has placed there for voyeuristic purposes. No explicit footage is shown. The woman is traumatized afterwards, imagining eyes watching her when she tries to use a public bathroom. This is called "molka" in South Korea, and is an important social issue that a lot of Korean media talks about. S1E7: the same woman gets drunk and kisses a man she is been pursuing. He is ostensibly sober, and reciprocates. When we next see her, she is awake in his bed the next day. Until S1E8, she avoids the man, too embarrassed to admit that she does not recall having sex with him night before (there are scattered, unclear flashbacks), and worried about "hurting his pride" (because she cannot remember having sex with him). They ultimately reunite, and i i's strongly implied they have sex again (while both sober). The show does not portray this as rape, or as in any way wrong.
This anime is about a race named Yesma (All women) who are slaves and find freedom when they reach 16 years old. S1E8 : a 16 year-old slave is caught by two men. We see them on top of her and one of them putting up their pants (15:15). S1E9: villains say that they raped a slave for a couple of days before killing her (12:30).
Butch Camp (Movie)
At the start of the movie, the main character accidentally bumps into a man. He then chases and attempts to force the main character to perform oral sex on him but the main character fights him off and runs away. At around 53:00, the gay main character has sex with a woman. While he does not say no or do anything to stop her, he is gay and tries to fight her off. She touches and flirts with him throughout the movie.
Butchers (Movie)
Male captors speak suggestively to women when they get them tied up, and grope them while searching them for phones/wallets. There is a wall full of photos of naked women. One of the women that has been held captive for a while is pregnant by the two men who kidnapped her.
The rape of a slave woman by her owner is implied; screams are heard.
Butt Boy (Movie)
The premise of the film is that a man has an addiction to inserting objects, animals, and children in their entirety into his rectum. The film never shows this act on screen but heavily implies it using editing. It is implied that the man is sexually satisfied by the act of anal vore but this movie does not sexualized minors.
As children, two of the main characters are forced into filming child pornography by one of their fathers (who is implied to assault one of them). This scene is referenced in flashbacks and memories repeatedly, but the actual act is not shown. There are heavy insinuations of rape while the main character is in prison. Another man grabs his penis without consent which results in a fight and the main character getting beaten for fighting against it (01:09:00). The perpetrator continues to insinuate that at night, the main character will get raped.
In the beginning of the film, a man is receiving oral sex from someone he assumes is his girlfriend, but is one of the villains of the movie.
The author discusses the following: the history of slaveholders raping enslaved women and justifying it by painting the latter as hypersexual; the racist sexual harassment that Sarah Baartman experienced; and the fact that parts of Baartman's body were amputated, embalmed, and put on display in museums for almost two centuries after she died.
The movie is about the sexual abuses of a priest on young children: pedophilia is thus the main theme of the film. Some flashbacks show the moments before the crimes, but nothing graphic is depicted.
Bystanders (Movie)
Children are forced into prostitution, though nothing explicit is shown. A character is assaulted by a man implied to be her father.
Cabaret (Movie)
A female character confides in main female character that she has been raped by their mutual acquaintance. The main female character had secretly encouraged the rapist to "pounce". The traumatized character cries and is clearly distressed, the female MC shows some regret but overall the rape is used to catalyze the female character falling in love with the man who raped her. There is also whistling/catcalling and grabbing of female cabaret performers.
A male character gropes a female character beneath a blanket while she is asleep. This results in the discovery that she has been infected by the movie's flesh-eating virus. The same character later observes a woman undressing without her consent or knowledge until he is caught by the woman's husband.
Cable Girls (TV Show)
One of the main protagonist escapes an attempted rape by a group of men. One of the main protagonists mistakes her husband's twin brother for her husband and keeps trying to have sex with him, despite him saying no multiple times, until he gives in. The scene is not violent.
Cafe Minamdang (TV Show)
Major plotlines in this show are about sex trafficking and other sex crimes. It is never graphic, but violence against women and girls is central (including at least one woman being the victim of a serial killer). All of the main protagonists are disgusted by violence against women and are hunting down the perpetrators. Teenage girls are being trafficked to older men. A teenage girl dies while she is being raped, presumably as the result of drugs. We see small sections of a video of this. The video mostly concerns the death and the coverup, and not much else is shown. Young women are forced to do sexual streams for drugs. We see a very brief clip of a woman dancing provocatively in one of these streams. We also see this woman being beaten. A teenage girl is forced to strip in front of a group of adults. We see sections of a video of this so that the characters can try to identify the adults in the room. There is no nudity shown. Discussion of a child being raped as the motivation for murder.
In one scene, the titular character rapes both a bride and her groom. The sexual relationship between the protagonist nd his sister is a major plot point in the movie.
Caliphate (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman is raped at gunpoint by her husband's friend before she stabs him (1:20-4:05). She is blamed for the rape. As a backstory, a female office worker is being punished at work for reporting what is implied to be sexual harassment. Another woman is hit by her husband multiple times throughout the show.
Call the Midwife (TV Show)
This series features child and adult prostitutes throughout. S2E5: a locally known actor gropes and tries to kiss a nurse while on a date. She pushes him away and escapes. The scene is brief and it is acknowledged that what he did was wrong. Their date was a quid pro quo, in which it was implied that if the nurse refused, the actor would not appear as a judge in a contest for the fair (he backs out of the agreement as a result). S5E6: the episode starts with a scene where two main characters say that some old pervert touched them inappropriately. Multiple women are grabbed from behind and brutalized (faces beaten and bitten on the neck.). It is not clear if the first two survivors were raped, but is confirmed the third was not. S6E1: a heavily pregnant women is sexually assaulted by her husband, who then tells her he will be going to a prostitute because they can "give it to him better" with less fuss. S6E9: a woman recounts being raped weekly by her father until she was 15, when she became pregnant and was subsequently kicked out of the house. Her mother was beaten by her husband and knew of the sexual abuse of her daughter, but did not intervene. The said woman was later pressured to rekindle her relationship with her mother by a titular character. S7 Christmas Special: it is implied that one patient used to be sexually abused as a child by a family member. S7E4: a 15 year-old girl is forced to marry an adult man who forces her to have sex and gets pregnant. S8E4: catcalling . S8E5: a male doctor forces a young woman's legs open for an exam without asking or even acknowledging her. He then inserts his fingers into her with no warning while she cries. All this happens while a half dozen male medical students look on and comment. She later describes it as "horrible". S9E1: a woman has scars on her back which were left from when her ex-husband beat her with his belt. S9E7: a husband physically intimidates his wife in a hospital ward, demanding she come home when she is not well. It is implied he abuses her. S10E7: a woman is threatened sexually by her landlord. S11E7: this episode is about a 15 year old mother. The fathers are old enough to drive, but do not seem to be adults. S12E3: a woman confesses to a nun that her husband rapes her. The beginning of a rape is depicting on-screen about 21 minutes into the episode: he pins her down after she said no and tells her "I'm not asking your permission". She starts to fight him and the camera panns to their daughter, who is outside their bedroom door listening as the husband rapes her. S13E7: previous abuse and beating by a husband is mentioned (35:15). It is hinted that a woman may have been raped by her stepfather. "Interfering" with a baby is mentioned (someone asks about it). Mention of repeated child rape by a stepfather.
The Calling (Movie)
A creepy man who says that he is an alternative medicine physician visits the house of a woman whose daughter is sick (37:00). Once left alone with the girl, he makes her drink tea and puts his hand over her mouth and nose. Nothing sexual occurs. The protagonist makes an inquiry about a boy who was adopted. It is very subtly suggested he was abused (1:24:00).
At the beginning of the movie, it is told that an old man slipped into a young teenager's bed and raped her. The story revolves around revenge for this assault.
Calmos (Movie)
This anti-feminist film is about men who try to escape the constant sexual sollicitations of women. There are a lot of scenes where women sexually assault, threaten, coerce and rape men (often in gang rapes) off-screen and on-screen. In the last part of the movie, a sort of administration allows women to brainwash men and rape them 'industrially' (women queue to have sex with them): one woman is shown to be reluctant to this and being forced to do it. All of it is played for laughs. At some point, one character mentions that men enjoy seeing little girls' underwear, and shortly after, a young woman is shown engaging sex with a male teenager (they are stopped).
Calvaire (Movie)
Calvary (Movie)
In the opening scene, a character describes being sexually abused as a child by a priest. This conversation goes into extremely graphic detail. A female character is physically abused by her lover. She is seen with a black eye and bruises throughout the film, though these beatings occur off-screen. Despite graphic discussions and representations of physical and sexual violence, the content is handled thoughtfully and sensitively. Atonement, forgiveness and revenge are major themes of the movie.
Camp X-Ray (Movie)
A sexual assault takes place between a colonel and his female private officer. After she refuses to have sex with him, she loses her position in the army.
Candy (Movie)
A high school aged girl is put in various sexual scenarios with older men throughout the movie. There are three rape scenes, two rape attempts, several statutory incidents. The titular character is tricked into sex with her own father. As well as with a doctor convincing her he is "examining" her as his patient. Several instances of grabbing, touching, and cat-calling.
Candy (1968) (Movie)
The sexual violence in this movie is not handled sensitively and is made into a joke of sorts while the main character, who is only 18, continuously gets preyed upon by increasingly deranged, pervy older men, some of which force themselves upon her. The movie, labeled as a ‘comedy’, is about a naive girl who gets taken advantage of by older men, some of it forced, some while she is unconscious, and one even with her uncle and a masked man who turns out to be her father. The scene is particularly upsetting and some are violent because she is being forced to undress or is being touched upon while unconscious.
Candy Land (Movie)
Although nothing sexual is ever mentioned or shown, the entire film is a metaphor for child trafficking.
Two women are cat-called by a group of men in a 'bad' part of town. One of the themes of the movie is a sexual affair between a professor and his student. In a flashback, we learn of a young boy who was castrated.
The film contains at least 3 rape scenes. One ends with the victim being violently murdered by cannibals. There are also 2 scenes of vaginal impalement, all extremely graphic.
The antagonist stalks and harasses a family and it is strongly implied he is intending to rape their underage daughter. There is a scene in which said girl is running and hiding from him when he follows her after school, and another scene towards the end of film where he physically assaults her mother.
Cape Wrath (TV Show)
S1E2: a male character dressed as a girl is assaulted on-screen by a man. The scene is very violent, with a belt being used to choke the victim.
Capernaum (Movie)
An 11 year old girl is married off to a man who appears to an adult. More generally, adults are shown to behave inappropriately towards children.
Discussions regarding child grooming online and abusive relationships between adults and minors, as well as mentions of child sex trafficking and pedophile rings.
Captive Audience (TV Show)
The above mentioned material appears in chapters 2-3, 6, and 11. It is never presented in a glorifying or romanticized way and the author is clearly condemning it.
The author describes being sexually harassed by two of her superiors at her former job, resulting in her eventually being fired in retaliation for reporting it. Rape and sexual slavery are mentioned when discussing the genocide in Myanmar.
Careme (TV Show)
S1E5: a male servant assaults a female assistant first by grabbing money she hid in her dress (chest area), then forcing himself onto her (25:36 - 26:12). The scene ends with her hitting him in the head to stop the assault, which kills him. The female assistant tells her lover the servant attempted to rape her when getting his help on what to do with the corpse (33:29-33:50).
Cargo 200 (Movie)
This movie is about the rape and the kidnapping of a young woman by a policeman. All of it starts at approximatley 21:00, when the woman is kissing with a young man in his car. at night He is drunk, pushy, and insists to go buy more alcohol. He brings her to an isolated farm where another drunk man lustfully looks at her. His wife tries to help her hiding, but another man finds her, sexually assault her, and kills another man who tries to help her. He then rapes her. on-screen and off-screen. The next morning, she is shown very distressed, saying that she is bleeding: the rapist takes her to his home, where he helds her captive (he lives with his crazy mother, who does nothing to help her). Later, he puts the corpse of the woman's boyfriend in the bed to which she is restrained. She is then once more raped on-screen by another man, before being forced to stay naked in bed with the rotting corpse of her boyfriend and one of her rapists, dead. A woman eventually comes to kill her captor, but she leaves her attached there (she previously victim blamed her). The captor of the woman, a policeman, is in charge of finding her once her disappearance has been noticed. We see him intervening to an emergency call from a woman who was apparently abused by her husband and his drunk friends.
An under-aged girl is touched and groped without her permission.
Chapters 3+5: a kidnapped woman is threatened with rape if she does not cooperate, there is no actual or attempted assault. Chapter 34: a woman discusses a time from her early teen years when she was abused and raped by an older man, which led to a pregnancy then a miscarriage. The discussion is non-graphic.
Carnival Row (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode contains frequent sexually denigrating comments about the fae creatures. Much brutality is shown, closing descriptions of assaults where sexual slurs are used. S1E2: attempted rape (26:30-27:13). S1E3: fae are referred to in sexually derogatory terms. One character has their fairy wings non consensually removed as a baby. A character convinces her best friend's great love to lie and say that that he is dead. S1E4: an inspector visits a witch for a spell and she insists that she needs his "seed" to complete the ritual. She suddenly blows smoke into his face that drugs him and makes him see his love interest instead of the witch. They make out and she pushes him onto the table and he passes out (around the 27 minute mark). When he awakens he has to tuck "himself" back into his pants. S1E8: it is revealed that someone has been having sex with their sibling without knowing she was his sister. A woman's brother watches her have sex without her knowledge. He then breaks into the house, threatening her and her lover at gunpoint.
Carnivale (2003) (TV Show)
S1E1: attempted rape of a woman by two men. S1E4: near the end of the episode, a scene shows an off-screen gang-rape followed by suicide. S1E9: graphic rape scene in a flashback. This season also includes an incestuous relationship between a brother and sister, and the off-screen rape and murder of a stripper (her mutilated corpse is shown on-screen).
Carrion (Movie)
A character’s history of being assaulted as a child is discussed in passing. A character describes observing trying to kidnap a young girl to “keep” her. Towards the end of the book, a man kisses one of the main characters. The main character is not expecting this. The main character tries to push him away, only for the other man to hold tighter. The main character says the man’s name, and the latter lets go. The man is verbally apologetic but what he says also could be interpreted as gaslighting. It is somewhat ambiguous, and the main character feels conflicted and confused after the fact.
The book contains graphic and long descriptions of young slave being raped by her boss.
The author references sexual violence on college campuses, rape threats against targets of harassment campaigns, white supremacist Frank Collin's molestation of young boys, and Milo Yiannopoulos being in favor of pedophilia.
Casque D'Or (Movie)
The main protagonist is a prostitute, considered as mere merchandise by men. One of them forces her to have sex with him in exchange of a favour.
Cassandra (TV Show)
S1E4: martial rape (17:00-19:00).
Castle in the Clouds (Video Game)
After the main character chases the thief boss into a forest, she walks into a building where she is surrounded by men and then is raped on-screen. There is another scene where the antagonist gropes her breasts as compensation for saving her from being raped by the thieves, and she then asks him to stop. After returning to the forest, the thief boss asks her if she came back to the forest to "get raped again". Both scenes are presented in a fetishistic way and not handled sensitively.
Castle Freak (Movie)
The attempted rape concerns a child: the mother 'offers' herself to the rapist so the child is not abused.
Castlevania (TV Show)
In the pilot (S1E1), a farmer in a tavern graphically complains to his cousin that he walked in on a strange man sexually abusing one of his goats. S1E3: a woman makes a brief comment about it being safer for her to wear masculine clothing when she travels. S3E9: a character emotionally manipulates and sexually coerces an enslaved character (kept locked in a cage, naked, beaten and walked around on a leash) into becoming her magically bound slave, unable to refuse her will without causing himself great pain. S3E10: the 'master' character jokes with her comrades about the assault and says that she intends to keep him as a sex slave. She refers to him as a child during this scene. She is a hundred year old vampire and he is a human man, so there is some clear age discrepancy as well. Season 4: the antagonist makes several jokes and references to the aforementioned assault throughout the season. In the end, the victim manages to escape and capture his assailant in return. The writing attempts to redeem her and he asks to keep her with him instead of punishing her. She kills herself rather than be captured and this is framed as a tragic scene. S4E4: a drunk man reaches out to grab at a woman walking past him. The woman beats him until he releases her.
The book contains a vivid description of a teenage girl being raped by an older man.
A woman is kinapped and brutally gang raped before being murdered.
Casualty (TV Show)
Rape is not actually depicted in the play, but the last scene ends with the implication that one is about to occur.
A man rapes a main character after murdering her cat in front of her. A character kills a woman with a cat-shaped penis weapon.
Catch 22 (Movie)
A character proudly admits committing sexual assault.
Catch-22 (2019) (TV Show)
S1E5: a soldier rapes (on-screen) and kills (off-screen) a woman. Military police arrives at the scene (for another reason) but the rapist is not arrested. A witness accepts to cover up the crime, which is referred to throughout the episode. The rapist briefly appears again in S1E6. In parallel of the rape scene, another man (an American soldier) tries to talk with an Italian young girl, who wrongly thinks that he is asking her for sexual favours.
Catch Hell (Movie)
One character is kidnapped and drugged before being almost raped.
S1E1+7: rapes on-screen.
This movie is about multiple teenage girls being hacked and blackmailed with their explicit photos.
Caveman (Movie)
The protagonist tries to rape a woman in her sleep: all of his attempts fail, and this is played for humor. Later, the protagonist is caught by the woman's partner, who gropes and caresses the protagonist thinking he is his wife. There are multiple sexually-charged conversations throughout the story, such as a woman insistently asking the protagonist if he will have sex with her (albeit in a fictional caveman language) and blackmailing him when he does not return his affections. There are also some humorous scenes of a blind man accidentally sexually assaulting a dinosaur.
The film revolves around a killer who kidnaps and tortures women by drowning them, preserving their skin and turning them into human dolls. Necrophilia is very heavily implied. Child sex abuse is discussed as the root cause of the killer's ways and is refuted by one of the main characters, who states that not everyone who was molested turns into a killer, implying that he was sexually abused as a child as well.
Cell (2016) (Movie)
The protagonist has a dream about a man receiving oral sex from a woman whose consent is unclear (48:00).
Censor (Movie)
A violent rape scene is briefly shown within a movie the protagonist watches (the sounds are heard for a little longer). A producer makes advances on the protagonist at her workplace and later harasses her when they are alone in his house, but what was most likely an attempt at rape is thwarted very quickly.
The Ceremony (Movie)
A woman describes being stalked by a man which progresses until he rapes her. The scene is short but graphic. The narrator does not seem bothered by this experience, continuing her detached/inhuman persona.
The book is set in a dystopian near future where incarcerated people can elect to enter competitions where they fight one another to the death for a chance to be set free. A few of the main characters were convicted of rape. One ended up in prison after killing a teacher who sexually assaulted her. Even when the characters are not in battle, many of their most intimate moments are filmed like a reality show feed. Two of the main characters are lesbians, and the cameras tend to focus a lot on their affection toward one another in a fetishistic manner. Female characters regularly receive "fan mail" that is harassing in nature: men who send unsolicited pictures of their genitalia, men who fetishize romantic relationships between women, backhanded compliments, etc.
Chained (Movie)
A man driving a taxi brings woman riding alone back to this home to rape and kill them (off-screen). There are brief and violent flashbacks of the attacker’s childhood that shows that his father was sexually abusing him.
Chainsaw Man (TV Show)
S1E7: an adult woman kisses the 16 year old male protagonist and pukes in his mouth. Later on, she lays semi-naked next to him in bed and asks him if he wants to do 'it'. There is a significant amount of nudity that involve teenagers.
The Chalet (TV Show)
A boy around the age of 12 gets bullied by a teenager (also boy) and is forced to give oral this does get stopped by an adult. This happening reappears in a nightmare. A man (age 31) has a relationship with a 17 year old altough this seems to be consensual. There is a claim of rape wich turns out to be a lie, but there is a girl (17 years) who had sex with a way older man who is in a position of power (a priest) and when he impragnates her he wants her to have an abortion, she does not go trough with it and keeps the child.
It is heavily implied that a prisoner is raped by a prison guard off-screen.
Chaos (2005) (Movie)
The film contains a long on-screen rape scene, which is very violent.
A step-father walks into his step-daughter's room while she is in her underwear and continues to look at her even as she tells him to leave. He then makes some inappropriate comments about her and another woman. While kissing, a girl tells a boy to stop but he pressures her. She screams and tells him to stop and the scene ends. Later she is seen with blood on her thighs and she tells the others that he raped her.
Charmed (1998) (TV Show)
S2E13: three animals are turned into men, the former rabbit corners a woman and attempts to rape her. S2E14: one of the main character travels back in time in her dreams - she is in the body of a different person whose lover attempts to seduce her. S2E22: during a time travel episode, one of the main characters is 17 when she makes out with a demon in her car. He wants to go further than her and does not listen to her objections. Her sisters can save her.
Che: Part One (Movie)
One soldier takes a teenage girl out of her house during a guerilla: it is implied that he rapes her off-screen. This is mentioned later on, and the rapist is executed for his crime.
There ware multiple scenes of violence against women in this movie, as well as hypnotized/drugged coerced sex. It includes crucifixion of a prostitute, hypnotized unclothing (on screen) suggested hypnotized/coerced sex off screen, and fluid exchange without consent. There is also needle usage which some may find triggering.
Cherry (Movie)
In a brief scene, a rape taking place can be heard. While not shown graphically it is very clear what is happening. A soldier makes a pointed comment about an Iraqi girl being “cute”. This is the same character that is heard raping a girl in a previous scene.
Cherry Falls (Movie)
Worthy of note: sexual attraction is implied between a high school girl and her teacher.
The documentary discusses the rape of a mother and her 11 year old daughter, with the rape of the daughter discussed in detail.
The Chestnut Man (TV Show)
S1E3: a voice over directs a child to undress and there are evidence of long term sexual abuse by a parent on a step child. Sexual abuse and child neglect is an over arching theme in the show.
The Chi (TV Show)
Chicuarotes (Movie)
Child 44 (Movie)
The whole plot is about young, prepubescent, boys being found naked and murdered: it is unclear if they are sexually assaulted. About one hour into the movie, the main female character is brought in by officers and given an offer to leave her husband to be with a higher ranking office. When she declines, it is implied that high ranking office order a man to rape her. The man comes up close behind her, starts touching her shoulders, neck and face. He puts his fingers in her mouth before the camera pans to her trembling hands, then cuts to a new scene. Later it is revealed that the main female character is with her husband only because she was afraid of what would be done to her if she denied him marriage.
This book discusses the history and culture of Vikings including the treatment and rape of slaves, rape as ritual practice, and other sexual acts people were forced to engage in. It also discusses historical legal codes about a variety of specific sexual crimes and the violent executions of people accused of being LGBTQ+. While the writing is not gratuitous or glorifying it is explicit and clear about what it is describing for the sake of education. Incest is mentioned in discussions of Viking mythology.
There is a mention of rape as part of war. Within a cult run by children, a pair of older teenagers have sex as part of a ritual while the younger children watch.
It is implied that a pastor abuses a child he fosters in his home.
A 17 year old boy says that another 17 year old member of the group was chosen by their leader to bear his child, and she is shown in a later scene to be pregnant. This is implied to have happened before with other pairs in the group.
Made-for-TV documentary about the cult 'The Children of God,' who participated in leadership-sanctioned child sexual abuse. Non-explicit clips are shown from 'strip tease' videos which young children were coerced to act in. Segments of documents sanctioning/encouraging child sexual abuse are shown. Ex-members discuss the abuse that they suffered.
Child's Cry (Movie)
The female protagonist finds the peddler who sold her a possessed doll, who then attempts to rape her as a form of currency (50:00-50:32).
Chiller (TV Show)
A man forces himself on a woman in her home (rape is implied).
Chillerama (Movie)
In the introduction scene, a man intends to assault a woman's corpse, but when he opens his pants, she sits up and bites his penis which infects him. Later when most of the people at the drive-ins are infected, they attack and assault each other. Story 1: a sperm creature attempts to rape a woman but it is stopped by her date. Story 2: a wrestling coach says he watches the team in the shower while groping one of the students, he then attempts to perform oral sex on him but the kills the coach before he can. A wrestling team corners another group in the locker room where the leader rapes one of them. The group then transforms and kills the wrestling team, with the one who was raped raping the other to death.
S3E6: it is strongly implied that a woman (turned spider monster) assaults her male partner in an attempt to 'fertilize her eggs'.
Chinatown (Movie)
An adult man has a relationship with a much younger woman. Her age is never stated but she appears to be a teenager. An elderly man, implied to be senile, gropes a nurse. A woman discusses having a daughter as a result of being impregnated by her father when she was a teenager. The father attempts to gain custody over the younger daughter, and it is implied his intentions are sexual in nature. He ultimately succeeds, and it is implied the young woman may be a victim of further incest. Worthy of note: it is implied that a woman is being physically abused by her husband.
Chlopi (Movie)
The protagonist is groomed by her swimming coach, who is overfamiliar with her in terms of commenting on her body, touching her inappropriately, and communicating with her outside of practices and competitions. The protagonist is later raped by a fellow swim team member.
Chobits (TV Show)
Although not out right stated, it is implied that the main character was being abused by his school master. It becomes a prevelant theme throughout the rest of the film. Further in the movie that same character assaults a woman by making her undress for him in exchange for money.
A changeling child stands in the bathroom when a woman comes out of the shower A teenage girl makes a sarcastic comment about not being able to wait in their car because of "hillbilly rapists". While possessed, a teenage girl has sex with a teenage boy (who does not know she is possessed). Afterwards the spirit leaves her and she is visibility distressed and does not remember what happened.
The Church (Movie)
A man attempts to rape a woman and a demon is shown raping a woman toward the end of the movie.
Cicada (Movie)
The main character was sexually abused as a child. A piece of news about a priest accused abusing kids is heard and commented on.
The first part of the movie (first 40 minutes) takes place in an orphanage where an elderly doctor and his protege deliver babies and perform abortions. About 20 minutes in, they find a very sick girl. The doctor finds out, by examining her, that a so-called doctor tried to perform a failed abortion on her: the punctured fetus is still inside her uterus along with a foreign object. She dies off-screen. At some point during the first part of the movie, soldiers on a train inappropriately touch a young girl (off-screen) who was teasing them (from outside of the train): she rebuffs them. About 1:30:00 into the movie, it is revealed that a father has been having sex with his adult daughter and got her pregnant. When confronted about it, the father gets angry and says that he loves her and would not harm her. The woman, visibly distressed, tries to flee at night, but he forces her to stay. The protagonist then performs an abortion on her in precarious conditions, while the father assists him. After that, she eventually flees (off-screen) and stabs her father when he tries to stop her: he additionnally stabs himself to death and lets her go.
Rape is not explicitly named at any point. However, in the depicted fantasy culture, girls aged 16-18 are compelled to marry the (sometimes also teen, sometimes much older) men who claim them. Misogyny and domestic violence are major themes. Spoiler: it is revealed that Cinderella married Prince Charming while under the influence of a strong love spell, and actually hated him.
The relevant scenes occur in the chapter where the sailors first begin to visit Circe's island.
One character rapes the severed head of a woman and forces her husband to watch.
Citrus (TV Show)
Sexual abuse is a prominent theme in this show. There are many sexual assaults between teenage girls (including step sisters) consisting of attempted rape, groping, forced kissing/heavy kissing, and more. There is a sexual assault (forced kissing) between a teenage girl and a male teacher. This teacher is also said to be abusing the girl outside of this scene. There are implications/mentions of sexual assault on younger children, including child-on-child sexual assault.
Relatively non-graphic scene in which a woman is raped by a man. In another scene, a man is forced to strip at gunpoint and is insulted with homophobic slurs.
Some white supremacist artists attempt to get a woman of color-owned art gallery to host their art. The art in question depicts Black women being gang raped by white men. A man gets one of the protagonists alone. He belittles her for being obedient and for being a virgin. Then he grabs her arm and flashes his genitals at her, telling her that he would be willing to take her virginity. She gets away before he can do anything.
The female lead, Sleeping Beauty, instead of being awoken by a kiss, is raped by a prince claiming that he "can not control himself" thus waking her from her sleep. She is sold to him by her father afterwards. On the journey to his home, she is brutally beaten, raped, groped, and tied up to not defend herself from both the prince and strangers who pay to both see and partake in the "action". When arriving home, it is revealed that the prince and his mother would take other princes/princesses to keep as sex slaves. It is heavily implied that the prince is in a relationship with his mother. The female lead learns from other sex slaves that they are beaten, groped, raped, and tortured if they do not do as they are told. One states this starts as young as age 13 and older. The slaves are forced to do sexual acts to strangers, each other (including same-sex despite not wanting to) and helpers of the kingdom. One slave elaborates that when he tried being defiant, he was given to the cooks who did such horrid things that he began to lose his senses. Everything is described in graphic detail, and considered "BDSM" by the author.
The son of a wealthy family rapes his house servant while he is drunk. The servant becomes pregnant. She goes on a radio show to discuss what happened to her, and although the host is mostly supportive, she does ask questions that might seem like rape apologism, specifically, asking why she did not go to the police. The father of the man who raped her rationalizes to himself that such the rape of house staff is a "rite of passage" for men of his class. There is mention of a classmate of the main character, who was raped by a grown man and subsequently removed from school.
There is a scene where one of the protagonists is sexually touched by a stranger on a subway. Also about 90% through the book, a man attempts to rape one of the protagonists before she gets away.
Class of 1984 (Movie)
A woman is pinned down by a group of juveniles: they take turns raping her on screen. A girl is forced to strip fully naked as part of an initiation.
S1E6: a teenage student is stalked and followed into an alley by an adult. The adult then assaults her in an attempted rape/sexual assault (10:00-14:30). There is nothing graphic and the student does not have her genitals touched or revealed before it is stopped and the culprit arrested. There is an instance of a character forcing one to grab her breast through clothing, and threatened to report it as attempted rape. It is not gratuitous, but serious and unsettling.
Claws (2017) (TV Show)
Claymore (TV Show)
S1E5: a woman is surrounded by a group of bandits that imply they will assault her. They are put off doing so after she reveals her body, which is not shown but implied to be disfigured in some way. S1E6: a man attempts to rape a woman as revenge for an injury. Her short is torn, but her body is not shown. The woman in question is a powerful fighter, and it is implied the man is far weaker than her. She does not resist, due to mention of a code that she cannot kill humans, this presents a potentially unique and uncomfortable power dynamic. The attempt is prevented by someone stepping in, after tearing the shirt. S1E10: about 15 minutes in, a monster has a fairly phallic-styled tongue which is used as a weapon. It results in a fairly graphic torso injury. S1E12: a woman grabs another woman unconsensually, and places her hands down her top (5:00-6:00). She draws blood to her fingertips and ingests it. This is broken up by another character that enters the scene. S1E12: from this episode on, the show features a relationship between an adult and a younger character. They share a kiss (19:00-21:00) and this scene is flash-backed in later episodes. This relationship is never sexual and not previously romantic within the anime.
In general, this series involves a lot of incest. The characters in this book are infected with an extraterrestrial disease that gives them superhuman abilities and increases their fertility. They have to actively restrain themselves from raping people because of this heightened libido. Two of the main characters are 16-year-old girls. Once they are affected by the disease, they begin craving and pursuing sex with adult men. One even starts trying to initiate sex with her father, but she is interrupted. Towards the end of the book, the two girls and their father are kidnapped. The kidnappers have other hostages, mostly women and children, whom they rape repeatedly and leave for dead. One child hostage is described as having mutilated genitals.
Clean (Movie)
While at a party of mostly adults, a teenage girl seems to be high or drunk. She tries to leave the house, but several men hold her inside and push her down onto a couch. Her clothing is not removed, but the men crowd over her and one opens his pants but they are stopped before going any further.
In the movie, the past of the vilain is shown. As a child, her mother sold her for grown man to rape. The movie does not show the men actually raping her. In one scene, one man starts to take his shirt off before the scene cuts. At another time, there are screams and a fight heard from outside of the bedroom.
Child sex abuse is mentioned and discussed and joked about as a fake scenario for an exorcism scene.
Clerks (Movie)
A woman accidentally has sex with a dead body in a bathroom with no lightbulb (nothing is shown, it is all in dialogue). The scene is played for laughs, as well as other rape jokes.
The following essays have references to sexual violence: "God, Sex, and Pythagoras" features a 16-year-old who became pregnant by her 18-year-old boyfriend. The author of "I Was Not Aborted and Further Miscellanea" recalls attending a protest where someone had a sign that said "All Men Rape." The author of "The Feminist Evolution of an Artist, Survivor, Conjurer from the Tropics" details her experienced being raped by a man who was supposed to be taking her to church when she was a teenager. She subsequently has an abortion. "You Can't Rape a Whore: A Love Story" features someone saying that they hoped a particular celebrity would get raped. "Anita and Me" is about the author's identification with Anita Hill after her rape accusations against Clarence Thomas. There is passing mention in "My Number One Must-Have" about rape taking place at Woodstock. In "On Reading Katie Roiphe," the author discusses rape on college campuses. The author of "Pillow Dancing and Other Failed Hetero Experiments" references the author's experiences with sexual assault, as well as those of her friends.
Clifton HIll (Movie)
It is discussed that one male character defiled a young boy, but we do not find out if that was the complete truth.
Climax (2018) (Movie)
Clinical (Movie)
While never shown on camera, the plot hinges on the sexual assault of a teenager, her subsequent PTSD and treatment. There is a clinical interview where a patient vaguely recollects interacting with her assaulter. It is later revealed that her assaulter was her father.
Clique (TV Show)
S1E4: a graphic rape scene (two older men raping a young woman) shown through CCTV. S1E5: footage of the aforementioned rape is brielf shown during a lecture. S1E6: mentions of rape. A female character tells her brother that he is a rapist. He denies it. A female character says to another woman that they need to talk about what the fact that she has been raped and that she is being raped. S2E4: rape on screen. S2E6: repeat of rape scene from S2E4.
Cloak & Dagger (TV Show)
The female protagonist is kidnapped and becomes a victim of sex trafficking - this spans several episodes. The same character has multiple relationships with adult men, on and off-screen, as a survival tactic.
A gang of boys sexually assaults a woman and attempts to rape her but she escapes (5:00-9:00). The scene is graphic and the victim can be seen distraught and struggling. A male gang breaks into a woman's home and rapes her, while her handicapped husband is forced to watch (12:00-14:00). The protagonist, a teenager male, is sexually assaulted by his social worker (23:20-25:00). Later, he breaks into another woman's home and bludgeons her with a phallic-shaped sculpture: she is not sexually assaulted (40:00-42:00). A video briefly shows a woman being gang raped (1:13:10-1:13:20). The last few seconds of the film show a sex-scene between the protagonist and a woman. It looks fairly aggressive but it is not clear whether or not it is consensual (2:13:30-2:13:55).
Closet Land (Movie)
The entire film revolves around a woman taken from her home and tortured physically and sexually by a man she does not know into telling him about her childhood trauma inflicted by a family friend. It is up to interpretation whether the man is the family friend, or not.
The main character witnesses a group of boys attacking another boy for being gay, raping him with a foreign object. It is mentioned that the physical damage caused by this attack was so great that the victim was permanently paralysed. This occurs off-screen between the 9:20-12:20 marks.
This movie is about a murderer with a bondage kink. He is sexually aroused by most of his victims and has lots of polaroids of unconsensual encounters.
An on-screen rape happens early in the film.
The Cobbler (Movie)
A man pretends to be someone they know to sleep with two different women, but does not succeed either time. One woman leaves immediately and the other gets nude but then he leaves.
Cobra (Movie)
Code Black (TV Show)
S1E4: a kidnapped woman has a child with her kidnapper. It is strongly implied that he raped and impregnated her. The kidnapper also repeatedly says that the woman belongs to her. S1E9: a woman tells a doctor that she was raped in a home invasion. She describes being strangled but the description of the rape is otherwise not graphic besides that. S1E13-14: a character treats a patient who begins stalking her and repeatedly shows up at her workplace to ask her out, despite her protestations. He also murders one the character's coworkers when she attempts to confront him about the stalking. S1E15: the same character confronts her in a parking lot, where she tells him that she is a lesbian. He attacks her with a knife and attempts to rape her, but is interrupted by the character's friend and coworker, who fights him off and allows her to escape the situation. S2E6: one of the cases covered involves a college student who was raped while she was unconscious; this is discussed heavily and there is a scene where she is examined for evidence collection. She is treated by the same character who was almost assaulted in season 1, and the character's memories of the attack are discussed.
The main male character (a minor) develops a romantic/sexual relationship with an adult woman. A man has an obsession with multiple women and young girls. He stalks and harasses one of them as well. There are multiple implied scenes of child sex abuse and rape. There are also scenes of sexual harassment and assault, sexualization of minors and women.
Code: Realize (Video Game)
In the beginning of the common route, a group of men try to sexually assault the protagonist. They rip her clothes trying to undress her, but that' i as far as they go. One of the male lead's jokes and comments could be considered or close to sexual harassment. This happens throughout the game.
Coffin Rock (Movie)
Two main characters engage consensually to sexual activity: one of them revokes her consent but the other keeps going.
Cold Case (TV Show)
S1E1: a man calls a woman a slut, tells her to shut up and then kills her. S1E2: this episode is about a femicide committed by a controlling and possesive husband. A husband speaks against her wife, who is testifying in court against a man who showed himself naked to her. S1E3: this episode is about a serial rapist. It is mentioned that a killer (male) raped the victim before killing her. Some details of the crime are mentioned. A scene after the rape between the rapist and the victim is shown. A man attacks a woman in her home. Before this flashback she mentions to a detective that she was raped that evening. S1E4: it is mentioned that a wife was violent towards her husband. S1E5: a female detective walks into a tavern with cops and gets whistled at. One cop asks another man if his wife knows he has a date as a joke (it was not a date). One man harasses a married woman, says she should "pay" for the "wrong behavior" of her husband (asking for a better pay) by offering him sexual services. After she declined, he says to another woman who was with her she should "pay". It is mentioned he sexually abused herand forced to lick his boots. In one scene he forces the married woman to lick his boots by threatening her husband with a gun. S1E13: there is a gang-rape scene at the end of the episode. S1E22: this episode is about a man grooming several minors and this man being sexually violent towards them. One of the victims told an officer about this who dismisses the child and asks him if he, the victim, is gay. A police team found about this while investigating the murder of the mentioned sexual perpetrator. S1E23: this episode is the case of a female teenager who was raped and killed. S2E9: an attempted rape is mentioned. S2E10: crime investigation of rape is mentioned. A woman is murdered in a park. S2E16: the sexual abuse of two minors, the creation of child pornography and the rape of a 18-year old woman are discussed. S2E17: a man asks a woman to pay in sexual work while touching a part of her blouse. She denies and he accepts. S2E18: in a bar, fraternity men want to have sex with a woman. She does not want to and they all grab her on the table. A female police officer who was there rescues this woman out of this situation. S4E2, 6, 7: a main character's brother is revealed to have been assaulted by his coach when he was a child. He is then pushed to admit that he was assaulted and begins to have nightmares about the events (not shown on screen). S5E10: one of the characters turns out to be a college campus serial rapist.
This series goes into detail about the sexual assault of a little girl. It gets very detailed in S1E3.
About 13 minutes into the film, a man gropes a prostitute before going to bed with her, and the two start arguing. In the next scene, they are heard having sex until she starts yelling at him to get off of her. Soon after, their bodies are found: a (corrupt) policeman then explains that the man beat her so she stabbed him and he finally shot her.
Cold Fish (Movie)
Cold Moon (Movie)
A character uses alcohol to have sex with teenage girls.
Cold Mountain (Movie)
A woman is almost raped by a group of soldiers.
Chapter 19: two underage boys discus sex and one of them suggests luring his sister to the barn so they can "see what it's like." His friend is frightened and disturbed by this suggestion. Chapter 35: the protagonist, a teen boy, kisses a classmate despite them saying no multiple times. Chapter 42: an adult character shares that her father raped her when she was twelve years old. The circumstances are described in detail.
Cold Skin (Movie)
A protagonist has a dubiously consensual sexual relationship with a humanoid creature he is keeping as a pet.
The violence is not too detailed, and it is not towards main characters. However, before the reader and protagonist can confirm that the assaults are occuring, there is an ominous implication of women getting plucked off that is not hard to miss before it is explained by a main character.
Colonia (Movie)
A man tells a young woman to take off her robe, then her blouse to reveal her bra. He smells her and then asks if she's touched herself. He yells at her and then hugs her. A man in a position of religious power touches very young, shirtless boys on the shoulders and then tells them to go shower. The boys undress in the shower (not shown), then the man enters the shower room and takes off his shoes. The screen cuts to black. Sexual abuse is implied.
About 52 minutes into the movie, the male protagonist locks the door of the main character's girlfriend's hotel room, shoves her into the bathroom and against a wall and says threatening things to her for a minute. He releases her when it is clear she cannot escape (power play): she then apologizes to him.
The main character is sexually abused by both her father and her husband, with depictions of rape onscreen. There are other scenes of sexual harassment in a bar and in the street; the latter is implied to culminate in an offscreen rape.
One of the main characters is raped by her father repeatedly and gives birth to at least two children. This same character is then forced into an unwanted marriage with an adult man. She is raped throughout the relationship. Her husband attempts to rape her sister.
A graphic story is told about a back-alley abortion. There is a long and graphic rape scene which shows the attacker as well as the victim staring blankly into the camera.
The author discusses the impacts of trauma from sexual violence on survivors' overall sexual relationships, a specific instance of homophobic rape, and a specific instance of someone walking in on his friend raping a woman while she was drunk and passed out.
Come and See (Movie)
A girl is thrown into a truck full of soldiers. She is verbally assaulted and beaten, and her screams imply that she is raped. She is later shown with torn clothing and blood runing down her legs.
Sexual violence is used for comedic purposes. A demonic puppet forcibly gives a man oral sex. Another man forcibly orally rapes a voodoo doll, making the real person feel what the other man is doing.
A woman gives her female friend pills with the intention of making her fall asleep. After confirming she is asleep she kisses her hip and the scene fades to black. Later, the same woman performs sexual acts using her body while she is awake but visibly distressed/unresponsive.
The institutional sexual abuse of children is discussed without detail.
In a flashback scene, a man confesses that while he and the protagonist were in America in the previous film, they had convinced two women to come back to their apartment. While he slept with one, the protagonist was left with the other woman, who drugged him and had sex with him (shown on-screen), which led to the conception of his son.
The plot revolves around the rape and murder of a teenage girl.
Communion (Movie)
In a scene where the protagonist is abducted by aliens, he is restrained and a rectal probe is forcibly inserted into him.
Community (TV Show)
Sexual molestation of some kind took place as a part of a main character's backstory (it was confirmed outside of the show by the creator). This is only very lightly implied, with mentions in passing on at least three ocassions throught the show. There are frequent rape jokes in passing, played for laugh, and women are often unconsensually grabbed, touched, preyed upon, or kissed without their will, especially in public scenarios (e.g. a male character even pulls down the pants of a female character). A teenager and a man in his mid-thirties have a romantic situationship. He is aware that his lust for her is morally reprehensible but he continues to flirt with her. S2E7: rape joke (18:25). Rape is also mentioned towards the end of the episode. S2E13: one character says that there is a rapist in an hallway. S2E19: one character makes up a childhood rape trauma. S2E20: a character lies about being sexually abused by a family member during childhood. S5E1: one character describes a town as having a 'finger up it's butt as a child'. S5E3: the episode revolved around people getting quarters down their butt cracks: it is treated very seriously. S6E3: a character mentions peadophilia (8:30). S6E5: mention of prison rape (2:25).
Companion (Movie)
The movie revolves around sex robots who become autonomous. Although the sex they have with their owners is portrayed as consensual, there is some dubiousness around it as they are programmed to be a sexual partner and do not actually have the ability to consent on their own free will. A man touches and kisses the protagonist without her consent and does not stop even after she tells him to. The man attempts to assault and hurt her but she fights him off before he can do so.
Compliance (Movie)
A young woman is forced to strip in front of two elderly women. She then puts on an apron which a man is instructed to ask her to remove. She is told to perform jumping jacks while the man describes aspects of her body to another man over the phone. A young woman's naked body is intimately inspected, without her consent, by a man. She is instructed by him to perform a number of other sexual acts, including oral sex.
S1E4: rape scene.
Con Air (Movie)
The main character is a slave and is forced to have sex with a woman. He covers her with a cloak and the scene ends. It is strongly implied that they are forced to have sex while his captors watch, but the action is not shown. The main character has sex with a succubus for information. Both parties consent to the sex. However, during the act the succubus transforms into a monster and tries to kill the main character. Later there are several topless women in a Roman style orgy. They are members of a cult, and their consent is implied, but is questionable due to their status as cult members, either under the influence of drugs, power, or some kind of magic.
The particular scene is quite violent and descriptive and does imply that a little girl who is the main character is raped by Hitler and subsequently bares a child from the assault. The entire story builds on this act happening to the girl.
Concrete (Movie)
The film focuses on the kidnapping of a 17 years-old girl by young gang members. She is repeatedly beaten, raped and tortured during several months. All these actions are depicted very graphically.
Confessional (Movie)
There is a lot of sexual abuse revealed towards the end of the film: non-consensual videotaping of sexual acts, sexual blackmail, forced exposure, and incestual rape.
Conflicted (Movie)
The film contains a graphic rape scene.
The Conjuring (Movie)
There is a very brief mention of childhood sexual abuse by a father at approximately the 43:40 mark.
Consent (Movie)
As she walks by his open bedroom door, a sister catches her brother masturbating and informs him of such. He later films her masturbating in her bedroom and she then stands in his bedroom doorway as he masturbates while she watches. A kissing scene occurs between siblings. They lay back on his bed. She lifts up his shirt and begins to unbuckle his belt, but he stops her here.
The Consultant (TV Show)
S1E1: the main antagonist creepingly smells his employees, and forces one of them to take a sponge in the office. He also somehow coerces an asexual person to give him oral sex violently. S1E2: the sexual assault fromt S1E1 is mentioned. A place with a glass floor is called an 'upskirt gallery'.
This erotic film is composed of four episodes (or five depending on the version). The first one opens with a quote about a 20 year old boy's relation with his 16 year old female cousin, mentioning a power imbalance between them, that he uses to fulfill his sexual desires. The film shows him luring her to a secluded place, and asking her to perform oral sex on him (shown on-screen). The second episode opens with a quote about a woman who was raped by a beggar. In the final scene of the episode, the woman is indeed shown being pursued and caught by a man who presumably rapes her off-screen. The third episode is about a countess who bathes in the blood of virgin girls. We see her choosing girls forced to expose their genitals. Later, there are long close-up of presumably teenage girls' genitals showering. We see girls being restrained and chained, before being sacrified off-screen. At some point, the countess is stripped by a crowd of young girls. Worthy ot note: early in the episode, a young girl briefly watches a couple having sex: they tell her to go away. The fourth episode is about a woman having sex with her father and her brother. In some versions of the film, there is an additional episode (between the second and the third) about a woman being pursued and raped by a beast in the woods. The beast strips her, ejaculates while trying to get her, puts his head on her genitals while she is trying to get away. After that, it tries to rape her but when she escapes, it masturbates on her clothes. The beast eventually catches the woman and rapes her: she is shown enjoying it and consent to oral sex. Blood is shown on her dress.
Promotional material describes the encounter as a 'one-night stand,' but it is actually date rape. Following this incident, the woman believes that she has contracted an STD, but is mistaken. This is the central plot of the film.
Control Z (TV Show)
The show features a relationship between a female student and her female teacher. S1E1: it is revealed that a teenage boy got herpes from his cousin (2:35-2:50). S1E8: an attempted rape takes place during a party scene. S2E2: a girl wakes up naked and tied up and discovers that she was drugged. No assault happened.
The Convent (Movie)
A man sexually harasses a woman during the first part of the movie. A man sexually harasses and appears to attempt to rape another man later in the movie.
S1E1+3: nonconsensual touching. S1E4: a woman drugs a man to pass out; tricks him into thinking he is the cause of her pregnancy (though they likely did not have sex). S1E: a husband has his wife give fellacio to him while he knows her lover is in the closet, and makes eye contact with him, indicating he is forcing him to watch. S1E10: nonconsensual touching, ripping off of clothes. Worthy of note: S1E4: a woman is slapped. S1E9: a woman is choked. A black man is abducted and beaten with the intention of selling him into slavery.
The main character is a gangster who keeps threatening, abusing, beating and sexually harassing his wife (and everybody around him). Near the end of the movie, the woman tells about the previous sexual abuses she endured from him. The film also contains several scenes of torture, mostly of naked men.
The protagonist is a teenage African girl who is kidnapped into slavery and taken to the Americas. She is raped and impregnated.
A clip is shown in the film featuring an attempted rape, during which a woman's shirt is torn open.
The theme of the movie is necrophilia.
Countdown (Movie)
A doctor frequently inappropriately touches one of his nursing students and eventually attempts to rape her before she pushes him off.
There is an on screen rape in the last ~15 minutes of the film. A male character thinks a female character is dead and proceeds to have sex with her corpse before she regains consciousness and kills him.
Several references are made to a neighboring land in which as soon as girls reach menarche, they are forced into partnerships and pregnancy. One female secondary character was badly abused (details unspecified) for trying to escape her fate. A male main character has undergone prolonged sexual abuse by the evil queen. He is safe now, but trauma and recovery are major themes. The female main character experiences emotional and psychological abuse from an intimate partner in the early chapters. She escapes the situation, but the fallout continues to be a major theme, and she is forced later to interact with her abuser and his allies.
A male main character is "overtaken" by magic that forces him choose a woman to have sex with. A group of minor male characters attempt to gang rape the female main character. They are interrupted before things get far. A secondary male character is forced to be the female antagonist's lover. A secondary male character touches and kisses the female main character against her will.
This film contains s a graphic attempted rape scene.
Cracks (Movie)
The Craft (Movie)
A man makes a sexual comment about his girlfriend's underage daughter. Another man attemps to rape the protagonist while he is under the influence of a love spell. This implies that he acts out of "love" and puts the blame for the assault on the spellcaster. The same man later becomes the victim of sexual assault / attempted rape when another woman disguises herself as his love interest and makes out with him until she is stopped.
Crank (Movie)
The main character is pregnant after what she believes is a one night stand. She is tormented by nightmares, and eventually remembers that the father of her child drugged and assaulted her. A brief dialogue from during the assault is included in a flashback.
Crawlers (TV Show)
The protagonist spends most of the film trying to find her best friend, whom she heard on the phone was about to be raped. She even has to come back to the place where she herself was raped, and runs into her rapist, who tries to get her alone again. A college student mentions that her boyfriend drugged her and that she does not know what happened whilst she was under the influence of these drugs. Rape is not mentioned specifically but it is heavily implied and the incident is brought up multiple times throughout the movie.
The Crawlers (Movie)
A woman catches a ride with a man to go to the next town. He makes suggestive comments then grabs her thigh but she rejects him. Then he pulls the car over and pins her down. She is able to get away and he chases her into the woods briefly, but soon gives up.
A father infected with a combat virus rapes his daughter.
Sexual violence is mentioned a few times in passing as a contributor to mental illness. A respondent in the chapter on eating disorders discusses being abused, including sexually, by her father.
Creamerie (TV Show)
S1E5: a man is held down by a group of women, assaulted with non-consensual touching, and another woman is pressure to rape him. She nearly goes through with it, but decides not to at the last second. S1E6: there are graphic depictions of men being forced to produce sperm.
Creature (Movie)
A man sneaks into a woman's room while she is changing. He presses against her from behind and grabs her breast, but she is able to fight him off and nothing further happens. A female crew member who is being controlled by the alien, strips down and kisses a male crew member in order to pass the infection onto him.
S1E0: this episode features the "born sexy yesterday" trope. There is a sex scene between the Bride and her creator even though the latter speaks in a childlike manner. S1E6: two of the titular characters end up at a brothel where a client abuses a sex worker offscreen. Worthy of note: Frankenstein spends the series stalking the Bride.
While on a date, a woman attempts to leave and the man chases her. He pins her down but she is able to get away from him before anything further happens. The man is then impaled on a branch by a creature.
Creep (2004) (Movie)
A nonverbal autistic child is abused by an adult caretaker. Because he is autistic, he has to fight harder to be believed.
S1E2 "Body In A Bag": a police officer mentions that a man was in jail for pedophilia. S1E3 "Dying For Protection": asex worker recounts being trafficked when she was younger. In another scene towards the end, a police officer recounts how a different sex worker's customer refused a condom and proceeded to attack and murder her. S1E4 "The Stolen Baby": mentions of child trafficking throughout. With the case never being solved, the child's fate is unknown.
In a world without adult women, a group of men try to artificially induce puberty in a 5-year-old so that they can impregnate her. None of them goes through with it, though.
Criminal (Movie)
A woman is ducktapped to her bed and the protagonist tries to rape her. He stopped because of his memories (he shares the brain of a deceased person which wife he was about to rape). At another moment in the film, a nurse is groped by a man against her will.
Criminal Minds (TV Show)
The show is a crime procedural and, as a result, goes into detail regarding incidents of sexual violence (and pedophilia) on many occasions. One plotline involves a main character who must repeatedly confront a man who once molested him, along with many other pre-pubescent boys. S2E3: parents are sent a video of their daughter being raped in the first few minutes of the episode. S2E5: a serial rapist ist caught. However, the victims offer insight into the hardships faced by victims of assault and as a result, he may hit home. S2E12: one of the main characters is revealed to have been molested by his football coach, who was a father figure to him for a time, during his childhood. The man who hurt him has also hurt many other young boys. He has to confront this man later in the episode. This topic is handled relatively sensitively. S4E7: a main character believes his father raped and murdered his childhood friend when the main character was four years old and the friend was six. The main character goes to hypnotherapy to try to remember the time of the murder, and while there he becomes distressed by a memory of his father coming into his room and telling him that he loves him. He also remembers seeing his father burning clothes that had blood on them. The main character becomes convinced that his father did assault and kill his friend, and goes to confront him along with two other main characters. Over the course of the episode it becomes clear that the main character's father was not involved in the child's death and assault, but helped to cover up the murder of the man who was actually responsible. The main character stays convinced of his father's involvement until there is irrefutable evidence otherwise. Despite all of this, it is implied that the memory which distressed him during hypnotherapy was not a memory of abuse. S4E20: a person with dissociative identity disorder has a protector alter who rapes a man who reminds her of his father who abused his mother and then himself as a child (no images). S5E1: a man is physically assaulted (stabbed repeatedly) in a scene with sexual overtones (the assaulter mentions sex explicitly while stabbing him, after removing his own shirt). There is an implication that this ends with rape, but it is extremely ambiguous and never confirmed one way or another. S8E12: a main character's girlfriend is abducted by her stalker, a woman who is obsessed with the main character and jealous of the girlfriend. While attempting to save his girlfriend, the main character allows the stalker to kiss and grope him, but he has trouble pretending to be into it which angers the stalker. Similar occurrences of non-consensual kissing and/or groping happen with this specific main character many times throughout the series, and he is visibly upset by it, but none of his trauma is ever addressed. S8E18: the man from S2E12 has to confront the man who sexually abused him. He has to shake the hand of this man at one point. The details surrounding his sexual abuse are discussed, but there are no graphic descriptions of the act itself. Once again, the topic is handled relatively sensitively. Several episodes features serial rapists, who sometimes seeks to impregnate their victims. One of them kills herself because she is pregnant. Another episode involves a woman who was raped and becomes a serial killer (narrative of victim blaming). Seasons 11-15: a recurring female character is a serial killer obsessed with one of the main characters. In later seasons there are multiple episodes where she kisses and gropes him without his consent. At one point it is revealed he believes she had drugged and raped him years prior, which she denies, but the truth is never actually told to the audience (i.e., it ie unknown whether she actually raped him and was gaslighting him or if she was truthful in her denial and he was mistaken.) After she denies that she raped him, the main character is shown to be very angry and upset, although he never talks about it. In the same episode where she denies raping him, she manipulates him into taking her on a "date", forces him to dance with her intimately (not the first time she has done so), and later he kisses her consensually in an effort to manipulate her back.
Crone Wood (Movie)
The male lead tries to record the couple having sex without his partner knowing. The same man is later drugged and multiple women rape him while he is mostly unconscious.
One of the main characters was forced to work as a slave in what is essentially a legal whorehouse. We get a pretty vivid description of not the acts, but how she felt during what she was forced to do on one time where she did not manage to mentally “leave her body behind”.
Cropsey (Movie)
The plot revolves around a child murderer, and sexual abuse is a prominent theme throughout.
Cross (TV Show)
S1E3: this episode mentions child rape. Nothing is shown on camera.
There are numerous, highly disturbing scenes of rape and psychological coercion, with the intent to shock and titillate.
Crossroads (Movie)
A main character discusses that she was raped while drunk and became pregnant from it. A man tries to touch a woman's butt, but he gets stopped by a punch.
The protagonist’s wife is raped and subsequently murdered in front of him. The film features multiple graphic flashbacks of it. The main villain has an ambiguous relationship with a woman he refers to as his father’s daughter and his sister. A character even reacts in confusion and disgust to it (49:45-49:57).
The Crowded Room (TV Show)
S1E3: a main character is the victim of rape: this ties into a major plot line. A man tries to force a teenager to perform oral sex on him at gunpoint. The teen is saved, but the scene is very tense and comes close. S1E5: a male adult character touches a young boy inappropriately. This is interrupted by another male adult character (32:05-33:04). A male adult character takes a young boy into a barn and it is implied that he rapes him. This is a major plotline in the series (37:25-39:59).
The story follows a boy who is being sexually abused by his step-dad: it is handled fairly well (right emotions and parts of sexual trauma that are not always discussed). However the manga is graphic.
Two stepsiblings are shown to be highly sexually attracted to one another, one luring the other into a bet with the promise of sex. In a deleted scene, the stepbrother attempts to rape his stepsister. The male lead performs oral sex on a girl after giving her a drink that he didn't tell her had alcohol in it. The girl is also extremely naive and dimwitted, strengthening the impression that he's very much taking advantage of her. Two underage girls (17 and 15 year-old) sleep with a man, who is the music teacher of one of them.
The female lead is forced into a marriage, and states that she knew she would never be able to marry for love. She explains her dislike to her husband, consistently tells readers how she wants to get the "wedding duties over with" While she never says "No" or "Stop", she does express not enjoying the sex with her new husband, instead imagining him as someone else to get it over with. Another female lead tells the first that while in foster care, a man tried to rape her. She also hints that it might not have been the first time a foster parent had done less severe things to her. The male lead admits to hating the female lead and just wanting to chase his own pleasure during sex. He hooks up with the female lead's ex, hoping to hurt her: the second male lead/ex ends up disliking himself for it. The second female lead gets drunk and the first female lead takes her home, while nothing sexual goes on. It is heavily implied that the first female lead was going to get her intoxicated in hopes of having sex, but upon realizing that it would be rape, chooses not to. The female lead hints at past child abuse from her father: however, it is not discussed if he was sexually abusive or not. The female and male lead get into an argument, and end up having sex while angry. All four end up happy and together in the end, but a lot of scenes hinted at past sexual assault, rapes and rape attempts.
Alternative title: Naked Youth
Cruel Summer (TV Show)
The plot of the show hinges around the abduction and imprisonment of a teenager by her high school's assistant principal, and the aftermath of her rescue S1E2: the character's mother says that she was "violated" by her abductor S1E5: the character's therapist specifically describes what happened to her as grooming. S1E9: the entire episode explicitly details the abusive relationship between a teenager girl and her groomer before he became her captor. The show is not in chronological order and many scenes depict the build-up to her abduction and/or show her in captivity. These scenes may be triggering for victims of grooming.
Cruising (Movie)
Multiple gay men arekilled before or during sexual encounters.
It is implied that a woman is forced to sleep with a man because she cannot pay off a debt.
Crystal Jewels (TV Show)
Crystal Swan (Movie)
The main character is assaulted by another character, then the camera shows the man's grandfather watching the scene but not doing anything. We can hear the woman fighting. The next day, the man's familly and fiancée blame the woman for having sex with the man.
A straight woman drugs and rapes a gay man. The scene is not overly violent but has the potential to be extremely disturbing.
Cube (1997) (Movie)
The antagonist becomes increasingly flirtatious and leers at a young teenage girl. He also attempts to rape her: he essentially kidnaps her and talks about how he wants to rape her but is ultimately stopped before anything happens by the other characters.
Cuckoo (Movie)
A species of not-quite-human creatures have the ability to disorient and incapacitate humans with their "call"; it is stated that they deposit their own eggs into human women in this state. The film's male antagonist seeks to systematically facilitate and observe this process, at one point trapping the 17-year-old protagonist in an attempt to do so. The main character (who is 17) and an adult guest at the hotel where she works flirt and make out in once scene.
Cujo (Movie)
Shortly after breaking up with a man she was having an affair with, a woman is approached in her home by the man, who attempts to talk her back into continuing their affair. When she refuses, he kisses her and attempts to put his hand up her skirt, but she fights him until he relents.
The Culling (Movie)
There are a few scenes where the male antagonist grabs the female protagonist while she tries to run away. (Spoilers) In one scene, the female protagonist runs into a barn to escape from the male antagonist. The man knocks her out and lays her onto a bed. He talks about having created an army of children with multiple women, presumably without consent/through rape. He rips open her shirt and gives her a kiss while she is unconscious. He then turns around to prepare for an evil ritual, at which point the woman wakes up, sets him on fire, and escapes (1:12:49-1:14:47).
A man hypnotises a woman while she is incapacitated, forcibly kissing her. It is implied that he has raped her in past 'sessions.'
A woman taking a shower sees a flash of light and thinks that someone is trying to take photos of her. Another woman has a flashback where she is remembering a conversation at a party. Only the voices are heard, the scene is not played, but a man is clearly pressuring the drunk woman to have sex and saying that she owes him. The scene ends with the sound of her crying, and later it is revealed that she was pregnant and had an abortion.
Cult Killer (Movie)
Child sexual abuse and revenge are central to the plot. There are descriptions from adult survivors and flashbacks of a perpetrator coming into a child's room (assault is not shown).
The film features a lengthy and graphic attempted rape scene in which the main female character is bound to a bed by a man. It is implied that her aggressor violates in her in ways which are not directly shown on screen. Incest is a theme throughout. Worthy of note: some may find that the actress who plays the woman who is the target of the attempted rape (as well as the object of graphic, incestuous fantasies) appears ambiguously childlike in the film. The character she plays begins menstruating for the first time directly before getting married to an adult man.
A baby is born with the appearance of an old man: as he ages, he stays old looking. Others assume he is an old man and convince him to partake in adult themed situations such as drinking and going to brothels before the age of 18 though he still has the mind of a child.
This movie includes a scene where the victim reports an attempted assault to police who do not believe her and dismiss her. There are two attempted rape scenes. A woman is murdered after refusing sexual advances.
The protagonist has a nightmare where he is chased through the woods by two men attempting to rape him. They catch him and begin to remove their clothes before the dream ends. The protagonist wakes up in a men’s aauna with no memory of the night before. It is implied he had sex with several men, and given the context of the story, the consent is dubious to say the least. A group of men break into the protagonist’s home and attempt to rape him with a dildo; shortly after they attempt the same on his girlfriend. Neither are successful.
A mute servant is imprisoned for rejecting the lord’s advances. There she is raped and impregnated by another prisoner, a beggar.
The Cursed (Movie)
After a Romani camp was slaughtered, when bodies are being rounded up, men drag women offscreen (they are clothed but screaming and crying): it is assumed they are being raped (off-screen).
In the first part of the movie (about twenty minutes in), taking place during the Armenian genocide, a woman is raped on-screen by a soldier in front of her child and a group of prisoners who are unable to help her. This implies that many women were identically raped during the same period. The protagonist's daughters (teenagers) are said to have been part of an arranged marriage. Near the end of the movie, a woman is verbally assaulted by a group of railroad workers: one of them attempt to rape her. The protagonist intervenes and allows her to escape: he is beaten up by the rest of the group.
Cuties (Movie)
Rape is mentioned in a passing conversation. An underage girl attempts to seduce older men multiple times. An underage girl publishes a nude photo of herself. An underage girl is touched without her consent in a sexual manner. An underage girl is pinned down on the ground in public and someone pulls her pants down to reveal her underwear (1:02:37). Children are sexualized by the adults surrounding them.
Cyberpunk 2077 (Video Game)
A character integral to the plot is revealed to have been kidnapped, brutally assaulted, trafficked, and tortured. It is implied that many of these acts were recorded. The character has an in-universe piece of technology allowing them to have their memory wiped for the purpose of sex work, and it is abused for these situations. The victim later commits suicide after being rescued. The game itself is relatively dark, but in comparison to many other outcomes, the character's fate is considered by many to be gratuitous. Several quests reference human trafficking for sexual or masochistic purposes.
The rape, which is not a plot point, is heavily described with a male-gaze.
Daglicht (Movie)
A prostitute gets raped by a man. It is partly on screen but most of it is sound. Another man eventually stops the assault.
Dagon (Movie)
The title character, a Lovecraftian deity, demands human women as tributes for him to rape and reproduce with. One character mentions how this happened to his mother. The two main female characters are both victims of Dagon in this manner. One is encountered after this has already happened and, traumatized and impregnated by the deity, she commits suicide. The other main female character is shown chained and suspended naked above a pit with Dagon in it, into which she is lowered. When she is brought back up, she is clearly traumatised both physically and psychologically.
Daisy Diamond (Movie)
This film features a violent rape scene in its first few minutes. It is revealed, towards the end, that is was part of an audition.
S1E1: a 15-year-old enters a hotel room with an older musician and says "where is everybody?" as he locks the door behind them. The scene cuts there but the implication is that he rapes her. S1E3: a music producer forces a singer to sit on his lap. His hand on her knee moves upward and upward, though she is able to get up and get away and stand up. The scene cuts and she returns home looking upset, it is unclear as to whether more happened or not. S1E8: a groupie grabs a band member's crotch, he turns down her advance. S1E9: a woman pushes her husband and he comes at her more aggressively but is stopped quickly by her male friends who are witnessing the scene.
There is a brutal sex scene taking place during a wedding night, that seems to be unconsensual.
Dance in the Vampire Bund contains many examples of sexual violence and appearances of or actual pedophilia. One of the main characters is often shown nude in a prepubescent body. It is not uncommon that she ends up nude in this form, often in bed, alongside her love interest, a young adult male. She maintains this prepubescent form to prevent her forced marriage to one of a group of older male vampire oligarchs. The trade-off for this is that she is subjected to invasive "virginity checks" by those oligarchs in full view of them, although the checks themselves occur off-screen. Many newly-created vampire thralls, mostly depicted as young men, are shown to assault, bite, grope/molest, and otherwise violate the bodies of mostly youthful/teenage-looking women. These incidents occur both on- and off-screen. One of these thralls is assaulted and 'turned' in the process. She is shown to be abused, starved of blood, and manipulated. One character has a pedophilic, pseudo-incestuous desire for 13 year-old boy who lives next door to her family, and who regards her as his older sister. It is shown that she approaches the sleeping boy in bed, kisses him on the mouth, and nearly bites his neck before restraining herself. In successive episodes, main characters use her obsession with him to eventually turn her allegiance, after which the young boy offers himself to her to be turned so they can spend an eternity together.
DanDaDan (TV Show)
S1E1: the female protagonist gets dumped by her boyfriend. He says that he would consider staying with her if she finally "puts out" and starts fiddling with his belt clearly signalling to his penis. They then get into a physical fight, which he wins and leaves after. The next scene contains the woman crying about being dumped. A spirit which resembles the shape of a very old grandma tells the underage male main character: "I'll let you suckle my teats, so let me gobble your dick". She then proceeds to run after him and the scree cuts to black. It is later revealed that the grandma "stole" the male MC's penis, and it is strongly implied that she did so by "sucking" on it. Even though there aren't any particularly graphic scenes, some people may find this upsetting. A teenage girl is abducted by aliens who strip her to her underwear and attempt to rape her (11:45-13:45). The aliens attempt both physical force and mind control, and one alien pulls out his penis threateningly. They are stopped. S1E12: the main female character is at a hot spring in only a towel when she is accosted by several adult men who say several sexually threatening statements. She is grabbed and forced underwater and it is unclear what happens to her.
Dangal (Movie)
Between the 40:48-45:12 minute marks, two characters attend the wedding of a 14-year-old girl and a much older man. The scene includes an extended dance number followed by the girls discussing their relative situations.
Danganronpa (TV Show)
A male character tries to force himself onto a female character. Another character sees them and stops him before he does anything to her, though. A female character presses her chest up against a male character and grabs onto him, despite him telling her to stop. In an optional scene, a female character brings a male character to her room, pins him to her bed, and demands he take off his clothes. When he refuses and pushes her off, she stops. In another optional scene, two male characters spy on the female characters in a sauna.
A child's backstory is that her parents allowed her to be sexually exploited to boost her career as a child actress. A flashback shows the rape about to happen before cutting away. There are panty shots of the main character, a teenage girl, whenever she falls over. At other points, her clothes get damaged to the point that she i stripped down to nothing but a bra and underwear. A minigame (required to progress) features the protagonist tied up and groped by multiple robot hands: the player has to fend them off. The one subjecting her to the rape is the child mentioned above. Later on, the same character flashes her. An adult male character openly says that he is attracted to children. The game says that it is against the sexual exploitation of children (the child character's rape is taken seriously) while simultaneously participating in it (showing panty shots of the teenage protagonist and putting in a rape minigame). The message the game is trying to send is unclear.
A male character repeatedly makes sexual comments towards the female characters throughout the game. At one point he attempts to trick a female character into giving him oral sex. All of the characters are teenagers. One female character is put into sexual positions on two occasions and her underwear is visible to both the player and other characters. She expresses embarrassment, but this is played for laughs and fanservice. Through an optional interaction, a female character reveals that when she was in poverty she had to endure sexual harassment from men at a waitress job to get money and support her younger siblings. This is not shown, but it is discussed. The protagonist says most of the fans of a very young looking female character are adult men: the game implies that her childlike appearance is the reason why. There is also an optional scene where the protagonist spies on her showering with another female character, but their private parts are covered with bubbles.
One female character repeatedly makes aggressive, threatening, and sexual comments towards another female character about her breasts throughout the game. In one instance, she points scissors at her breasts and threatens to pop them. Despite the girl feeling discomfort or fear in these situations, this is treated as a joke by the narrative. All but one of the characters are high school students. The male protagonist makes a comment (in his head) about the breasts of the character mentioned above, saying her "proportions" have been widely discussed online. The main antagonist makes sexual comments around and towards the students a few times. They also put cameras in all the dorm rooms and joke about spying on the students engaging in sexual acts. This is played for laughs. In an optional scene, the protagonist and two other male characters spy on the female characters in the sauna. A female character obsesses over a male character throughout the game, including in sexual manners. The said male character expresses discomfort throughout. Worthy of note (spoilers): There isa plot point where a character is revealed to be a cross-dresser via searching their dead body and having their private parts touched.
In an optional scene, a female character attempts to grab another's breasts without her consent. In another optional scene, a female character threatens to lift up a girl's skirt in front of a male character: this is presented in a joking manner. A male character is revealed to have had an incestuous relationship with his deceased older sister. It is implied she groomed him in the past. He is a teenager during the events of the game and his sister was an adult. A sub-plot features a predominant character being involved in a sexual/romantic context with his supposed children. He does npt outrigth say or do anything romantic, but he licks them, makes weird comments about their appearence repeatedly, and when talking about them). Blushing and sweating with strong sexual connotations are often used. None of these character’s ages are outrigths stated, but they are children and meant to be siblings. There is deliberate incest, at some point: the female in the group gets pregnant by the leader, and then deliberatly states to be in a romantic relationship. This is at all moment presented in a joking manner, and most characters seem mildly distrubed about it. However, nothing is done about it and it is just left as a reocurring joke. A female character puts her breasts against a male character and touches him. It is implied to be non-consensual. In a male character's backstory, it is implied that he was sexually assaulted in prison. A female character makes a joke about the same male character being raped, and he is visibly uncomfortable with this. The same male character has flashbacks when asked to undress with the main character. In an optional scene, a male character is very heavily implied to be raped by a female character off-screen after explicitly saying no. In an optional scene, a male character is non-consensually tied up by another male character and it is heavily implied that they had sex off-screen, which was most likely not consensual. Most of these scenes are portrayed in a humorous light, which seems to be a common theme throughout Danganronpa.
A man blackmails a woman into having sex with him after having entered in her bedroom, despite her protests.
Daniel & Ana (Movie)
A man possesses other characters and then uses their body to have sex against their will as they scream in protest.
Dare Me (TV Show)
Worthy of note: Throughout the entire show, there is sexual tension between a high school cheerleader and her adult female coach. A high school girl’s rapist regularly appears at her school as a military recruiter. There is heavy imagery of PTSD flashbacks relating to sexual assault, rape, abuse, and death. The show was cancelled before any answers about the sexual assault were given and the rapist was accused. S1E1: 2 teenage girls drive to their coach’s house and watch her in her living room. One girl thinks her friend has a crush on the coach so she yells “someone out here wants to fuck you”. The coach spots them outside of her house and they drive away. A high school girl gets the business card of a man in the military with intentions on getting his number. They bat eyes at each other in a flirtatious way. A high school girl sends a photo of her breasts to the same man later in the episode. After underage drinking, A teenage boy and girl are making out. He tries to force her head down as a way to signal for her to give him head. She pushes his arm away and gets offended but then continues making out with him and he goes down on her consensually. The two girls later both watch their coach have sex with the military man in a car. S1E2: 2 teenage girls go to a bar and they bring men home with them. A girl dances seductively for a man on her kitchen counters and the other girl is seen making out with the man she brought home. S1E3: a girl makes a joke about necrophelia 3 high school girls go to a Marine’s hotel party and dance, drink, and party with grown men. Other high school girls show up visibly uncomfortable surrounded by grown men. The girls are let into the party while the men are told to go away. A man forces them to give up their phones to get into the party. A man asks another man if the girls that came in are even 16 years old and says that it will look really bad if they’re caught. The guy responds and says no one will know since they took the girls’ phones. A girl finds her friend passed out and intoxicated in the back of a car. She asks if she was roofied or raped and there is no clear answer given. It is implied that she was raped because her tongue was bitten to the point that she was bleeding out of her mouth and her lipstick was smeared all over her face. S1E5: the girl with the bloody tongue from the last episode is seen talking to one of the marines from the party. We hear him say “I didn’t mean to” implying he was the one that hurt her. Her friend sees them taking and asks her again if he was raped. She says “nothing happened”. The episode flashes back to the morning that the girl woke up and remembered what happened. She finds marks on her body and cries. The man texts her and sends messages that imply something happened to her and asks if she wants to have sex again. She repeatedly grabs at her neck this episode because her necklace is missing and she has strangulation marks. She messages her rapist and asks if he can look for her missing necklace. She sees him the next day at her school and asks if he found her necklace. He says no and tries to corner her to talk to him about what happened stating that he doesn’t remember. He asks her why she’s being so weird and she repeatedly tries to move away from him. She has a panic attack at a pep rally but is forced to deal with it on her own because another girl was severely injured and no one noticed her. S E6: a girl has regular panic attacks and works her way through coping with the experience of being raped. She has a dream about him gripping her thighs with blood coming out of his mouth. A man stalks the woman he is having an affair with by sitting outside of her house. He shows up at her house drunk and stands in her baby’s nursery. A girl walks in on her coach showering and watches her for a minute. The same girl later watches 2 adults have sex through a crack in the door. S1E8: a woman comes back to her hotel to room to find her stalker whom she was currently having an affair with dead. He was texting her non stop and kept harassing her. He threatened to kill himself if they couldn’t be together. S1E10: a girl confronts her rapist and shows him the pictures she took of her bitten and bloody tongue.
Dark (TV Show)
A pre-teen/teenage girl witnesses two other young adults about to have consensual sex and later lies to the police and tells them she saw the man raping the woman. The false rape charges are mentioned briefly in other episodes. S3E5: an attempted rape of a young teen by an adult is shown on-screen (30:40-37:30). Worthy of note: two teenagers romantically interested in each other turn out to be related without knowing it.
The Dark (Movie)
Dogs: a woman is raped by a sentient dog. The Way she is with Strangers: the main character married her husband when she was 17 and he was 20. Good night, Prison Kings: possible reference to a past child sexual assault. Grit: mention of teenage girls who are likely having sex with a dealer in exchange for drugs. Dark Hill Run: non-graphic mention of an older brother who sexually abused his younger brother in the past.
Dark Crimes (Movie)
Rape is not described but is discussed, mostly between police investigators. There is sex trafficking as well: a website for sex trafficking is described, as a pictures of the victim in distress.
Dark Gathering (TV Show)
S1E1: a young girl wants to go ghost hunting but her tutor says no. She then calls the place where he works and tells them he asked her what panties she is wearing. This is played for comedic effects en did not actually happen. S1E4: it is revealed that one of the female protagonists is a yandere. Yandere is someone who is extremely obsessed with someone they are in love with. She has a room full of pictures of the male protagonist. They later on start dating without him knowing she is stalking him S1E17: a father and daughter are manipulated into doing a ritual that involves them having sex with eachother. You can see blankets moving and both screaming they do not want this and the daughter is crying. She later on gives birth to a child.
A man tells a female character to 'come a little closer' while reaching out as if to grope her. She obliges by walking over to him and breaking his hand. A mother and her child are in a prison: the mother is dragged away by multiple male prisoners: rape is implied.
A prominent secondary female character is barraged with (unspecified) lewd comments from a band of soldiers. Later some of those soldiers attack her and while nothing explicit is shown, it is strongly implied that they attempted to rape her before her brother interceded. The narrative shows her coping with trauma in the aftermath, though it is not the focus of the story.
Dark Match (Movie)
At a party, an adult man is drugged. A woman comes on to him, but he tells her no and asks for help finding his girlfriend. She says she will help him, but leads him back to his bedroom instead where she kisses him while he tries to push her off. There are some short clips implying sex, interspersed with other scenes of the party. In the morning his girlfriend blames him for cheating and does not believe that he was not consenting. It is worth nothing this film takes place in the 80s.
The protagonist is replaced by another version of himself, and the replacement has sex with protagonist's wife.
Dark Net (2016) (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman describes how an ex-boyfriend victimised her by releasing revenge porn, in some cases accompanied by personal details such as her name and address and occasionally alongside threatening comments implying that she wanted to live out rape fantasies with strangers. S1E3: this episode addresses the prevalence of child pornography, including interviews with children who have been victimised by this industry. S1E4: one sub-plot looks at the work of people who remotely moderate the internet usage of children. This includes one instance where somebody online has attempted to solicit sexual pictures from a schoolchild online (this person’s attempt is stopped and reported by the moderators). S1E7: part of this episode addresses hateful online comments made towards women activists. Many of these comments make reference to or threats regarding rape and sexual assault.
Dark Places (Movie)
A teenage boy is accused of molesting several young girls.
The author notes that the book contains dubious consent. The female main character does not explicitly give consent, male main character takes her silence as a yes. The female main character learns her brother slept with multiple adults while he was a teen, he says it was consensual but confesses he was not happy with it and only did it to blackmail the adults and appease their physically abusive father. The male main character discloses being sexually abused for money when he was a child.
In the story called "Amanda's Revenge", during a college party, two men give roofie a girl's drink and take her into a bedroom. They are stopped by others, but she is seen lying on the bed, unconscious and in her underwear.
In the Dark (TV) (TV Show)
In season 1 and part of season 2, the main character falls in love with a cop who has murdered her friend. He non consensually jacks off into her panties. It is also discussed that he rapes teenage girls he arrests. In season 2, the main character has sex with a man while lying to him about having killed a drug dealer who she has been coerced to work for. While she was not at fault for having to work for the drug dealer, and the killer was in self defense, she uses sexual chemistry to make the guy believe she did not do it. S2E9: a drug dealer forces the main character to take her clothes off in front of him, ostensibly to prove that she is not wearing a recording device, though he does not make her male friend strip. It is implied that he is more interested in seeing her body than making sure she is not wearing a microphone. S3E2: the main character discusses buying tequila so she can get her ex-boyfriend drunk and have sex with him. Two main characters have a thressome with a woman after giving her alcohol, to keep her from exposing them as criminals. She is portrayed as enjoying the threesome, while the two other character feel awkward about it. S3E12: a man has kidnapped his niece and has been raping her since she was a teenager. In season 4, a character cheats and then has sex with his girlfriend without telling her (possibly exposing her to STIs). S4E8: this episode features a serial date rapist. S4E10: a woman's ex-boyfriend sexually assaults her. S4E11+12: these episodes involve a woman flirting with a man and kissing him to set him up for drug charges.
Dark Winds (TV Show)
There is a brief reference to a man possessing inappropriate pictures of children. There is also a brief reference to possible child sex trafficking. A woman talks about a doctor having sterilized her without consent. A young teenage girl is pregnant due to statutory rape from her mother’s boyfriend, it is never discussed in detail.
The female protagonist successfully fights off a minor male character who is attempting to rape her. The female protagonist creates a magical duplicate of the male protagonist and makes the duplicate perform a striptease for her while the male protagonist watches and repeatedly asks her to stop. At the age of 15, the female protagonist is sold to a man by her father to pay his debts. The man intends to rape her but before he can, she is able to fight him off and escape. The encounter is mentioned only briefly. An unnamed male character has sex with a prostitute and uses the encounter to infect her with a magical disease without her knowledge. The encounter is described euphemistically but the content is clear.
In Darkness (Movie)
Darwin's Game (TV Show)
Das Boot (2018) (TV Show)
S1E3: a female character is gang-raped (57:17). S1E7: a woman is graped by an man (36:00-41:00).
The film opens with the graphic rape (on-screen) of an 11 year old girl. The same pedophile is in possession of child pornography. A very uncomfortable 12 year old (who had previously gone missing after school) is shown with a masked adult male who is undressing. A man later masturbates to the video off-screen. More child pornography is found later, but not shown.
The film opens with a couple having sex on a beach: afterwards, they realize that three young men were watching them. They do not seem disturbed (laughing) and decide to leave. Immediately after, the three (drunk) men break into their house, threaten them and eventually force them to get naked and have sex together while one of them masturbate. When it appears that the husband will not be able to go on with it, the leader of the three rapes the wife while the two other incapacitate the husband. The rest of the movie is about how the couple deals with this trauma, particularly when they discover, two years later, that the rapist lives not far from them. The rape is thus discussed throughout. At some point, the rapist enters the house of the wife when she is alone: he overpowers her and puts his hand on her mouth and threatens her, but does not go further.
Dateline NBC (TV Show)
Although primarily a show about true life murder cases, a significant proportion of episodes (perhaps close to 50%) cover cases which include rapes and sexual assaults, often described in detail. Most cases involve young women, but have also included incest and child victims.
An antagonist is the leader of a drow settlement. It is stated in narration that he captures and keeps a harem of women of various races, and there are also children of his in the settlement that are half-drow. The same antagonist states to his son that there are "other ways to exact revenge", discouraging him from killing the female protagonist. He also states that he wants her for his pleasure and is not opposed to "sharing her". The son of the aforementioned antagonist implies what he will do to the protagonist once he finally confronts her one-on-one, and starts to make an attempt, but is quickly overcome and nothing occurs from it. The scene does not even begin to get graphic. Due to the nature of drow, especially in earlier D&D lore, there are several uncomfortable comments throughout the book referring to forced advances and to one gender or the other as breeding stock.
It is implied that the main female character has been sexually assaulted by her husband. He is seen trying to have sex with another woman as she repeatedly says no.
Dawn (Movie)
In all the episodes of this series, incest, rape and child sexual abuse are present and/or discussed. S1E1: from the beginning, there is implied attraction between two characters who believe they are brother and sister. It is later revealed that they are not related at which point they pursue a relationship. The sister previously had a consensual sexual relationship with a different teenage boy who she did not know she was related to at the time. When she finds out they are related, she tries to end their relationship, but he continues to pursue her regardless and attempts to force himself on her in scenes at 46:00 and 1:12:00. S1E2 (Secrets of the Morning): the main character has a sexual relationship with her college professor and becomes pregnant by him. It is arranged for her to stay with her great aunt while pregnant but the woman is a religious fanatic who subjects the main character to an invasive reproductive exam as "penance" for her "sins". It is also discussed that another character conceived a child by rape from her father-in-law but this is not shown on screen. S1E3 (Twilight's Child): a teen character makes allegations that her adoptive father sexually abused her but later admits they were false. This teen character tries to pressure two younger children into stripping and touching each other but it is stopped before they go too far. The main character has a sexual relationship with (and later marries) a man she grew up with as a brother, although they were previously confirmed to not be blood-related. An adult brother tries to rape his adult sister at 1:01:03 but she fights him off. S1E4 (Midnight Whispers): a brother tries to grab and touch his sister inappropriately at 8:45 and 14:43. An uncle attempts to rape his 16-year-old niece at 33:20, but she escapes. This occurs again at 1:18:50 but she is able to get away again and he is later arrested.
Dawson's Creek (TV Show)
A recurring plot throughout the show's first and second season involves a sexual relationship between a 15-year-old character and one of his high school teachers. At one point, another character accidentally films them having sex. This is mostly played for jokes and is not addressed by any of the characters as abusive. There are also a couple brief statements that seem to imply that another character was sexually assaulted when she was a young teenager (specifically that she was under the influence of drugs/alcohol at the time and her partners were older and aware that her judgement was impaired). It is not played as a joke, but these instances are not discussed past a single line or two. S4E11: sexual harassment.
A woman is attacked by a man in a morgue, and is forced to the floor. He rips her shirt open, exposing her bra, but the attempt ends in failure by the following scene. Main lead asks what happened to zombie with “bite marks on his hands”. Woman jokingly responds “I’d say he had his hands down the wrong girl’s pants.” Main lead has flashbacks to her attempted rape.
Multiple men in the novel have a sexual relationship or fantasize about one with a main character who is 17 years old. While this was much more commonplace at the time the novel was written, it may be uncomfortable for modern readers nonetheless. She is also sexualized throughout the book, and at one point works as a prostitute to pay for her father's funeral. The protagonist fantasizes about raping this same character multiple times, and at one point seems about to attempt it, but the fantasies aren't detailed and he never actually does it. During one of the final scenes of the novel, the protagonist witnesses an old man raping a young girl amid a mob. This is described in more detail. He fights the man off, only for her to be seized by another man and swept away.
A possessed teen girl has sex with and sexually touches her father and a priest, whom she has tied up. Earlier in the film she implies that she may have been raped or coerced to have sex in front of a group though she does not remember much.
One of the FBI undercover agents is a known pedophile, which is joked about several times. He is briefly shown on a "date" with a young girl. It is essentially used as a way to show how little the FBI cares about actual crimes.
S1E2: a man in a group shouts that he wants a woman. Another man grabs a woman from behind after telling her that she is a "nice bit of skirt". He begins to drag the screaming woman towards the group of cheering men, before an onlooker tries, unsuccessfully, to intervene. The man then continues to drag the woman towards the group as the scene ends (15:30-16:00).
Daybreak (TV Show)
S1E9: a teen boy is briefly shown being raped by a large mutated dog. A character jokes that it's "mating season." The boy can be heard yelling in pain and protesting. The scene is played for laughs.
Rape is a something that comes up a lot in this relatively short book. It isnever discused in detail but discussed in passing a lot. The most jarring part of the story is with a little girl that is repeatedly abused by someone who later turns out to be her father.
Dayshift At Freddy's (Video Game)
DCI Banks (TV Show)
De Patrick (Movie)
A husband initiates sex with his wife, but refuses to let her go (holding her hand) when she rebuffs him.
Deacon (Movie)
In the opening of the movie, a woman is walking home and a man follows behind her. She notices him and keeps walking, and the scene cuts. At 10:00, a man enters the confessional with the protagonist (a priest) and confesses he pays prostitutes to allow him to hurt them and have sex with them. At 15:00, a boy lying in bed, his vision blurred, sees a man enter his room and stand over him. The scene cuts. At 19:00, the same man enters the confessional again and confesses he beat a prostitute almost to death and raped her. The confessions of this man continue throughout the movie until he is murdered. At 35:00, when the priest is performing an exorcism, the possessed woman describes sexual abuse he suffered as a child. At 01:20:00, the priest, who is helping a boy with night terrors, has him spend the night at the church. In this scene he stands ominously over the boy and says "I'm listening". The scene cuts and he is back with his mother. He is crying quietly, and his mother asks him what's wrong, but it is not made clear. At 01:27:00, a man who is investigating the priest and his possible crimes is grilling him to try to get information out of him. Pedophilia is mentioned. At 01:40:00, the priest's friend interrogates him and asks if he has been a little too close to the young boy he's been spending time with lately. In the following scene, the priest and the boy interact; the boy's mother calls the church and speaks to one of the nuns. An abusive relationship between the priest and the boy is heavily implied. At 01:57:00, the priest kills the boy's mother. He opens the door to the boy's bedroom and stands in the doorway. The scene ends. At 02:00:00, a video is shown of the priest confronting his abuser. The next video is shown that the priest was not abusing the boy after all, but was protecting him from his physically abusive mother.
Dead Alive (Movie)
Dead Calm (Movie)
A woman sleeps with her captor to make him believe she is on his side.
A couple is forced to have sex while their daughter is forced to watch. A woman is raped off screen, and the sounds can be heard.
The opening scene shows one of the protagonists raping and murdering a teenage girl. There is also a rape scene at 1:49:00.
A woman is threatened with violence by a man, to have sex with another man whilst he is sleeping. She touches him in his sleep and then begins having sex with him. When he wakes up, he is surprised and begins to enjoy it, to which a group of men come in to congratulate him.
The Dead Ones (Movie)
An apparition of a girl's dead father occasionally appears. It is known that he abused her when she was younger and he was alive.
During the cinematic into, a woman is seen lying on the floor crying and topless whilst her attacker laughs at her. Due to her assault she gives birth to a child who is one of the playable characters.
The main characters are twin gynecologists who have an arrangement where they will have sex with their patients while posing as each other, with the patients often being completely unaware that they are with the other twin.
S1E1: this episode features sexual harassment and mentions incest. One twin goes on a date for another one, and kisses a woman without her knowing. She then has sex with her and lies about her deception. Pedophiles are mentioned. S1E5: this episode mentions doctors who have sex with patients and teachers who have sex with students. It also contains a graphic description of the historical gynecological torture of a 17 year old slave woman. S1E6: a woman assumes the identity of someone else and starts sleeping with their partner, without them knowing who they are.
Dead Rising (Video Game)
One of the side missions titled "Above the law" features a cut scene of a woman cop getting ready to rape a tied up women with her baton, calling her vulgar names, the woman is heard screaming and crying, the player interupts just before the woman inserts the baton. If the player rescues the woman, it is revealed she and several others were kidnapped and about to be assaulted, they later explain that there were more women in their group, but the cop had killed, possibly from the brutality of the assaults.
A man has sex with his dead girlfriend after he brings her back to life as a zombie. A priest says that if he was ten years younger, he would have sex with one teenager in the church.
A male scientist tells a female assistant that she will "celebrate with him tonight" while stroking her neck. A male zombie rips open a woman's shirt and licks her neck. A male zombie pins down a female zombie and licks her nipple while she struggles to get away. He is killed before anything further happens.
A character who murders women is introduced halfway through the film. During a flashback, the killer is shown approaching a victim, tearing her clothes off, and killing her.
Deadgirl (Movie)
All main characters rape an undead woman.
Deadly Class (TV Show)
It is implied that a character was sexually exploited in organized crime as a child.
Deadly Prey (Movie)
Deadpool (Movie)
The film contains a lot of innuendo and a great deal of dark humor, and as such there are often references and depictions that may be upsetting to viewers, but are presented as jokes. In one such instance, a character recommends kidnapping a romantic interest. A male character engages in a sexually experimental and consensual encounter with his partner, however he is visibly nervous and vocally protests when he is penetrated. In another scene, a character pulls at the jeans of a male in a fight, exposing his buttocks. Other scenes depict characters inappropriately touching the genital regions of other characters. When one character meets his lover for the first time, she mentions that she was sexually abused by her uncle as a child. Worthy of mention: T.J Miller, who plays Weasel in the film, has been accused of sexual abuse. Miller has denied the veracity of these claims and has been recast in the sequel due to be released in 2018.
Deadpool 2 (Movie)
In a fight scene near the beginning, the titular character exposes two seperate men's genitals against their will (6:00-7:00). This is played for laughs. The same character hugs a man and places one hand on his ass, He removes it, but the character places it there again (30:45-31:00). This is played for laughs. The character says that a teenage boy will get raped by other prisoners (51:35-51:50). The character makes several graphic references about wanting to have sex with a man (including imitating a blow-job) despite knowing that he is not interested. He tries to open his pants but is stopped (1:40:10-1:41:00). This is played for laughs. Another character sticks an electric cable up a man's ass (1:45:15-1:45:30). This is played for laughs. Although not clearly stated, it is heavily implied that the principal and other staff members sexually abused mutant orphans, and there are many references made to this.
Deadwood (TV Show)
S1E1: a sex worker is seen bruised after a client beat her off-screen. Her pimp later threatens her. S1E7: a woman is sexually assaulted by having her crotch grabbed. A teenage girl considers working at a brothel and is leered at by an older man. S1E8: there is a reference to assault in previous episode. A teenage girl and an older woman share a bed in suggestive manner though it is never stated what happened that night. S1E9: a man crudely accuses another of being a pedophile, which seems untrue. S1E11: there is a lengthy scene of fellatio where a man speaks to a sex worker in a degrading manner. S1E12: there is a discreet implication a woman's father may be abusive, another woman describes being sex trafficked by her father. S2E1: a man boasts about a woman being trafficked when she was fourteen. S2E5: a sex worker describes being beaten by a violent client. S2E6: multiple women are seen in poor conditions in a crate. Itt is apparent that they have been sex trafficked. In a disturbing scene, a violent man kills two sex workers at a brothel by cutting their throats, one offscreen and one on-screen.
Deaf U (TV Show)
Throughout the show, one male character admits to having stealthed while having sex with a woman and purposely impregnating her without her consent. This is not handled as a sexual assault. S1E6/7: a person on the show shares her story of being molested as a child.
Prior to the events of the book, the protagonist's grandfather routinely sexually assaulted the house girl, who was the same age as his daughters.
S3E1: the main character watches a parody of The Handmaid's Tale which features a rape scene (13:20-13:50). S3E7: a student tells her friend that she has been sexually assaulted by her professor and the three following episodes discuss this topic. The other students do not believe her and one of them confronts their professor, who denies the assault. At the end of the season, they eventually realize that he already assaulted other students before. S3E9: a student tells her friends that she was sexually abused by her piano teacher when she was 15. Worthy of note: S1E1: later in the episode, a fraternity watches a soap opera and suddenly, the drama turns sexual. The man demands the woman to get on her knees and go down on him as a favor. It is meant to be humorous.
A woman is in the shower, and asks her husband to pass her a towel with her eyes closed (25:00). A creepy man, having broken into the house unsuspected, passes her the towel and stares at her. Nothing further occurs. A man tries to force himself on a woman, but after a few attempts she pushes him away and he gives up (45:00). The same creepy man from earlier approaches the same woman in the woods, speaking ominously about her beauty and how her fiance is unable to 'protect her' (47:00): nothing further occurs.
The ending scenes discuss the plot point and use visuals that include the rape of young girls.
Death House (Movie)
The movie opens with a scene of sexual assault and rape (1:00-4:00).
Death Line (Movie)
A woman is assaulted by a primitive man, who is likely trying to make her be his new mate. He tries to kiss her and tears her clothing off.
This movie is mostly about a woman trying to get answers and vengeance for her rape and torture prior to the events of the film. Worthy of note: this film is directed by Roman Polanski
The play mostly deals with a woman trying to gain answers and vengeance about her rape and torture prior to the events of the book.
Death of Me (Movie)
The couple in the movie cannot remember what happened a night before. They find a video that they took which shows them getting drunk, having sex, and the husband strangling his wife. She struggles to get away, but he pins her down and continues to choke her. Later in the movie, the woman is having an episode where she is unsure if she is hallucinating or not. During it, she is held down while an unknown/unseen something kept in a bag is held between her legs and it is implied that it crawled inside her. The next day she is revealed to be pregnant.
Death Note (TV Show)
S1E1: a group of men on motorcycles attempt to rape a girl when she is walking down the street at night. S1E5+E33: older men try to take advantage of younger girls (a group of men harass a girl in the street and an older man feels up a young girls skirt on the train). These acts never last long and violence is not particularly shown.
Death Parade (TV Show)
S1E8: a young boy remembers that his little sister was brutally assaulted and raped by a stranger. Once at home, he sees her being beaten, crying heavily and frightened when her brother touchs her. S1E9: a man is on top of a woman who fiercely fights him off, screaming, crying and begging a witness to help her, as the rapist tries to undress her.
S3E1: a brief attempted rape takes place in a kitchen. S10E1: an attempted rape takes place in a car.
One of the characters is accused of having raped children as young as seven. There is a scene towards the middle of the film where he is heavily implied to use his authority (backed by the threat of death or imprisonment) to force a prepubescent child to join him for an unstated reason, whereupon the film cuts away. The girl in question is later seen being given back to her parents, appearing traumatised and being given a flower by the man (historically, a practice used to claim 'consent,' usually accepted - again - under the threat of imprisonment and/or execution). His history as a serial rapist is later explicitly brought up as evidence, with the victims listed, in a mock trial/execution towards the end of the film. It is implied that a woman is assaulted to get her husband to talk and that another woman did 'everything' to get her husband released by his captors.
A man forces a teen girl into a chair; he attempts to molest her, but is stopped by two other men.
Death Wish II (Movie)
Death Wish 3 (Movie)
Deathcember (Movie)
This movie is a collection of 24 films: story 17 revolves around a group of women who band together to kill their rapists. Though there are no scenes showing rape, there is a montage which includes the women clothed and lying on their backs screaming while the camera is positioned over their faces.
The central relationship is built upon dubious consent. The female human lead is destined to marry an ancient immortal being. She is 16 when he first claims and kisses her. She agrees to go with him, but it is clear that refusal is not truly an option. He treats her in ways that often border on emotional and even occasionally physical abuse. She comes to be passionately drawn to him, while never settling into a sense of safety around him. The earliest chapters contain passing references to an adult male housemate leering at the then-teenage girl protagonist. One minor character mentions in passing that his father raped his mother, and praises his father's strength.
Deathstalker (Movie)
The film consists in nine stories. After the first episode, a scene hints that a man pays a young boy to have sex with him. In the fourth episode, it is mentioned that the main character is a rapist. In the seventh episode, a priest tricks a woman into believing she can be turned into a mare, but it is only a way to have sex with her. During the "ritual", the husband stops the priest after seeing him abusing his wife.
Dede (Movie)
Forced, arranged marriage is a central subject of the film. Graphic kidnapping of two women in order to "make them wives" is shown. A man tries to make moves on and caresses a woman in a state of dissociation/freeze response.
Midway through the movie, the main character has a dream that he is being raped by a woman in the woods, which ia shown for about 10 seconds. He wakes up and the woman is there on top of him in real life.
A sinister force sexually manipulates male protagonists. Part 5, chapter 18: there is a semi-graphic flashback where a mother sexually abuses her oldest son.
The Deep Ones (Movie)
Deer Camp '86 (Movie)
The film is about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. A bartender is physically assaulted by an unidentified man while she is taking out the trash. He graphically attempts to rape her, but as she fights back he becomes frustrated and kills her. When her body is found, the sheriff asks if she was raped. The deputy says she was not. The same sheriff later refers to other women in the town who were raped and murdered, but not in graphic detail. The man who attacked the bar tender is revealed to be one of the main characters. There is a flashback to the murder, but not the attempted rape.
Several stories have a theme of sexual assault. The collection is a graphic novel, and there are a few semi-graphic panels that strongly suggest rape but do not actually depict the rape.
There is a father-daughter incestuous rape resulting in temporary amnesia and a miscarriage.
The Defenders (TV Show)
A jewish woman becomes pregnant after being raped by a nazi.
Defiance (TV) (TV Show)
An alien species practice ritual bathing, and there are many scenes throughout the series where a family bathes together, and being physically close/affectionate with family members while nearly nude is considered normal in their culture. No incest is meant to be implied, but some scenes, for example, a mother embracing her teenage son while wearing nothing but a draping of beads are clearly intended to make the audience uncomfortable to highlight the (literal) alien-ness of the characters. There are several scenes throughout the series where an alien character makes her human inlaws uncomfortable by pressuring them to participate in her species' practice of communal bathing. They do it to appease her but clearly do not like it, which she is entirely aware of. Domestic violence is implied and shown onscreen for two characters. S2E4: two characters discuss having raped in the past. S2E5: there are very brief flashes of the assaults throughout the episode as the two characters hallucinate, but nothing clear/graphic. The female character remembers her assailant shining a torch in her face so she could not identify him. Throughout the episode, she hallucinates her current love interest as the faceless attacker. The male character was gang raped by alien soldiers as a 15-year-old, he sees brief flashes of shattered glass and spattered blood. In season 3, the villains are a violent species who are said to enslave, rape and eat weaker species. The main antagonists are a father and daughter in an incestuous relationship. This is depicted as normal for their species, and disturbing to all other characters. S3E11: a female antagonist rapes a male main character. The beginning of the assault is shown; she pins him down and he briefly struggles, before pretending to consent because he needs to keep her distracted while other protagonists are enacting a plan, and because she is stronger and could kill him. They are shown 'cuddling' after the assault; he is clearly uncomfortable and her body language is like a predator playing with prey. Spoilers: S3E4: it is revealed that a woman's lover has actually been stalking her and her ex-fiancé for years, and is responsible for the rape she confided in him about the previous season. She kills him.
S1E9: a minor meets up with an adult in his car, where he attempts to assault her. She is able to get away before anything happens. S2E2: a substitute teacher takes an interest in an underage student and eventually suggestively touches her. Someone walks in before it goes any further. S2E12: the substitute teacher from S2E2 comes back and takes an interest in another student. He tries to touch her, but she runs away. It is implied later that her and the other student reported him. S3E11: a teenage boy gets into a car to hitchhike with a grown man, who asks suggestive questions and then attempts to assault the boy. He is able to get away after the man touches his knee (22:25-24:38).
S2E7; S7E1; S8E13-14 - The incest concerns a kiss between brother and sister and another couple who are step-brother and sister. S1E1: a teenage girl meets with an adult who has been pretending to be a teenager in their online correspondence. S1E2: a teenager is held captive in a hotel room by an adult man who posed as a teenager online in order to trick her into meeting up. S1E10: having seen a teacher spend extra time with one of her classmates, a teenage girl believes that something in going on between them romantically. S2E7: a teenage girl is raped by an athlete from a competing school. The beginning of the assault is shown on-screen but the rest of the scene is only in audio. S2E8: the teenage girl assaulted in the previous episode is hesitant to perform a song about rape with her friends due to her recent experience. S2E20: the teenage girl assaulted in E7 confronts the boy who assaulted her and decides to press charges. S3E10: a teenage boy begins losing his temper and abusing his girlfriend during their dates. S3E17: the teenage boy from E10 wins his ex-girlfriend back, convincing her that he is a changed man. However, this proves to be false and his abuse eventually results in his girlfriend being in a coma. S4E1: the teenage girl assaulted in S2E7 faces her rapist as his trial begins. S4E4: the teenage boy who assaulted his girlfriend in S3 returns to the school, causing another character to start a school-wide campaign against romantic violence. S4E13: a teenage girl and her teacher begin to date. S4E21: an adult man flirts with multiple teenage girls. S6E6: an adult viewer of a teenage girl's suggestive online photos tracks her down and follows her home from school. S7E1: a teenage girl is raped by an unknown assailant after drinking a spiked drink at a party. S7E12: a teenage girl falsely accuses another character of sexual harassment. S8E14/15: a character realises that her father sexually abused her as a child and that she had since repressed the memory. S9E11/12: a teacher watches porn with a student and orders him an escort. S9E22: whilst intoxicated, a sister kisses her brother passionately. S10E1: a teenage girl gets a new boyfriend, who soon begins to abuse her. S10E2: the teenage girl from the previous episode continues to be abused by her boyfriend, hitting a breaking point when he throws her down a flight of stairs. S10E17/18: a teenage boy sneaks out to meet with his online friend and is nearly sexually assaulted by her. S10E41: a teenage girl reveals that another character slapped her. S11E5: a teenage girl is forced into a sexual relationship with another character to prevent him from harming someone else. S11E23: the teenage girl from S11E5 is slapped by her "boyfriend." S11E24/25: a teacher kisses a teenage boy. Another teacher hears about this, but the teenage boy lies and says that it was a rumour he started. S11E29: the teenage boy and teacher from S11E24/25 slow dance and kiss. S12E11/12: a character is infatuated by her boss at her internship and he responds very inappropriately, harassing her on two separate occasions and threatening her to prevent her from telling anyone. S13E7: a teenage boy forcefully grabs a girl's wrists, hurting her, after finding out that another boy has been texting her. He assumes that this was the reason she wanted to break up with him. S13E13: a teenage boy slaps a teenage girl in the face and another teenage girl is sexually harassed by another teenage boy. S13E17: shortly after their marriage ceremony, the teenage boy who lost his temper in S13E7/13 beats his partner in his car, leaving her face bruised and bloody, and her arm broken. S13E22: a teenage girl is sexually assaulted by two teenage boys at a party. The attack is videotaped and photos are leaked online. S13E23/24: the girl assaulted in the previous episode discovers that she was assaulted and with the help of one of her friends, assures that her attackers are arrested. S13E35: a teenage boy and an adult man start dating. S13E36: the teenage boy and an adult man who started dating in E35 continue to see each other romantically and sexually. After a teenage girl tells another teacher, the teacher involved in this relationship is suspended. S13E37: the teenage girl assaulted in E22 faces her attackers in court. S13E38: the teenage boys who assaulted a girl in E22 are found guilty in court. S13E40: a teenage boy reveals that a teacher tried to grope him. S14E13: a teenage girl is sexually harassed.
Deli Boys (TV Show)
S1E6: this episode features a back story about human trafficking.
A woman is confused for a man and mistakenly kidnapped. Jokes are made about "checking the sex" which culminate in a man grabbing her breast. A man kisses a woman without her consent in a scene which is played humorously. A man attempts to rape a woman, but is quickly stopped.
From the author note: "Content warnings: childhood sexual assault (off page, some details discussed), childhood physical abuse (corporal punishment, off page, described), childhood physical abuse (confinement punishment), childhood neglect, gaslighting, grooming, suicide (off page, mention), killing of a goat (off page, described), discussions of fatphobia, body horror/gore, violence, death." One of the protagonists is groomed into a relationship while she is a teenager, with a man in his early twenties. This man later denies that he was ever with her. There are several flashbacks to scenes where he choked her while raping her. We find out that the protagonist's mother was raped by her sister's husband, and the sister does not believe her. Many other children in the town where they live also were preyed upon by this man.
Graphic and disturbing on-screen depiction of rape of a man by another man.
A teenage girl is seen laying down and an adult man approaches menacingly and undoes his belt buckle in flashback scenes.
A character reveals that she was raped by her employer and that she "liked it", that it cured her of her sexual phobia, that she immediately forgave her rapist and that the two had consensual sex afterwards. A non-neurotypical adult falls in love with a teenager. Though the relationship they eventually develop is not obviously sexual, there is kissing, including an attempted kiss on the part of the adult at a time the teenager would not have been able to consent.
Demo Reel (TV Show)
A young actress reveals she was sexually abused by her uncle on a camping trip when she was a child. It's heavily implied the abuse continued, and that her parents knew what he was doing, but forced her to spend time with him anyway. Throughout the series, it's implied that the same character has been sexually harassed by men in the film industry.
Rape scene occurs almost immediately, 2-3 minutes into the film.
Demon Seed (Movie)
A woman is restrained by a robot, which binds her arms and legs and then cuts her clothes off. The robot strokes the woman's body, and then forces an endoscope into her mouth and then moves it towards her crotch before the camera cuts away. Later she is restrained again, is threatened and manipulated by the robot, which then penetrates her with a metal probe and we later learn that she has become pregnant.
Demonic Toys (Movie)
Demonlover (Movie)
A woman is drugged and kissed while she is passed out. A woman claims she was raped, the rape scene happens off-screen. There are extensive scenes of sexual torture (torture porn in the most literal definition) from a site asking its users if they want to torture a woman, and depictions of spam advertising "Russian Rape Sites".
Demons (Movie)
It is implied that a man sexually abused both of his daughters, possibly resulting in an ectopic pregnancy in one of them. While these assaults do not occur on screen, characters make multiple references to them and at roughly the 1:24:00 minute mark, there is a scene in which an assault occurs on the other side of a door.
The Dentist (Movie)
A man forces a woman's head down during oral sex (in a fantasy sequence). A woman is assaulted through kissing and groping while under anesthesia. A man is groped by a women under anesthetic.
Depraved (Movie)
The painting 'The Rape of the Sabine Women', is shown on-screen and discussed by two characters. A man insists that a woman goes home with him and drags her with him, leading to her death. A man rapes a woman on-screen.
This movie is about a serial killer who murdered numerous women (mainly prostitutes), dismembered them and hid their body parts in his apartment: the protagonist is based on a real character. Women (drunk most of the times) are thus sexually assaulted, raped, beaten and killed throughout the film. The opening scene (during approximately 10 minutes) shows the protagonist disposing of the corpse of a woman he presumably raped. We see him undressing her and starting to cut off her head. The protagonist rapes women on-screen at approximately 22:00-24:00 and 31:00-32:00. About 41 minutes into the movie, a woman mentions how she was sexually assaulted by nuns when she was a child. At around 47:00, the protagonist agressively explains to a woman how he wants to sexually assault her. At 50:00, at his apartment, he asks two women to have sex with each other. When they refuse, he beats one of them, who manages to flee. He then brutally murders the other. At approximately 1:11:00, a drunk man unconsensually kisses the protagonist. Between 1:18:00 and 1:20:00, the protagonist attempts to rape his female colleague when they are alone at work. She manages to escape. A woman mentions that she was forced to be a prostitute when she was in a concentration camp (1:23:00). At approximately 1:25:00, the protagonist tries to have sex with a woman but fails to have an erection. The woman laughs at him so he beats her. He presumably rapes her off-screen (we can later see blood between her thighs). After that (1:27:00), she puts mustard on his penis while he is sleeping as a vengeance, so he strangles her and then smashes multiple bottles on her head to kill her (1:29:00-1:34:00). At his apartment, the protagonist fondles a woman who tells him that she does not want to have sex with him: he kills her with a pair of scissors (it is implied that he cuts her tongue off) (1:35:00-1:37:00). A man forces a male teenager to stand still in the toilet of a bar while he pees on him because the teenager greeted him while peeing (1:39:00-41:00). An adult man hits on a female teenager in a bar despite her clear disinterest and uncomfort (1:38:00-41:00). Throughout the movie, the protagonist fantasizes about that teenage girl: at approximatelx 1:42:00, he starts following her in the streets but is interrupted before he can reach her (1:44:00).
Der Hauptmann (Movie)
Much of the film is set in a detention camp, where some of the prisoners are charged with rape. As such, rape is occasionally mentioned. It is implied an adult man is coercing a young or teenage girl into sex in exchange for better treatment for her imprisoned father. A man harasses a woman on the street, including touching her while she tries to get away. A woman reluctantly has sex with a man, believing him to be a high-ranking military official.
Derailed (Movie)
A teenage boy (main character) was raped and murdered by an adult man, as shown in flashbacks throughout the series. An adult main character is repeatedly sexually harassed by a man, which is occasionally played off as comedic. An adult main character is kidnapped in the final four episodes and tortured by the man who has been harassing him. While there is no on-screen assault, he has been stripped of his clothing.
The film contains two very graphic rape scenes. In the first, a woman is raped. In the second, the woman ties up the man who raped her, and then rapes him with an object. The man is then raped by another man: it is a very graphic and very prolonged scene lasting several minutes.
Desert Flower (Movie)
A female minor is raped by an older male (he appears to be thrusting against her, as he pulls down his pants, revealing his underwear as he lies on top of her). In self-defense, the girl picks up a rock and bashes the man's head with it until he collapses. The movie addresses FGM (female genital mutilation) and shows an implicit instance of genital mutilation as a female toddler is seen screaming in pain as the procedure takes place. The bloody aftermath is seen (as the one administering the circumcision appears to have blood all over her clothes), however the actual mutilation occurs off-camera.
The female main character is supposed to be married to someone against her will. The female lead struggles against the male lead and while the male does mention a safe-word, the female does not want to seem "weak" In a sense it's described in detail of her "losing her virginity" during a rapeplay game The rest of the book is rather consensual but the female lead does end up with the male lead and participates in CNC style sex (also described in detail).
A man forces a teenage girl to have sex with him in order to secure a record deal for her band (22:00): he rips her clothes off and gets on top of her.
Throughout the story a girl is in love with another girl, after being manipulated by the villain she chooses (she is not possessed) to rape the other girl in S1E8. It is not shown on screen, but the aftermath is very dark. It is also discussed in S1E9.
A character looks under a girls skirt multiple times. One of the characters grabs and harasses younger women. In several episodes adult men hit on the underage female protagonist and her underage friend under the guise of humor. SPOILERS: Two characters are revealed to be cousins when they were dating but they did not know. Also multiple cases involving cousin/sibling marriage One of the kidnappers attempt to/ strongly implied to want to rape the female protagonist's mom.
The Detour (TV Show)
S1E5: parents teach their kids about the rape of POC by white people, but badly, and played for laughs. S1E6: Episode plot revolves around the wedding of a 60-year-old man and a 16-year-old girl (which is legal in the state where the action takes place). The wedding guests are other 'couples' of adult men and teenage girls. The episode makes a point about archaic laws. S2E3: the main character female wants to have another baby, and refuses to let her husband pull out of her. This is also played for laughs. This series frequently shows women being objectified and harassed, and often men, usually played for laughs.
The author describes being raped as a child by her mother’s adult boyfriend.
Detroit: Become Human (Video Game)
This game is set in a future where human-like androids are sold for household use, and are essentially slaves used for most kinds of work. There are references throughout the game to humans using androids for sex. There are references to and depictions of androids being abused by their owners in various ways, including main characters. There are also depictions of non-sexual child abuse in the game. One scene takes place in a sex club: the androids working there did not choose to do so, but androids are capable of choice and free will, which the game explores in-depth.
The Deuce (TV Show)
This show is about prostitution. Sexual encounters between prostitutes and their clients are featured throughout. Abusive relations between prostitutes and their pimp is a central theme in the first two seasons. S1E1: a man assaults a woman who is entering her apartment alone at night, pushes her on her bed and begins to unbuckle his belt: It is implied that he rapes her off-screen (about 30 minutes into the episode). It is later revealed that it was a scripted encounter, with the man paying to be violent with her and 'pretend' to rape her. A college professor has sex with one of his 20 year old students. In the final scene of the episode, a pimp is shown cutting one woman with a razor blade because she did not want to work that night (he also threatens to send her back to her hometown where he says her father would sexually abuse her again): another man (the protagonist) watches him do without intervening. S1E2: in the opening scene, a police officer touches a woman's butt without her consent as he is arresting her. Shortly after, a woman learns that copies of the porn movie she agreed to play in are sold, although it was said to her it was for a man's personal use. This is referred to throughout the episode. About 45 minutes into the episode, two women plays in a porn movie where two men engage sex by pushing them on a bed. In the end of the episode, a policeman mentions the fact that two rapes were committed. S1E3: one character jokingly says that a man has sex with his niece. S1E5: a minor girl is recruted to become a prostitute. A recurring character (who is a prostitute) is beaten up and robbed by a man (a client). At some point, he is on top of her and strangles her. It is mentioned later that this happened several times to her in the past. A man arguing with a woman implies that she had been sexually abused by her father and his friends when she was younger. S1E7: early in the episode, a recurring character suddenly kisses a woman without her consent, shortly after having hinted that he would not assault her. She seems surprised and pushes him off, but then kisses him back. Near the end of the episode, we hear a prostitute (the 17 year old from S1E5) working in a brothel protesting against a client, asking him to stop: two other women intervene. S1E8: a man mentions porn movies involving animals. Someone mentions that the protagonist's wife was beaten up by a man. Near the end of the episode, a client kills a prostitute (a recurring character) by pushing her through the window of a hotel room. S2E1: a porn actress is shown shooting a movie where she is cuffed and about to be presumably raped by a man (the shooting is interrupted before anything happens). S2E2: early in the episode, strip dancers are told that they have to accept getting touched by clients to gain more money. They reluctantly accept, and in a later scene, a man presumably hurts one of them off-screen (we hear her scream and we see her being angry at the manager). A woman explains that she had to give sexual favours to a man for a professional opportunity: she says that she was surprised that he asked her permission first (to practice oral sex on her). An homophobic assault happens off-screen (we see the victim being teased by a group of men who have just hurt him). At some point, a porn movie scene is being shot: in the scenario, the man is forced to have sex with a woman he owes money to (the director insists that he is not in control of the situation). During an interrogation about a murder (from S2E1), it is revealed that a man paid a young boy to have sex with him, but the latter killed him when he tried to made him 'do things he didn't want to do'. S2E3: a character mentions that underage girls are working as prostitutes in a brothel. A main female character is pressured to perform oral sex on a man for a professional opportunity. S2E4: early in the episode, a woman briefly mentions that one of her professors wanted to have sex with her when she was in college. It is revealed that a woman who died because of a fire in a brothel was an underage prostitute. S2E5: a main female character (a prostitute) is shown having sex with her abusive pimp. She is clearly not into it, and shortly after, he beats her up. A woman mentions that prostitutes are sexually abused by their doctors. A woman kisses another woman without her consent: she seems not into it and accepting the 'relation' because the woman is offering her shelter. A man threatens to rape a woman. S2E6: this episode is about the shooting of a porn version of Little Red Riding Hood, with a man playing the wolf (a sexual predator): several scenes show him chasing women. Rape is mentioned early in the episode, and throughout, it is mentioned that the women (the victims) are in control and fantasize about the assault. A cartoon version of the tale shows the grandmother being aroused by a wolf and trapping him to presumably sexually assault him. In the last sequence of the episode, the wolf is trapped by the women he is chasing, and has consensual sex with them (who are in power positions). S2E7: a high-school boy has oral sex with a prostitute. S2E8: a man (a pimp) rapes a woman (a prostitute) on-screen. S3E2: a woman explains that she became a prostitute after a client, supposedly paying for a massage, asked her to go down on him. On the set of a porn film, an actor does something that the actress did not agree to (i.e. put an object in her anus): she stops the scene but eventually gets pressured into accepting it. A man confronts the boss of porn booth to show him that child pornography is display in his establishment without him knowing (the video is played in the background but not shown on-screen). S3E3: a porn actress has to argue with a film director in order to have an actor wearing a condom (the season takes place during the beginning of the AIDS pandemic). A man jokingly says that when women say no, they mean yes. S3E4: rape and violence towards women (including torture and murder) are mentioned and discussed several times throughout the episode. S3E5: throughout the episode, a female pornstar is harassed by men (her 'fans'). Eventually, one man follows her to her motel at night and tries to enter her room: however, it is finally hinted that she was imagining this last encounter from paranoia. S3E6: the episode opens with a scene showing a waitress being harassed by male customers. A female pornstar is pressured to act in a gang bang scene without being notified first, and despite her clear reluctance (she refuses to shot it several times). We only see the set and the actors getting prepared. She is shown leaving the set and being shoked. A woman explains how she was forced to get an abortion by her father when she was 15, and how traumatizing this experience was. S3E7: a woman is forced to prostitute herself for money (we see her having sex with a client). S3E8: a recurring theme of this episode is the shooting of a porn film that addresses issues of consent, including reluctance of the actors to play in it. It includes suggested off-screen rape and on-screen domestic violence. An ex-porn actresses is forced to accept sexual practices she originally did not consent to on the set of a porn film, in order to get money.
The Device (Movie)
There is a story discussed several times in the movie of one of the sisters being kidnapped by her boyfriend in the past and that everyone believed he raped her because she was pregnant when they found her. Later it is revealed that they were abducted by aliens and she was pregnant by them. Within the current story, the other sister is pregnant and she believes it to be her husband's but finds out that it is the alien's.
A young girl is coerced into removing her clothes and getting kissed by a man in a position of power (a preacher) and it is implied that they have a regular sexual relationship after this (1:05:10-1:06:20). When she gets pregnant, he victim blames her and tells her to get rid of the child: she kills herself. The same man is then shown to do the same with other young girls. The brother of the victim then confronts the rapist and talks about his crimes before killing him. Throughout the film, two characters kidnap men and then coerce them at gunpoint into sexual acts before murdering them (rape is strongly implied). Pictures and scenes of these acts are frequently shown, and it implies sexual mutilation. Early in the movie, two men make sexual assault threats to a man about his wife: he later beats them up. Teenage boys attempt to rape a teenage girl before her brother intervenes. This is presented as taking place regularly: her brother then comes to pick her at school and beats her assailants up. Throughout the movie there are instances of verbal harassment towards women.
A man walks out of a room zipping up his pants while the woman in the room screams at him. While being beaten, a man says "I didn't know she was underage". There are several mentions of trafficking.
Two women are forcibly impregnated with a syringe in a lab: they do not seem to be in pain, but are scared and held down by scientists. One is violently killed by possession through the mouth. The other is forced to carry the pregnancy to term. The birth scene is short and not incredibly violent.
Standard rape does not strictly occur, but there are two notable moments that could be triggering and one is definitely coercion: Chapter 37: one of the main characters is a woman in an arranged marriage. Her father traded her to her older husband when she was a teenager and she hates both of them for it. When the story begins she is in her 30s and reflects back to her anger and devastation over being sold. She views having sex with her husband as her "duty" that she hates and there is only one scene where sex is described but it can be triggering. She does not fight him, but she very clearly does not want to be there and when he finishes she tells him she hates him. He says and he knows and that he picked her out from amongst her sisters because he knew she would hate him the most and he wanted to punish her father by making her "suffer". He is also physically abusive to her throughout the book. Chapter 75: the second incident involves a character who is stranded amongst a lot of other characters in an isolated environment. He gains power over most of the men, but says very matter of factly that he only has control over them while he can provide what they want - so he calls a meeting with two others to discuss offering all the unmarried "of age " women to the men so they can be raped repeatedly. While the other characters are horrified, they later only refer to this set up as a "brothel" which can feel dismissive to real life victims. The plot also does not advance far enough beyond this point for the rape to take place, but it can be retraumatising to read as this seems almost certain to happen for several pages until the plan is interrupted. There are other mentions of rape, but they are in passing and vague. The story takes place on a boat in the 1600s and it is mentioned every now and then that the sailors are bad men who might do such a thing.
The sexual relationship between adult and teenager is a delusion in the teenage girl's mind and is not actually happening.
S1E2: a devil-woman is raped by a teenage male devil-man during a fight. A teenage girl sexually fantasizes about getting raped by a photographer: it is unclear whether it really happened or that it was just a mere fantasy. S1E5: a Devilwoman is raped by a teenaged Devilman during a fight. S1E7: a teenage girl is raped by a man while being held at gunpoint. The scene is short but explicit, and the girl later on kills the man. Worthy of note: an adult male photographer likes to take pictures of 'young people'. In a scene, sexually explicit photographs of teenage girls and boys can be seen.
Devilman Lady (TV Show)
The show has multiple scenes featuring sexual assault (S1E5+6+13+16+18+22+25) and the main character (an adult woman)'s love interest is a teenage girl. S1E5: the protagonist recalls being sexually assaulted by a friend, although she eventually manages to push her away. S1E25: the antagonist rapes the protagonist in a graphic scene.
Devilreaux (Movie)
A white man asks intimate and pressing questions to a black female slave about her husband. Later he and several others pin her down and attempt to rape her but her husband kills them. A man suggests that another man might rape his daughter as an act of revenge.
Rape, coercion, and assault on teens and children are all major plot point in this movie and come up many times.
Devil's Bride (Movie)
The male patient rapes one of the female college students that is working on the study. She fights him off and crawls away but he chases after her and kills her. He attacks another female student, and tells her repeatedly to open her legs before killing her.
Worthy of note: being based on the real events of the Magdalene laundries, there are implications of women being tortured and sexually abused. While giving birth, a woman is forcibly subjected to a painful procedure.
Throughout the movie, the main antagonist is shown raping, beating and sometimes killing women and schoolgirls. Several scenes show him kidnapping young girls for his personal harem when they are leaving school.
The Devil's Hour (TV Show)
Devils' Line (TV Show)
A man with a gun forcibly pulls a woman out of a shower fully naked and throws her on a bed in front of her parents and husband (29:00-29:45). Later, the same man forces her to remove her clothing in front of her family and abductors to humiliate her and to cause her family distress. During the undressing, he forcibly puts his gun in her underwear. He then forces her to kiss him and perform oral sex on him, threatening to kill her if she does not comply (33:00-36:40). Later on, he sniffes his gun and says it still smells (43:00-43:20).
Devil's Snare (Movie)
Two women are graphically raped on screen and killed at the very end of the movie. There is also some non consensual touching around the middle of the movie, when the 'executive producer' character and his wife join the cabin. They both try and force themselves sexually onto the group of men and women. Towards the beginning, we see some aftermath of a 'sex scene' filmed for the fake movie being made within in this movie, but it was consensual.
The entirety of the movie's premise is based around a teenage boy's represed memory of being molested by his grandfather. The scene is shown at 1:10:00.
Toward the end of the movie, a “demon” has unconsensual sex with a man who is paralyzed by a herbal drink: it is not graphic, but it is clear that a sexual act is occurring.
There is a passing mention of Abner Louima, who was sodomized by NYPD officers. A character is tortured for refusing to go out with an agent of the Haitian military dictatorship. Discussions of rape and genital mutilation in the context of torture.
Dexter (TV Show)
In season one, a male character is a rape survivor. S1E1: early in the episode a pastor is revealed to have raped and killed numerous young boys. Also early in the episode, the main character views a website which displays a violent rape on-screen. This clip is roughly 10 seconds long. This is not relevant to the overarching plot but, although brief, may be disturbing to some viewers. The character Rita is also a survivor of an abusive domestic relationship. S1E3: several main characters joke about a sex move that amounts to assault (riding a woman like a bronco while she is trying to buck the man off). It is presented as legitimate. One male character says that he murdered someone because they assaulted him: the protagonist lets him live because of it. S1E9: the ex husband of a main character threatens her and their children. To appease him, she baits him with sexual favors, only for him to try and violently rape her. She stops him, beating him with a baseball bat before retrieving her kids and escaping out the front door. S2E11: a character drugs herself in order to frame another character of rape to manipulate someone to be in a relationship with them (she frames him for sexual assault). Season 5: the main villains are a group of serial rapists (there are flashbacks in almost every episode). There is a description of a rape by their first victim and while the police is investigating, there is a board with pictures of the victims and frames of the videos. S5E3: a character is introduced as a survivor of rape. The impacts of this trauma are made clear in the way she reacts when faced with large groups of men or when she is touched. S5E9: the police finds DVDs that contain recordings of all the women the group raped, and they show parts of those images, as well as a lot of screaming by the victims, in almost every following episode of the season.
A high school girl (her age unspecified, although it seems she is 16-18) has a relationship with an adult man (age also unspecified but seems to be early to mid 20’s). S1E1: at a college party a young woman gets drunk. Her brother finds her passed out in a locked room, half dressed with a boy - also half dressed - on top of her (16:05-16:25). The protagonist pulls the boy off before he can rape her. After, the girl asks "did he..." and the answer is no.
D.Gray-Man (TV Show)
S1E11: an adult character who looks like a 12 year old girl kisses the main character (a 15 year old boy). Manga (chapter 232 page 24-25): in a flashback, a boy is sold to the circus and there are implications of sexual abuse. Nothing is shown besides the man stroking the child's lips.
D.I. Ray (TV Show)
Discussions of human trafficking occur in both season 1 and 2. Towards the end of season 1, a man is blackmailed with a video of him sleeping with an underage sex worker. In the last two episodes of season 1, a main character is in (non-sexual) physical danger from her fiance on-screen In season 2, a young child is trafficked, and it is discussed that it could be for sexual exploitation. A female character finds text messages sent to a group chat of her coworkers in which she is the target of harassment based on both gender and race. At the end of season 2 it is revealed that a teenage girl and her cousin were being sexually abused by their grandfather, and a flashback shows him threatening them, though the abuse is not shown. Across all mentions, the show handles issues respectfully and seriously, with a focus on how the survivors are affected by the trauma.
Diablero (TV Show)
S1E1: halfway through this episode, a man enters a woman's room in a mental hospital, taking his pants down: he tells her that it is her turn next. The implication is that he has done this to other patients. S2E1: towards the beginning of this episode, a woman describes how a man tried to force himself on a female employee of hers.
Diabolique (Movie)
Near the beginning of the film, we hear a husband walking towards his wife off-screen, who then says 'no', implying he has sex with her without her consent.
This film is about an man pressuring a woman to have sex without a condom. It ends with her violating her wishes and raping her.
The premise of the book is that the protagonist accidentally kills her blind date while acting in self defense after he starts trying to take her somewhere presumably to assault her. The would-be rapist's actions never get to the point of actually assaulting her, so there is no graphic description. However, he does ignore the protagonist's repeated wishes to not let him drive her car, and he calls her a tease. There is also passing commentary about how "everything bad" happens at frat parties, including rape.
The Dictator (Movie)
The protagonist is a trans woman who was sent to a man's prison for a crime she did not commit. At the beginning of the book, she is at the cusp of getting out of prison on parole. While in prison, she was constantly under threat of physical and sexual violence at the hands of correctional officers and fellow prisoners. She has several PTSD flashbacks to specific instances of rape she experienced. She also discusses experiences of rape with other female friends. There is passing mention of a house where a number of children were raped and murdered. In the last chapter, we find out that one of the protagonist's friends dies in a domestic violence situation.
To Die For (Movie)
Much of the film revolves around an adult woman grooming a group of teenagers into murdering her husband. This involves being sexually inappropriate with them and beginning a sexual relationship with one of them.
Dietland (TV Show)
Rape and sexual assault are frequently discussed throughout the series. In episodes 2, 3 and 7 rape porn is shown. Episode 8: a woman is pushed against a bookshelf, and another character puts their hand over her mouth. She says no but the other character proceeds anyway. This scene occurs from the 38-minute mark until the end of the episode.
The author discusses her own experiences with sexual violence and statistical information about sexual violence experienced by neurodivergent and disabled people more broadly. The author gives clear content warnings before discussing these topics.
A character tries to rape a main character in a car on a date: she escapes and someone steps in to save her. This episode also discuses consent, especially on college campus.
At the end of a date, the woman tries to leave but the man stops her. He pins her up against the wall and starts undressing them both, but then is stopped by someone else and killed.
Digimon Survive (Video Game)
One of the major routes reveals that the youngest cast member (age 12) was sexually harrassed by an adult. Nothing is explicitly shown or detailed. Most of the routes also include on-screen death of children and teenagers, which while not graphic (most death scenes are simply the character being pulled into a fog) does include audio that may be distressing.
S1E1: an imprisoned woman is almost raped by her captors before someone intervenes and rescues her. She recalls her attempted rape in later episodes in flashbacks.
A Dirty Shame (Movie)
Dirty Work (Movie)
The author discusses sexual assault in the contexts of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, psychiatric institutions, wartime, and within families. Towards the end, there is discussion about how abled people are often incredulous about the high rates of sexual assault against disabled people due to stereotypes of disabled people as sexually undesirable.
The author discusses the following throughout the book: numerous individuals with a background of experiencing sexual violence, sexual violence in institutions, the Buck v. Bell US Supreme Court case, PTSD that arises from sexual violence and other forms of violence, and general statistics about sexual violence against disabled people.
Many of the essayists discuss statistics about disabled people’s heightened vulnerability to sexual violence, as well as their own experiences. Several essays begin with content warnings, particularly those that involve sexual violence.
The main character was raped in her past: the film shows the start of the attack. We find out later that she was impregnated by the attack. Worthy note: domestic abuse is discussed throughout.
Disclaimer (TV Show)
S1E7: violent and graphic depictions of sexual violence.
This documentary is about the depiction of transgender people in television and movies. As such, the documentary shows brief clips of those representations to underscore the points being made. Many of those clips feature implied and overt sexual violence against trans people, mostly against trans women. There are also scenes that depict gender non-conforming people raping and sexually assaulting cis people. Moreover, one of the actresses interviewed explains her real life experiences of sexual harassment on the set of a television show she was a part of.
Disco Elysium (Video Game)
At the beginning of the game, a child screams "Help ! Rape !" to try to get rid of a police officer who is asking questions to his friend. The police has no inappropriate question or gestures. There are mentions of the murder victim being a potentional rapist: it is later confirmed. SPOILERS: While not necessary to finish the game, it is possible to talk with one of the scab workers, who the main character figures out is an undercover mercenary. If we keep talking to him, there is a point where he discusses a woman his group took hostage as a sex slave until her death.
Disco Pigs (Movie)
The sexual violence scene (28:00-32:00) is confusing in that it is implied and not talked about openly in the film. Both characters have an estranged attachment, with the victim not willing to part with the abuser, so the event remains undiscussed while their friendship continues as normal. The abuse is handled realistically where the victim suffers in silence and no retribution or resolution is ever found, which makes the movie all the more disturbing. There are no overt moments in the movie where the abuser is said/shown to be wrong in his treatment to his friend, leading the watcher to think his morality is up to speculation; this seems to be the most harmful thing about this movie.
This book contains a mention of mass rape of women post downfall of Troy, including brief interaction with a minor character who has been raped and is afraid she will be again A major male character is enslaved and repeatedly raped by a Greek god, on and offscreen (descriptions of nonconsentual interactions are not detailed). The situation persists over many flashbacks to various parts of their lives together, and the emotional and sexual relationship dynamics between them become complicated. A secondary male antagonist attempts to rape female lead onscreen. She is rescued before things progress very far, but the descriptions of her struggles and his touch are detailed and emotionally charged.
S3E5: a man captures and holds witches against their will and rapes them repeatedly trying to get them pregnant with vampire witch hybrids.
Disobedience (Movie)
A woman is raped off-screen and continue to live with her rapiste because she is pregnant.
While drunk, the protagonist attempts to rape another character. His internal monologue shows that he believes the way she is dressed to be an invitation to sex. She says "no" and "stop" repeatedly in the interaction.
Divergent (Movie)
The film contains a hallucination of an attempted rape (which is not in the book). In another scene, the protagonist is attacked by a group of men: in the film, they are trying to kill her while in the book, this includes her being groped. Worthy of note: the book the film is adapted from contains an attempted rape.
The theme of rape is recurrent in the film, with multiple mentions and depictions that are graphic in nature.
Divines (Movie)
Do Not Reply (Movie)
Rape is implied but not shown.
A teen character agrees to have sex with her teen boyfriend out of a sense of obligation, although her thoughts reveal that she does not want to have sex. Midway through the scene, the character changes her mind and tells her boyfriend to get off of her, and he does not. She has to physically push him off, and the boy is cruel about it. A teen character recalls an abusive boyfriend of her mother’s from her childhood. She recalls finding the boyfriend raping her mother at knifepoint in a car. A teen character experiencing debilitating depression has sex with another boy out of a sense of obligation, although her thoughts reveal that she doesn’t want to do it.
Doc (TV Show)
S1E7: there is a flashback of a rape on-screen. There is victim blaming and it is very traumatic. It features a serial rapist.
A drunken man in a bar grabs a woman and tries to forcibly plant a kiss on her while she struggles against him. Off-screen, a man attempts to force himself on a woman before being shot dead by another woman who witnesses the act.
A 17-year-old girl is raped by an older man when she refuses to call off her engagement to another.
Film depicts several scenes of sexual torture between individuals for the purpose of entertainment.
Dog Pound (Movie)
The relevant scene is graphic and occurs towards the end of the movie.
Doggie Heaven (Movie)
A man is raped by a dog, then later says that he has 'seen dogs do things that no human should see.' This occurs between the 3:14-4:14 minute marks.
Dogville (Movie)
Throughout the film, the main female character is raped repeatedly by several men, chained to a bed, chained to a heavy wheel, beaten and exploited by every individual in the small town she seeks refuge in.
Dollhouse (TV Show)
Manipulation of consent and nonconsent are recurring themes in the show, beyond just sexual assault.
The main character's daughter is molested by the father/husband. At one point there is a flashback sequence of him forcing her to touch him inappropriately; aside from this incident his actions are only spoken about.
The Domestics (Movie)
The antagonists are intent on raping the female protagonist and kidnap women to use for sexual slavery.
Don Giovanni (Movie)
Donnie Darko (Movie)
A high school teacher is arrested for possessing and publishing child pornography. A highschooler says to another teenager that he hopes he gets molested. Two high school boys make a female classmate umcomfortable, standing behind her, touching her hair, saying they like her breast. A young girl asks when she can have a baby and her brother jokingly say not until eighth grade. While under hypnosis, the protagonist answers negatively to his therapist when he asks him if he thinks about "fucking his family" (36:16-36:50).
Don't Be Afraid (Video Game)
A female character is shown being raped by the main antagonist on a television. It is heavily implied the main antagonist rapes children before murdering them.
Don't Be Afraid 2 (Video Game)
The protagonist is suffering from PTSD: it is implied he was sexually abused as a kid. It is implied the abuser had multiple victims, ranging from children to adult. The protagonist is drugged during one of the endings.
Don't Breathe (Movie)
A woman is held captive and is revealed to have been impregnated by her captor. A man captures a female character and attempts to impregnate her as well.
In the introduction scene, a monster rapes a woman. This results in several parasites who later infect other women by crawling into their mouth or vagina.
A boy walks in on a woman whilst she is naked and she begins to make suggestive comments towards him. This is not presented as predatory in the film.
The explicit sexual scenes in the movie are marketed as empowering a women's pleasure. However, an important part of the story is that the main character is living in a simulation against her will, so making all previously shown sexual activities non-consensual.
S1E1: a grown female nurse pulls the main character (a 16 year old boy) into a dark room at work. She gets close to him and undoes his scrubs revealing his underwear. She alludes to wanting to have sex with him. As his pants drop, the lights turn on and all of the other doctors and nurses hold up a happy birthday banner and shout “happy birthday”. It is played as a prank S1E2: a 40 year old woman hits on the protagonist. She kisses him and asks him to dinner. At the dinner, she explains that she wants him to be the father of her child. He misunderstands her thinking that she wants to be with him sexually. It is later discovered that she wants to go through artificial insemination and they discuss it together. They ultimately decide not to. The protagonist's friend later calls him a wuss for not sleeping with the woman. He jokes saying that he never wants to speak to him and he is out of his life.
There is a non-graphic rape scene of a main character in a sequence of highly graphic and intense violence; another character has his genitals severed.
Doom Patrol (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman grabs a man’s genitalia to upset her husband. S1E14: a character accidentally causes everyone near him to orgasm from his superpowers. It is shown to to visibly distress the sexual assault survivor in the group. S2E9: a boyfriend coerces his girlfriend into participating in an orgy. During the sexual act the girl has a PTSD hallucination of her rapist father in place of the man on top of her. She has Dissociative Identity Disorder and rapidly switches between alters in a state of distress. She vocally pleas for him to stop and it does not until one alter shouts and shoves him to get off her. S4E1 contains sexual harassment.
Door Mouse (Movie)
The plot revolves around people kidnapped and sold into sexual slavery at a hotel for the wealthy. No rape is shown, but hear sex noises are heard through a door from a woman about to be rescued. People are also shown being led to a stage in their underwear, wearing collars and led on leashes. There they are bid on and purchased.
Doreiku (TV Show)
Many episodes contain sexual violence, since the show deals with a Slave-Control-Method (SCM). For example, a girl uses it to force a boy to engage in non consentual sexual acts with her, and it shows a child sexually torturing women and engaging in sexual acts with them. In S1E1, a girl is raped in the car of a man.
Dorohedoro (TV Show)
In this show, an underage girl is shown half naked in multiple scenes. Her breasts are exposed around adult men and women who do not cover her up. S1E2: Some male bandits corner a woman and demand that she hands over her belongings and her clothes. The woman immediately overpowers her attackers and leaves. S1E4: an adult man lures an underaged girl to a secluded place and plies her with alcohol, but she kills him before we find out what his intentions were.
Dororo (TV Show)
A teenage girl is prostituted at an army camp so she can provide for her family.
Dorothy Mills (Movie)
A graphic scene where a girl is raped by several men occurs near the end of the film. A man makes unsolicited sexual comments about a woman in a public space.
S1E1: it is mentioned that someone's testicles were cut off. A woman says that she is willing to give something in exchange for information to a man, who infers it as a sexual request (which it is not). Three drunken men at the bar approach two women and make a sexual request by saying that both of them are going to be their future ex-wives. S1E0: two women enter a room where an orgy takes places. Later, it is inferred that the women in that orgy are (forced) sex slaves. Two women are held captive and a man says: "You would not last 1 week upstairs (the place where the orgy was seen)", implying that they were going to be sex slaves. They manage to escape.
Double Daddy (Movie)
A teenage girl's ex-boyfriend stalks her, making advances towards her that are implied to be sexual in nature.
Double Impact (Movie)
A woman is caught stealing and is frisked in an inappropriate manner by another woman before she runs away. In another scene, the same woman is tied up by her wrists as a hostage and a man attempts to assault her but someone comes in to save her.
Doubt (Movie)
The story follows a catholic school nun who is trying to figure out if the priest is having an inappropriate relationship with a pre-teen student or any of the other children attending the school. By the end of the moive it is still unclear.
S1E2: the bulk of this episode details an encounter in a hotel room between a young female prospective TV presenter and the older male producer. The male producer is highly inappropriate and the episode builds towards the point where she feels that she has to stay an engage in his sexual games in order to get the job. T he entire episode is self aware of what it is doing and references rape culture in a clear manner. Worthy of note: At one point, a man knocks on the door and realizes what is going on but advises her in an oblique manner to go through with it in order to get the job.
Down (Movie)
Down By Law (Movie)
A key character is a pimp. At one point, we see a very underage girl and it's implied she has been involved in a sex trafficking ring. The scene is very brief and not plot-central.
Downton Abbey (TV Show)
S1E3: a female character is threatened by a character she is attracted to. Since he got into her room without asking, her reputation would be ruined if she screams. They eventually as sex, and this is used later by another man as a threat to her reputation. S4E3: rape is strongly implied (a man blocks a woman from leaving a kitchen before forcefully pulling her) between 40:20-41:45. The woman is later found bloodied and disheveled: a man helps fer hind new clothes and takes over her duties (45:25-46:37). S5E9 (Christmas Special Part I): a woman recounts in detail being molested as a child (19:50-22:19). The rape is mentioned frequently thereafter with her having to see the same man again whilst hiding it from her husband. The plot focuses entirely on her husband's revenge and her protecting her husband.
When the protagonist turns into his monstruous alter ego, he forces a woman to engages in an abusive relationship with him. It is implied that he repeatedly raped and beat her and a long scene about halfway into the movie shows him harassing and threatening her. He later strangles her to death. In the final scenes of the movie, the evil protagonist also attempts to sexually harrass his fiancee before people intervene.
Is is implied that a woman was raped twice off screen by a man.
Rape scene is not visually graphic, but marks the beginning of Komarovsky's disturbing psychological control over Lara (who he raped) through a large part of the film.
Dracula (2020) (TV Show)
S1E1: a man is raped while having a sexual dream about his partner. He half awakes to see the rapist's face (not his partner) above him while it is still happening. It is implied that he may have been raped every night, as he wakes every morning to find he has been bitten (a sign of the first rape). It is revealed that the rape leaves a long term alteration on the man's body, as a potential allusion to sexual disease. The rapist also keeps three 'wives' captive in boxes. He has a child with one of them and he refers to them as 'toys'. He later becomes obsessed with making his new victim his 'wife' (i.e. an undead slave).
Dragon Age Origins (Video Game)
The game is dark and includes several instances of off-screen, implied, and possibly symbolic rape. In one of the origin stories available, the player characters cousin was kidnapped with other women, beaten, and raped. If the player character is female, they are also kidnapped, but have not yet been assaulted. Rape is shown to be a common abuse between city elves and human nobles. During a main quest, a character describes an instance where a man's daughter was kidnapped and raped. She commits suicide when she finds out that it resulted in a pregnancy. A main quest and several notes discuss how women are kidnapped by humanoid creatures to forcibly reproduce. The process is described as a "violation", and the women are forced to commit cannibalism, and are force fed biological matter and vomit by the creatures to create more of them. This is never shown, but the women, called "Broodmothers", are monstrous creatures that the player has to kill. A man makes a comment about women being raped during a war. A party member, that cannot be removed until the completion of a main quest, constantly sexually harasses female party members and the player character, if female. A female player character will be harassed by male characters, and a male player character has the option to harass many female characters. In a DLC, a female party member is possibly assaulted in some way after being imprisoned, guards call her a "whore" and say "If you wanted more of my men, you could have just asked.".
One of the main characters is trying to avoid an arranged marriage to a nobleman known for raping peasant women and tormenting his enemies. A secondary female character ends up marrying this abusive nobleman instead. She chose the union for political gain, and ultimately escapes it.
Dragon's Dogma (TV Show)
S1E3: an attack party of goblins undresses a woman with the intent to rape her. They are fended off. S1E6: a succubus poses as the lover of the main character with the intent to have sex with him, and is implied to have done so with a number of other men.
Volume 1: The primary romance is between a high school student and a college student. They are about two years apart in age; she is mentioned to have just finished 11th grade, while he just finished his first year of university. Their exact ages are never specified. They kiss once during the book but otherwise have no sexual contact. The main character's boyfriend attempts to rape her before she fights him off and escapes. Volume 2: No rape or sexual assault. Volume 3: A man flashes a crowd. This is played for laughs. The main character runs into an ex-boyfriend who previously attempted to rape her. This causes her to have a brief flashback to the incident and she is too scared to move or speak until her new boyfriend arrives and comforts her. The ex is portrayed as having become a better person since their breakup, but it is clear the main character will have no further contact with him if possible.
The main character is attacked by a gang and they attempt to rape him, but are fought off.
Drawn Together (TV Show)
Dread (Movie)
One character talks about the sexual abuse she suffered from her father.
Dream Boy (Movie)
A dfather falls into a wire trap made by his son to catch him, and the son runs out of the house with the mom yelling, "did he touch you?" The main character spend the latter half of the movie sleeping away from home to escape his father. A side character rapes him in an abandoned house while on a camping trip Worthy of note: during intercourse, the main character's partner suddenly and violently pushes him away.
The Dreamers (Movie)
The film revolves around the incestuous relationship of twins (brother and sister): multiple sex scenes are shown on-screen. At some point, they both challenge the protagonist (a man) to have sex with the sister: he tries to escape but he is held against his will, and visibly distressed as they undress him. He eventually complies and starts a relationship with the woman. This is framed as an erotic/romantic game.
Dreaming Mary (Video Game)
One of the characters makes sexual innuendos towards the child protagonist multiple times. This happens in her dreams and it is implied that the character is meant to be a representation of her father. The protagonist is locked in her room by her father and it's heavily implied he sexually abuses her.
A woman is drugged and then raped by her husband while unconscious (15:42-16:30).
Drift (Movie)
A man grabs the vulnerable main characters arm and tries to bring her somewhere against her will, promising to feed her. She is obviously scared of the risk of being sexually abused or exploited. A tour guide casually mentions rape a pillaging during a tour, which is obviously triggering for the main character. A group of home invaders, mostly child and youth soldiers, enter the main characters home and rape her sister in front of her after killing her whole family. The children/young people chant while they rape the girl, who is pregnant. She is killed afterwards. The main character is forced to watch. While the mechanics of the rape itself are not displayed on screen we still hear the chanting, listen to a graphic description from the main character and see the faces of the two women in the room as they keep their eyes on one another.
A prisoner says he had to perform sexual acts to get information. In his description he does not go into detail. A woman is raped by a zombie-like creature, who was a sex offender in a past life. The woman may or may not be conscious. Somebody else sees this and shoots the rapist, the description of the rape is short but vivid.
Drifters (TV Show)
S1E5: at the end of the episode, a group of elven women are brutally raped.
Dronningen (Movie)
One character begins having sex with her husband while he is still asleep: he wakes up and eventually consents (42:28-43:43). This is played for comedic effect.
The Dropout (TV Show)
S1E1: the main character's mother tells her she might get kidnapped and be forced to be a sex slave. The main character goes to a party. She reports being raped to the University, and they say it is her rapist's word against hers. They do not recommend any punitive action for the male student. She is clearly traumatized. S1E6: a female character recalls being sexually assaulted on campus.
The sexual violence scenes in this movie are particularly violent.
Throughout the film, sexual blackmailing, necrophilia, child abuse, and incest are mentioned or discussed. The attempted rape takes place 20 minutes before the end, by the main male character, who constantly tried to seduce the three female protagonist during the rest of the film despite their disinterest.
A flashback contains detailed information of how a mentally disabled tween was forced drunk and abused.
Drowning Love (Movie)
There is an attempted rape of the main protagonist (a middle school girl) about halfway through the film.
Drunk Bus (Movie)
The protagonist character sleeps besides a woman: she suddenly climbs onto him and starts having sex with him in the night. He is visibly uncomfortable, but pretends to enjoy it until he realizes that she is doing this in her sleep and has a sleep disorder, at which point he leaves. He later describes the incident, referring to it as a “felony,” with it being ambiguous as to whether he views himself or her as having been the victim of the crime. (Possibly both.) The entire thing is mostly framed as awkward comedy.
The Dry (Movie)
At the end of the movie, a character is detailing her sexual assault. Nothing is ever shown on-screen, but the content is disturbing. SPOILER: the rapist is the victim's father.
Dublin Murders (TV Show)
S1E5: gang-rape. The following episodes contains flashbacks of it.
The movie does not thoroughly discuss the teenage marriage, but it is mentioned that the main character was not 18 when she married an older man (older in the movie than he actually was historically though). The rape scene is an extremely emotional scene, with a lot of screaming and several people including a child are shown overhearing the situation; it is also referred to in a discussion later in the movie, though with broad terms.
Dude (2018) (Movie)
Sex begins consensually. However, the woman insists that she only wants to do oral sex and her partner ends up penetrating her vaginally and ejaculating inside of her, all while she tells him to stop. This scene occurs between the 56:48-58:30 minute marks.
A character is met in a bathroom stall by another man who attempts to force him into having a sexual encounter. The scene is played for laughs.
Dumplings (Movie)
A woman brings her daughter to get an abortion and tells the person performing the procedure that the girl’s father is the one who impregnated her.
Dune (1984) (Movie)
It is mentioned that a Duke keeps underage slave boys; nothing further is specified but this could be taken to imply a sexual component to the dynamic. There is description of an event in which a village has an "orgy" at which children are present, under the influence of a psychoactive drug. However it is ambiguous whether the term "orgy" here is used metaphorically (to refer to the melding of minds under the influence of this substance), literally or as a combination of the two. A Duke has teen sex slaves sent to his bedroom. It is strongly implied that he rapes them and sometimes murders them. At one point, this Duke asks one of his underlings to drug the boy sent to his room because he “doesn’t feel like fighting”. Two soldiers discuss raping a female character. One says, “I’ve never had a Duke’s lady before.” However, she is able to subdue them before they can attempt violence.
Dune: Prophecy (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode contains a story about child trafficking, and a marriage of a 9 year old boy to a teenage girl who is excited that she can manipulate him because he is a child. S1E3: this episode features a woman who lies about who she is, to have someone fall in love with her. She kills his whole family and him as well S1E5: this episode mentions the use of the Fremen and uses the word rape. It is revealed through episode 5 and 6 of season 1 that the sisters have long term plans for breeding including in depth plans for non consensual sex.
Durarara!! (TV Show)
One of the main characters (16) is constantly sexually harrased by one of the teachers. The latter is a pedophile who also engaged in a relationship with another highschool student. The character is frequently cat-called or lusted by other characters due to her large breasts (altough this is most played for comedy). Two sisters are very fond of each other to the point where they seem to have a somewhat romantic relantionship. There is more than one scene of them kissing each other (this is also played mostly for laughs and to add quirkiness to the characters but can be unsettling to some viewers). S2E13: a character gropes one of the main characters, and while another character laughs at it, the harrasement goes further (she attempts to touch her crotch). The assaillant is stopped by another character. Again this scene is played mostly for laughs. S2E14: a 25 year old character is madly in love with his younger brother (16). Her incestuous obsession is further explored and the younger brother almost kisses her. S2E15: in a flashback, there is a conversation between a main character and a crime boss who talks about how he plans to prostitute a middle schooler and have sex with her to "taste her" first. He is killed before he can do anything. S2E20: there is a mild implication that one character sexually abused another character in high school, but this was left ambiguous S2E25: one character is imprisoned against his will in some kind of BDSM dungeon. His captor express her desires to bassically fullfill every depraved and violent sexual fantasy with him as a captive. In one of the light novels (Vol.9) one character tries to rape a woman after crippling her and burning his face. He is stoped.
Dying Breed (Movie)
There are cuts to a woman who is struggling and screaming.
Dying for Sex (TV Show)
S1E1: a character's spouse mentions his wife's childhood trauma where it is revealed to the audience she was sexually assaulted when she was 7 (18:34). The abuse is discussed but not depicted throughout the series, and is a major plot in S1E5. The discussion of the events and the subsequent trauma is handled sensitively.
The book opens with the protagonist, a schoolteacher, being fired because she has been accused of molesting her students. In reality, she reported to the police that one of her students was being abused at home, and since the child's mother's boyfriend is involved in the Albanian mafia, he decided to use his resources to ruin the protagonist's reputation by starting the molestation rumor. Although there are no formal charges, the protagonist is constantly worried that others will recognize her from the news and hate her on sight. Meanwhile, the student that the protagonist was attempting to protect gets sold into the Albanian mafia's sex trafficking ring. She and other girls are drugged, held in squalor against their will, and forced to have sex with adult men. They are in this situation for most of the book until they are rescued towards the end. Even before the student was kidnapped, she was in an abusive household. Her mother's boyfriend made passes at her, and her mother called her a slut for attracting him. The mother excused the behavior taking place by saying that she herself had been sexually involved with adult men when she was her daughter's age and that it isn't a big deal. A woman who is the mafia boss's second in command is also in an abusive relationship with him. The mafia boss brags that he has "subjected her to every degradation possible." This woman threatens to allow the protagonist to be raped the same way she has been, but this doesn't end up happening. Worthy of note: an FBI agent who is trying to bring down the Albanian mafia becomes aware of the schoolteacher getting unwittingly wrapped up in their business. Before this agent meets her, he immediately becomes infatuated with her from her photos. They happen to meet at a party, and the FBI agent doesn't reveal that he already knows who she is. They have sex. When the schoolteacher finds out later that the FBI agent already knew about her before they met, she feels very betrayed and assumes that he only had sex with her to get information out of her. He is able to convince her later that he is genuinely interested in her, but it takes some doing.
Earth Abides (TV Show)
S1E5: off-screen rape.
The protagonist's older brother is found guilty by his college's administration of raping another student. Other than being suspended for a semester, he does not face any significant consequences or accountability. Their parents, specifically their mother, tries to save face and act as though nothing bad is happening. They don't believe they could have raised someone who could be capable of rape. The protagonist feels a great deal of sympathy for the rape survivor. There is a scene where she imagines in fairly graphic detail what the rape may have been like. The protagonist is upset that no one in her family seems concerned for the feelings of the student that her brother raped. They seem more concerned with placating their son's bruised ego. The protagonist contends with the fact that, prior to this event, she idolized her brother. There is a scene where the protagonist visits the rape survivor to apologize on her brother's behalf and check how she is doing. At the end, the protagonist doesn't forgive her brother but is still trying to make peace with him.
The instances of sexual violence in this book are heavily detailed. The protagonist, who is entering the 6th grade at the start of the book, is groomed and sexually assaulted by a teacher. In one instance, he reaches under her clothing under the guise of correcting her posture. In another, he coerces her into changing her menstrual pad in front of him. In yet another, he tricks her into going to his home alone and forces her to perform oral sex on him. After this instance, he tells her not to tell anyone because he will get into trouble, but she will get into more trouble. When the protagonist tries to tell her mother what happened, between the second and third instances of assault, her mother does not believe her. Her mother says the protagonist has a filthy mind and then beats her. The protagonist is in love with her first cousin. They decide to "get married" in a childlike, pretend way. Later, the protagonist asks him to have sex with her, specifically because she feels her body doesn't belong to her after her assault, and she believes the teacher will eventually kill her. They sneak off together and have sex in a very detailed scene. While in a heavily dissociated state, the protagonist sneaks into the teacher's house and stabs him to death. The press labels him as a beloved and intelligent person whom everyone loved. When the protagonist is an adult, tries to tell friends what he did to her, and they misunderstand her or say that she was lucky to have a grown man interested in her when she was in elementary school. The protagonist ends up marrying a man with the agreement that they will not have sex or even any touching. He was traumatized by the fact that his mother would take baths with him into his teenage years. He later decides to try to abandon humanity having incest with a member of his family. At first, he considers his grandfather, who is in a coma in a hospital. When the protagonist tells him that's wrong, he apologizes and later decides to invite his brother into incest. The brother reacts negatively to this invitation. When the protagonist's and her husband's families and friends find out that they haven't been having sex, they tell her how abnormal they find that and try to get her to have sex with him. Towards the end of the book, the protagonist, her husband, and the cousin she had sex with as a child all move into a house together where they believe they are aliens, walk about the house naked, and steal food from other houses to survive. The book ends with all 3 of them somehow becoming pregnant.
Earthquake (Movie)
A psychotic national guardsman takes woman hostage and attempts to rape her after she tries to escape (01:41:00).
Chapter 6: general reference to child pornography Chapter 11: reference to incest and child abuse within a cult. A woman briefly discusses how three men tried to rape her but she was able to get away.
The East (Movie)
During a party, a woman is supposed to distract a sex addict. After making a phone call and trying to leave, he pushes her against a wall and kisses her and rips her necklace despite her telling him to stop (about 45 minutes into the movie). She then stabs him with a pen and knocks him unconscious.
Eastenders (TV Show)
Two men go to a brothel, where we know from other scenes that the prostitutes are trafficking victims and likely drugged. One man is the other's superior in the mob and tells him to have sex with one of the women while he watches; he is reluctant but does so. Sex trafficking is talked about a few times: a 14 year old girl describes being trafficked in her diary. It is not graphic however she states that she was raped and became pregnant - this is a plot point that is referenced several times. The movie begins with the pregnant girl bleeding between her legs and then dying during childbirth.
Easy (TV Show)
Episode 1: a married couple in which passion is gone have sex in the second to last scene. The wife is clearly not enjoying the act and the husband has sex to gratify himself. Episode 2: rape is mentioned in a discussion. Episode 4: on-screen rape scene is conveyed as ambiguous due to the fact that the female protagonist is drunk and initially wanted to have sex due to her conflicted emotions.
Easy A (Movie)
A guidance counsellor has a sexual fling with a student at the high school she works at, though he's in his twenties due to being held back several times. The protagonist is nearly raped after a date but fights the aggressor off. He makes repeated attempts to physically approach/touch her, despite her repeated verbal indications that she does not want him to do so. The scene is not especially explicit/violent but may be upsetting.
Eaten Alive (Movie)
At the very start of the film, a man tries to force a prostitute into anal sex while she screams and tries to get away. She is assaulted by another man soon after.
Eating Raoul (Movie)
There are several attempted rapes throughout the film, slightly played for laughs. The whole movie centers around making money from killing the men that try and rape the main female character, and then stealing their money.
Women are raped on screen and brutally killed.
Rape and sexual assault are never directly indicated in this book, but issues of consent and domestic abuse are integral to the themes of the story. The protagonists are women who are mostly in positions of power within their lives during most of the plot events. One of the main characters had a father (absent in the present day, shown in flashbacks) who was explicitly controlling and physically abusive, implied to be possibly more. The other main character is a clone custom-designed to want to be a subservient housewife and mother, who gradually becomes independent; questions her goals and desires. When she deviates from her programming, her "loving husband" / creator becomes physically violent.
Echoes (TV Show)
Identical twin sisters switch places and sleeping with each other's spouses without the men knowing. This is not reffered to as problematic throughout the series.
Eden (2012) (Movie)
The teenage protagonist is kidnapped and forced to become a sex slave by human traffickers. When she realizes that the people running the ring will kill her when she gets too old to be interesting to the customers, she begins working with her captors and working her way up the ranks of the operation in order to ensure her own survival.
Eden Log (Movie)
An extremely graphic rape scene is depicted, with additional physical violence. The victim remains with assailant on-screen for rest of film with continued references to the event.
Edward II (Movie)
Effie Gray (Movie)
A man forces the main female character to grope him. She immediately pulls away and runs away from him. He chases her with the intention to rape her, and ends up finding her and cornering her but she escapes. Worthy of note: a man is heard masturbating next to his wife while he thinks she is asleep. Upon question, he immediately stops and pretends to be asleep. The husband is significantly older than the wife and had been pursuing her since she was a child.
Eileen (Movie)
A man attempts to cut in while a woman is dancing with another woman at a bar. She rejects him verbally, to which he tries to grab her. She decks him and continues dancing with the other woman. The workplace of the main characters is a boy's prison. One of the boys murdered his father (cop) extremely violently. Towards the ending of the movie, it is revealed that his father was raping him regularly as a child, up until his murder. This is never shown or visually suggested in any capacity, but it is discussed in a disturbing monologue by the boy's mother about how she decided not to intervene with the situation after finding out, because the father would then come back and have consensual sex with her, which she enjoyed. The monologue is lengthy, uncomfortable, and disturbing, but not handled tactlessly. The characters surrounding her react to her story with appropriate horror.
El Conde (Movie)
There is a ambiguous scene at 1:18:00. There is a short (not very graphic) rape on screen scene at 1:27:00.
After escaping from a reformatory, the protagonist decides to hitchhike and is picked up by a truck driver who takes her to a motel, drugs and brutally rapes her (the post-rape scenes are described in detail).
One of the main leads is a high school student who pursues a relationship with his teacher who rejects him multiple times.Throughout their 'relationship', he repeatedly threatens suicide and manipulates her. It was implied that he was there when his father murdered her. S1E4: he is seen masturbating to a portrait of her. S1E5: she confronts him and they sleep together though consent is ambiguous on her behalf. S1E16: it is revealed that he was forced into prostitution by his father. This is shown as a video with multiple nude men and it is implied that most of the boys involved were underage. The same high school student and his friend find a sexual video of the protagonist having an affair and blackmail her. He later pretends to be the protagonist and texts the man she had an affair with, telling him that she wanted to see him again. The man surprises the protagonist at home and holds her from behind, touching her while she protests. She gets free and the man apologizes after realizing she was not into it. Later on, she has a flashback and is about to masturbate before being interrupted by her partner. It is unsure if she was turned on by the situation or the thought of sleeping with the man again. The same high school student from before invites his two friends over and gets them drunk but one of his friends finds a hidden camera. It is unknown what he was going to use footage for.
A concentration camp prisoner has sex with another prisoner who is being forced to work in the camp’s brothel.
El Hoyo 2 (Movie)
A character talks about how, as punishment, a woman was tied naked to the platform and sent down to the lower levels. This punishment is later performed on screen. However, both times, they talk about/imply people eating the women rather than doing anything sexual to them.
El Inocente (TV Show)
This movie is about a former sex worker: the scenes are abuses by clients and her boss (it is not explicit but it does include physical violence).
El Marginal (TV Show)
This show is based on the events of an Argentinian prison, and how a police officer infiltrates in it. Senes of explicit sexual violence take place all along the show, and even a rape on-screen is shown in the jail showers.
El Nino Pez (Movie)
There are perhaps various ways to interpret what is shown and talked about in this film. A girl is being molested by her father which leads to her being pregnant around the age of 13. She then leaves her house and is taken in by a guy who she at least at the age of 20 is intimate with (unclear when this started). Around the same time, she starts working for a wealthy family and at the age of 20 she is seen having sex with the father of family (again unclear when this started). At 20 she is imprisoned and it is suggested that she and other prisoners are being sexually exploited by the police on a regular basis.
A man tries to molest a young boy in the beginning of the movie but he fails due to another young boy (his nephew) intervening and hitting him.
El Topo (Movie)
There are many rape scenes, some of which are real, filmed rape and not just simulated. While the director stated upon release that the on-screen rape was a real rape, he later stated in 2019 that this claim was a publicity stunt that he later regretted, and that the rape was simulated.
The sexual violence, not shown on screen, is not handled sensitively, nor is it particularly relevant to the player character's story line. The sexual violence is described by the victim (an NPC in the Thieves Guild) in a graphic way that emphasized the violence of the act. A member of the Thieves Guild, named Sapphire, tells the player a detailed story of how she was captured and violently abused for a fortnight as a child. The book Opusculous Lamae Bal tells the story of how the first vampire was created, during a violent assault by the Daedric God of Rape, and how she sought her revenge against him by doing the same to the tribe of people that tried to save her. In the city of Riften, in Haelga's Bunkhouse, a dark elf named Tythis Ulen frequently catcalls and gropes the maid, Svana, to which she replies threatening to remove his genitals. In the Dawnguard DLC, Serana the vampire explains that she and her mother are also pureblooded vampires, having went through the same violent "ritual" that Lamae Bal is known to have gone through.
S1E1: early on in the episode, a man rapes and beats a schoolgirl on-screen. As an older teen, the schoolgirl later explains more details behind the rape (including having an obsessive interest in her abuser, and that she thinks of him as an older brother despite not being related). There is also a major character who, while she does not make any sexual advances, does make several uncomfortable advances towards the protagonist, stalks him, breaks into his house, and insists they were previously romantically involved (despite barely knowing each other). Their relationship later becomes reciprocal and is never violent, but the dynamic may still be uncomfortable for some viewers. S1E2: the protagonist is mistakenly accused of sexually assaulting women on a train. While he is being reprimanded, his friend (who has a purely platonic relationship with him) forcibly kisses him and forces him to grope her so he can get out of the situation safely. She expresses shame for helping him, and initially blames the man for coercing her into it (even though it was actually the other way around). She later tries to undress in front of him so they can have sex (to which she refuses), as she was rejected by her actual love interest for being involved with the protagonist.
Elementary (TV Show)
Rape/sexual assault are occasionally mentioned/discussed throughout the series (not graphic). S1E7: a criminal is shown to have been keeping a sex slave and mentioned to have repeatedly assaulted her (8:00-8:10). S1E9: a criminal is mentioned to have been a rapist (15:30). A woman reveals that her husband sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions (26:30-26:40). S1E20: a 17 year old girl is mentioned to have been drugged and assaulted while also being filmed (03:00-05:00). Videos of various assaults are quickly shown on a computer screen (06:50-07:10). S2E4: there is a discussion of a female character who was sexually abused by her father. Later, it is revealed that a boy was sexually abused by his father and that the assault was filmed. Season 3 features a storyline centred on a rape survivor in the first half, focusing on her recovery and the aftereffects of the trauma. The storyline culminates in her confronting her attacker in S3E12. While it is handled with care, some discussions had and particularly E10-12 may be very difficult for viewers, as more details about her assault are revealed and the character is shown to be struggling with her trauma. S4E7: a girl mentions being kidnapped and raped by her captor. She then talks about another man who had raped his daughter and abused her. S5E5: a man catfishes men into thinking they are meeting up with underage girls to have sex. S5E11: this episode revolves around women being sex trafficked. Rape in prison is used as a threat towards a perpetrator. S5E14: this episode involves sex trafficking. A girl is stalked and pressured by a gang into being the girlfriend of one of them. S515: rape and sex trafficking are discussed. S5E23: a murder victim was was raped is briefly mentioned. S6E1: a sex tape being published online without consent is discussed. S6E10: a serial sexual harasser is introduced. S6E12: a detectives theorizes that a kidnapping victim has been raped. S6E12: Incels encourage people on message boards to rape and murder women. S7E7: a cop who pressures underlings to go out with him is mentioned. Other cops who sexually harass are mentioned.
Elfen Lied (TV Show)
Two characters in a romantic relationship are said to be cousins, but it is unsure specifically how closely they are related. One interpretation could take the term to imply that they are simply close friends. A young girl (9-years-old) is repeatedly sexually abused by her father until she manages to escape the situation.
One of the main protagonist (a woman) gets raped by a man who kept bothering her. She ends up pregnant and she and her girlfriend have to take care of the child.
Elite (TV Show)
Season 1: two boys are forced into a threesome by a girl who manipulates them both. Later, one of those boys assaults the other. Season 2: continued subplot of sibling romance, justified by only being half-siblings. Season 4: a character leaves his home country to escape from the rumours that he sexually abused a woman. A character secretly records himself and another character having sex to have proof that it was consensual. A main character attemps to rape a woman. His family later tries to buy her silence and justifies the assault. It is revealed that he also abused another woman prior to the events of the show. A girl (16 year old) has sex with a much older man who offered her a place to stay after being kicked off her dad's bank account. S4E1: a man runs his mouth over another man's body, completely ignoring every time he says "no" or "stop" or "I have a boyfriend" even getting to the point of a unconsensual blowjob (over the clothes), telling him "It's riskier to try to tell yourself no than to say yes." and "It's not cheating if it's over the clothes." He even offers answers to a test in exchange (38:00-40:00). But the other man does eventually stop him, explaining that he could never betray his boyfriend. S4E4: a female sex worker is almost raped by a client but she is saved in time. S4E7: a 16 year old girl is blackmailed into keep having sex with an older man by threats of him telling her father that she has done sex work. Season 5: a woman is sexually assaulted/raped while unconscious due to drinking. The rapist is protected by his school, which dismisses the victim's testimony.
Elite Squad (Movie)
A teenager has his pants pulled down and is almost violated by a squad with a broomstick in a torture scene.
One character reveals that another has been being sexually abused since she was 8 years old and implies that she was "unbothered by it".
Elle (2016) (Movie)
Protagonist is raped on-screen in a graphic scene. Sexual harassment is depicted in a video game, supposedly representing the rape of the protagonist shown earlier in the film. Worthy of note: the film depicts some characters willingly role-playing as an aggressor" and a "victim" for sexual gratification, which, although consensual, may be upsetting for some viewers.
The female protagonist is constantly sexually harassed during the film by multiple different men who attempt to solicit her for sex. Male teenagers visit the same woman, taking pictures of her without her consent (while she is changing) and offer to help her clean up the house while sexually objectifying her. The film contains multiple sexual assaults: the first at a bowling alley, when two men sexually harass her and pull her up against them while making threats. The second time is when the woman tries to sell her house, and her realtor forces himself on her.
The rape scene is very graphic.
Embers (Movie)
Emmerdale (TV Show)
Empathy, Inc. (Movie)
The protagonist vocally protests sex with his wife. She keeps touching him and trying to initiate sex despite his wishes, at one point reaching down his pants. She does eventually stop.
The book makes passing references to the real life issue of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls (MMIWG). On two separate occasions, one character tries to initiate sex with another and doesn't listen initially when he says no. A character is mentioned to have "forced himself" on his younger cousin.
Empress Ki (TV Show)
Throughout the series, women and girls are kidnapped and enslaved as a tribute paid to the emperor. Additionnally, all the concubines are forced by the empress to drink something that harms their fertility, on a routine base. S1E7: an imperial soldier attempts to rape the main character, but someone rescues her. S1E45: the emperor performs marital rape to the main female protagonist while he is drunk. She has the duty to bear his child, but cleary did not physically consented it at that moment as she was screaming and desperately tried to push him away.
En Place (TV Show)
S1E2: rape is mentioned throughout for comedic purposes. It starts when one character mentions the Catholic Church and the Vatican and makes a hint about the sexual abuse of children. Shortly after, a male character explains that a politican has "a taste" for Thai girls aged 18-19: another character underlines the fact that it is thus legal. Later, that same character explains that he proposed (and performed) sexual favours to a politician in exchange for his support (oral sex). The main topic of the episode it the male protagonist (candidate for a political election) securing his public image "about MeToo issues'. Quickly, he explains that years ago, he "somewhat forced" a woman to have sex with him while they were drunk and drugged: he minimizes the fact as a normal behavior. Then, another man from his crew halfway confesses that he presumably had non-consensual sex with his ex-girlfriend's cousin (age unknown). When the protagonist is confronted with his presumed victim, she explains that he did nothing to her: he was too drunk to remember what really happened (she rebuffed his sexual advances when he asked for her consent and he accepted it). [Under further review]
An underaged girl reluctantly agrees to perform sexual acts on an adult handicapped man in exchange for his mother not reporting her shoplifting to the police. The same girl is also forced by her mother to engage in sexual acts with her dentist in a similar kind of agreement. The teenage victim is then shamed for these same acts by her classmates and even her own mother.
End of Days (Movie)
S1E1: a teenage girl mentions her stepfather having made an inappropriate comment towards her. Later, he offers her a beer, despite the fact that she is underage, and makes a comment complimenting her looks while suggestively touching her back (roughly 14:15). S1E2: teenagers accept a ride from an adult man after crashing their car. The man forces the teenage boy to masturbate him and tries to reciprocate it. The teenage girl uses this as blackmail to get him to give them his wallet (13:10-14:29). They discuss what happened directly after the event, until roughly the 15:00 mark. S1E3: a teenage girl kisses an adult man and invites him back to a house to sleep with her, he references the gap between their ages but ultimately complies. They kiss and partially undress but do not sleep together. He reacts negatively when she changes her mind about having sex and cuts their time together short. A teenage boy discovers photographs and videos which show nude women who have been tied up and injured/murdered (13:00-13:44). Only tiny and indistinct snippets of the videos can be seen, but screaming can be heard. Two teenagers take shelter in a house which isn't theirs. When the owner returns, he attempts to rape one of them, but he is stabbed to death and they escape (17:54-end of the episode). S1E4: this episode deals with the aftermath of the attempted rape in the previous episode, as well as the discovery of the disturbing sexual photographs which the teenagers discovered. Flashes of the videos of women being tortured are shown again, screams are heard, although the images shown are non-explicit (04:40-04:52). S1E5: there is a brief (1 second) and non-explicit flashback to the attempted rape from S1E3. S1E6: the photographs of women who were tied up and killed appear in a flashback (02:00-02:03). Three women discuss previous accusations of sexual assault made against the man who attempted to rape the teenage girl in S1E3 (12:00-13:29). Two women discover evidence (the videos and photographs) suggesting that the man from S1E3 may have been killed in self-defence. Mention of rape, in passing (17:30-17:40). In season 2, the survivor of the attempted rape (in season 1) deals with her trauma. There are some split-second flashbacks in several episodes, mostly of the perpetrator’s dead body and the survivor covered in blood. S2E1: a professor (who attempted to rape a teenager in season 1) starts a manipulative sexual relationship with a young woman in exchange for her attending his classes. He rewatches videos of his previous victims. The images are non-explicit and only on screen for a couple of seconds (~16:00). It is implied that the man sexually assaults another student (17:45-18:05). S2E4: a man exposes himself to a woman (19:00-20:55). S2E7: a woman recounts her attempted rape from season 1 (09:00-10:40). There are some brief mentions of this again for the rest of the scene.
A husband forces his wife to have sex with another man in order to have a child, but the two begin to have feelings for one another and the sex becomes more passionate. Later on, this other man returns to the couple, but refuses to engage with the wife. When she tries to find comfort from him, and possibly sex, he forcefully and violently has sex with her. She does not fight back but she is left shaken.
Endeavour (TV Show)
The show frequently depicts violent crimes. While not always graphic, the show's subject matter is almost always dark. The main characters are disgusted by sexual violence and usually express this, but it is still an extremely prevalent part of the show. Most of these things happen or are mentioned toward the end of the episodes. Pilot: teenage girls are hired to take part in orgies. A teenage girl has a sexual relationship with an older man. Nothing is shown on-screen. S1:E1: a man uses sex to blackmail other men. A man has a sexual relationship with a teenage girl. (Nothing is shown on-screen). S1:E2: a woman is raped and murdered. (Nothing is shown on-screen). S1:E3: a man gropes a woman's buttocks in a dance club. Worthy of note: a woman murders her rival love interest. S2:E1: toward the end of the episode, a man has sex with his long-lost daughter without either realizing they're related (they're shown in bed together). When he finds out, he murders her to avoid his reputation being ruined. S2:E3: worthy of note: a man seeks out women who have cheated on their husbands in order to murder them. S2:E4: the entire episode centres around child sexual abuse. At the end of the episode, an abuse victim commits suicide. S3:E1: references to the abuse committed in the previous episode. A man makes repeated unwanted advances toward a woman. S3:E2: worthy of note: a woman is forced/coerced into having an abortion against her will. S3:E3: worthy of note: a woman describes a physical assault in language which places the blame on the victim of said assault. S4:E1: a girl commits suicide to avoid being raped by her brother. The brother speaks about his sister to a main character. S4:E2: worthy of note: a man is brutally beaten because of his sexuality. A gay man commits suicide, a major motivation for which was the fact that he had to hide his sexuality. A woman kills a rival love interest, who is also a gay man. S4:E3: a doctor takes advantage of his position of power to date (and likely have sex with) nurses. S4:E4: worthy of note: a main character is in a physically/emotionally abusive relationship. It's implied that her boyfriend has caused her to miscarry by throwing her down the stairs. S5:E1: on-screen rape scene at the end of the episode, a woman is gang-raped. Throughout the episode, this character tracks down and murders her rapists, then commits suicide (again, this is onscreen and graphic). Sex trafficking is a major theme in this episode. The abusive relationship from the last episode is briefly referenced. S5E4: a woman grabs two men and kisses them without their consent. A man stalks a woman. S5E5: worthy of note: a man physically abuses his wife. S5E6: a teenage boy makes unwanted verbal advances towards a woman. It is implied that he might intend to rape her, but this doesn't transpire. A man pressures a woman into feeling his bicep when it's clear that she is uncomfortable with this. Multiple men have sexual relationships with a younger woman - it's unclear whether she's in her teens or early twenties. Physical and psychological abuse are key themes in this episode.
A woman is shamed for stealing by having all her clothes removed. The protagonist goes to a gay bar and a group of men attempt to rape him. A woman cries and disassociates as her husband has sex with her.
Enemy (2013) (Movie)
A man has sex with his asleep girlfriend until she tells him to stop.
The show features the ghost of a man who sexually abused his own daughter, driving her to commit suicide at the age of twelve. The abuse does not occur on screen but is verbally reenacted and pantomimed by a medium.
The English (TV Show)
Based on the 19+ Mature Physical Edition Incest: Due to Ennead being a story inspired by Egyptian mythology, almost all of the main characters are related to one another. This includes the main pairing. Prologue: A character demands his sister sleep with him. She refuses, and she is locked away as punishment. Chapter 3 (Secret Rendezvous): A character restrains his brother and kisses him without his consent. Chapter 8 (A Whisper of Calamity): Attempted rape followed by 50+ pages of graphic and violent rape. Chapter 10 (The Whereabouts of the Curse): Discussion about the rape in Chapter 8 and victim blaming. Chapter 11 (A Night of Betrayal): Graphic drugging, rape, and victim blaming scenes that last over 100 pages. Chapter 14 (Penalty): Brief discussion about the rape in Chapter 8.
Woman is harassed by a group of men. She fights many of them off but is eventually cornered and kills herself to avoid sexual assault.
Enthiran (Movie)
The main love interest is used as prop multiple times throughout the film for the males heros to rescue her from attempted rapes. There are several instances where a women's lack of consent to the actions of men are used to forward the plot. The first instance is a gang of men threaten and corner the female love interest as an act of revenge. She is held down by multiple men and then rescued in the nick of time by one of the male leads. The second times, a young girl is rescued from a burning building however she is was bathing and thus naked. The deuteragonist rescues the girl from the fire but does not allow her to clover herself and is then brought into a massive crowd of people and reporters. The girl is so incredibly distraught by the humiliation she then runs into traffic ending her life. The main love interest offers herself as a 'one day girlfriend' to a stranger in order to make the protagonist jealous. The stranger then holds her wrist and threatens her when she attempts to leave. The main love interest is kidnapped by the antagonist who is madly in love with her. She does not return his feelings and he is overly affectionate. Worthy of note: there is no on screen depiction of rape/groping. Any attempts made towards women are very clearly depicted as morally wrong/done only by villains and is stopped by the protagonists. There may be cat-calling or verbal harassment in the native language of the film- Tamil- but it is unclear in English subtitle translations
Epidemiya (TV Show)
S1E1: a solider cuts off a woman's underwear and then chloroforms her. Her step daughter fights the man off and kills him before anything else can happen. The daughter has dreams in several later episodes where she sees the man she killed but not of what happened. S1E8: a woman has a man, his wife and his daughter locked in her basement. She pulls the man out, ties him to the bed, and opens his pants before climbing on top of him. As he is struggling, she implies that she has assaulted men before. There is a noise outside that distracts her and he is able to knock her off and tie her up.
The Equalizer (Movie)
A big plot point is how the male protagonist saves a girl from a prostitution ring. The main antagonist is a pimp and beats the women and forces then to have sex with men who hurt them.
It is implied that a woman was drugged, filmed and raped by a group of men (18:00-24:00).
Equinox (TV Show)
The sexual violence, used as a plot device for the series, is not handled sensitively.
ER (TV Show)
Several episodes deal with patients who have been sexually assaulted. A recurring plotline in season 4 involves a serial rapist targeting elderly women; the rapist is eventually caught and dies at the hospital. S2E8: a brother and a sister have sex which results in pregnancy. The father attempts to kill his son because he believed he raped his sister. S13E1: rape on-screen (30:00-33:00). S8E16: a character is pressured by his coworkers to talk about his first sexual experience and reveals that he lost his virginity at age 11 to a woman in her twenties. A couple of the other characters present joke about this, including one person jokingly implying that the woman was paid by the character's parents to have sex with him. None of this is ever brought up or mentioned again. S15E8: one plotline involves a patient being accused of pedophilia. When he is attacked by his brother-in-law for interacting with a young girl at the hospital, one of the main characters witnesses this and does not intervene, instead allowing him to be injured. At the end of the episode, the character reveals to a coworker that he was sexually abused as a child and found it difficult to be objective because the patient's behavior reminded him of his abuser. While he describes the abuse he went through, the man accused of sexual abuse is shown interacting with the girl again in much the same way as the character describes his abuser interacting with him, implying that the patient is indeed a pedophile.
This show revolves around a series of child kidnappings, abuse and murder, with a man trying to find the culprit and prevent the kidnappings from happening by travelling trough time. A 10 year old girl is physically abused by her mother: this gets discussed (and shown) a lot, especially troughout the first episodes. Additionnally, a 29 year old man in the body of his 11 year old self seems attracted to the girl (no sexual interactions). Child sexual abuse is heavily implied and gets verbally confirmed (S1E6): there is no sexual assault on screen troughout the whole series. S1E1: a failed kidnapping attempt is shown. A hiogh school girl is shown inappropriately through the main character's point of view (close up of her chest), even after stating that she os too young. His mother encourages him to pursue her. S1E6: it is mentioned that a girl was raped and her murder is descriped. A men gets falsely accused of pedophilia. S1E12: another men gets falsely accused of pedophilia. Worthy of note: A woman is stabbed and murdered on screen early in the series.
Eric (TV Show)
There are repeated mentions of child sex trafficking, paedophilia, and attempts to sell a child to a sex trafficker. Statutory rape is shown on screen, involving a teenager exchanging oral sex for money with an adult. S1E4: a man jokingly asks if another man raped a dog, implying that he has done so before. A homeless woman and a homeless man are in possession of a little boy. They discuss selling him to make money. The woman says she knows what “pervs” they can sell him to.
Eroico (Video Game)
Some female enemies can sexually assault the male main character. The male main character cannot initiate any sexual acts toward female characters. Adult content can be disabled before beginning the game.
At some point, the main character enters into a basement and sees men sexual harassing a woman. He does nothing and moves on.
The Escort (Movie)
S1E1: a woman's husband dies. He has been physically abusive to her: she has a flashback of them having sex and it appears to be non consensual
Estranged (Movie)
Eungyo (Movie)
This film contains numerous scenes of full frontal nudity, sex and sexual acts with a "teenage girl." It is implied that an old man (70) has sexual desires for a teenage girl who is about 16-17.
Euphoria (TV Show)
S1E1: a young girl receives rape threats in a tex (03:00); a teen boy holds up his phone playing pornography and mimicks the scene to the girl (04:28); a girl recalls an attempt assault (11:40); a character gets catcalled while riding a bike (12:30). There are also disturbing scenes between 29:00 and 35:35. A seventeen-year-old girl pursues sexual encounters with older men, some of which are shown on-screen. A very drunk teenager asks a college-aged man to have sex with her in public in order to get back at her ex, and the college student complies. S1E2: a young boy stumbles across porn and later displays emotional issues which seem to be a result of this. One character repeatedly asks another if he raped a female character (the word is mentioned multiple times throughout the episode). S1E3: a teenage girl starts selling sexual content featuring herself online, although it is unclear if the men who consume this content are aware of her age. A boy has his clothes ripped off in a fraternity hazing. S1E4: a boy screams rape threats through a door while masturbating. Someone tricks a teenage girl into sending nudes and threatens to report her for producing child pornography. The narrator discusses how a character during uncomfortable sexual acts (painful or aggressive sex) pretends to not be in their body which is a trauma response for sexually assaulted people. S1E5: a man is arrested for child molestation. A man accepts a fourteen-year-old's offer to have sex, and the narrator makes a comment about how the girl was actually in control of this situation because she prompted the encounter (this comment may be intended to be tongue-in-cheek; unclear). A girl is coerced into giving a blowjob. S1E6: someone is the victim of stalking. When a couple is about to have sex, several college students wearing strap-ons burst into the room and humiliate the naked man by touching him and making homophobic remarks; this is not rape but in many ways closely resembles one. A boy tries to pressure a very drunk girl into sex, but she is able to leave the situation. S1E7: a girl is groped by her uncle. Somebody is sexually coerced. Somebody is the victim of revenge porn. S2E1: a group of people is forced to undress at gunpoint, including a teenage girl. A 12-year-old boy is also in the room and starts to undress, but the gunmen stop him and lock him in a closet, saying nobody wants to see him naked. S2E7: a character has a nightmare that he is being raped by his dad. It is unclear whether this actually happened in the past or if the dream stems from other emotional issues. S2E8: a character discusses a recurring nightmare where his father rapes him.
Euphoria (Anime) (TV Show)
Characters are forced into a game where the male protagonist must rape the female members so they can all leave the room they are trapped him. Sexual violence is at the centre of the plot.
Eureka (2000) (Movie)
It is briefly rumoured around the town that a child protagonist was raped during a bus hijacking: there is no further discussion around this topic. The film is about dealing with the aftermath of (non-sexual) trauma. Subtle signs of characters experiencing PTSD symptoms are shown.
Eureka Seven (TV Show)
Across the series, there is a very creepy, abusive dynamic between a teenage girl character and an older adult male, whom his organization has groomed to be a subservient child soldier through human experimentation on catatonic children. The same adult male also brainwashes child survivors of ethnic cleansing for a similar purpose. Another organization is also shown to have groomed another young woman as a child soldier in flashbacks. S1E5: a drunk female character has a creep-shot taken of her. In response, she breaks the creep-in-question's camera. Angry and provoked, he overpowers her, forces her to the ground, gets on top of her and attempts to force a kiss, but is interrupted and then thoroughly beaten by a third party protecting the woman.
Europa Europa (Movie)
A teenage boy is groped in the genitals while bathing unexpectedly by an older man.
Eurotrip (Movie)
There is a joke about internet sex predators in the beginning. There is a creepy guy in the train, hugging and kissing the protagonists while they are clearly uncomfortable. The protagonists are on a nudist beach, and there are only men, except one woman. As soon as she undresses, they all run after her, but nothing happens to her (41-42 min in). One of the characters goes to a brothel in Amsterdam, and his safe word is not respected because he does not say it properly.
Two woman are forced into sex trafficking. Rape is not shown on screen, but only physical assault before it.
Event Horizon (Movie)
This film contains a brief orgy scene involving rape.
Nothing is written detailed, but there are several mentions of rape and sexual assault throughout the second half of the novel. SPOILERS: A father unknowingly hits on his daughter because he does not know she is his daughter. Towards the end of the book, it is explained multiple men covered up a rape, then continued to taunt the victim about it. The woman states she did not speak up because she knew it was his word against hers.
Eve's Bayou (Movie)
A child sees two adults having sex. A teenage girl kisses her father, which eventually becomes more intense and he tries to take it further. Much of the latter half of the film concerns whether this memory is accurate or not (different versions of the scene are shown).
The Evil Dead (Movie)
A woman is raped on-screen by possessed tree branches (25:00-27:03).
A demon tells a man his little sister is being raped in hell. A woman is held in the air by branches and a snake-like entity crawls up her legs and disappears between her thighs. She screams in pain. A possessed woman licks up another woman's legs and thighs with a bloodied tongue. She forces the other woman to kiss her.
Evil Dead II (Movie)
The rape scene (by trees) from the first movie is recreated. The clothes of the victim are tore off and vines and branches try to enter her mouth.
The film features a fairly graphic and long rape of one female character after she is trapped in a van by an escaped male captive (he rapes her while describing his captors).
Evil Lives Here (TV Show)
Evil Toons (Movie)
Évolution (Movie)
Young boys are impregnated via a needle through the stomach. A young boy observes what looks like an all-female orgy and one of the women involved makes eye contact with him. A naked woman swims with a young boy. At some point, she swims with him and presses her mouth to his to give him air.
Ex Machina (Movie)
A sex scene is interrupted where the man is killed and the woman begs to not be killed: the killer then makes her have sex with him. Later in the movie. another main character is taunting a man while grabbing the naked woman he was just with.
All women are made to strip being held at gun point. It shows two of the women getting chased down, held to the ground, clothes ripped off, with the men laying on top of them. Later both women are seen redress, their underwear pulled down. A man is held down on the bed while his friend used a dildo on him as revenge for raping the girls.
Exit 0 (Movie)
A woman is raped on screen (30:00-31:30). No nudity is shown, but it is clear what is happening. Two men discuss their plans to do so beforehand (29:15-29:30).
A priest performing an exorcism on a woman becomes possessed by the demon; he climbs on top of her body, we hear him unzip his pants, and the camera pants across the floor as we hear the bed shake from violent thrusting.
While possessed, a preteen girl performs violent sexual acts on herself with a crucifix, then shoves her mother's face in her crotch. She later gropes a psychiatrist who yells in pain.
A female character, captured by the antagonist, is about to be raped by two guys but is rescued long before anything happens.
Film is a dramatic reenactment of the Stanford Prison Experiment. Depicts the attempted rape of an inmate.
Extracurricular (TV Show)
The premise of the show is about minors in highschool being sex workers. The main character is the pimp who oversees it all. S1E1: a man gags and beats up sex workers (one of whom is a minor).
The author discusses the rampant sexual harassment against women online, particularly during Gamergate; an incident where a man stalked an influencer and killed her when she would not date him, video skits involving jokes about sexual assault, and the Pizzagate and Qanon conspiracy theories.
This film is a biography of a serial rapist and murderer and it contains vivid descriptions of his acts.
Extremities (Movie)
The film is based on a feminist play about a woman getting brutal revenge on a man who invaded her home and attempted to rape her. Sexual assault and rape culture are discussed throughout.
Extremity (Movie)
Two characters are forcibly stripped of their clothes near the start. A woman tries to coerce her girlfriend into sexual acts. A male sexually harasses a woman while they are working together. The main character has flashbacks of abuse and sexual assault by her father. Incest is a main theme in this movie.
The film contains two very violent rape scenes, the first involving a 17 year old girl (during the first 15 minutes of the movie).
A girl and her father hold their mother/wife’s murder captive and have him chained in a barn with his eyes sewn shut and his vocal cords removed. After the girl has grown to adulthood, she brings the man into the house, undresses in front of him as he sits on the bed, and then it cuts to the next scene. It is unclear whether or not the man was into it because it is established early on that he has a very sick mind.
The premise of this book is that individuals are occasionally forced to participate in a ritual called The Gauntlet, where they try to escape a trained, biologically augmented assassin for a set number of days while being streamed live to an audience. One protagonist is chosen to be The Lamb, the assassin's target in The Gauntlet. A boy she knows forces a kiss on her just before The Gauntlet begins, and this causes her to recall other situations where boys touched her against her will. The other protagonist is the assassin, referred to as an Angel. She and other Angels receive cosmetic surgery against their will, with one character being given a breast augmentation. When Angels are decommissioned they are married off to high status men and not allowed to refuse. Their memories are also tampered with as a matter of course, which allows their handlers to gaslight and subdue them. The Angel and The Lamb, both teenage girls, fall in love at a point in The Gauntlet where they believe the streaming cameras are not present. They then feel very violated when it's revealed that the cameras were there all along, especially during intimate moments. They are exposed to sexually harassing comments from the public, as well as AI-edited images that show them in compromising positions.
Fable 2 (Video Game)
In the tutorial, when the player incarnates young Sparrow, an adult man solicits Sparrow's teenage sister, trying to convince her to become a prostitute for him so she can feed herself and her sibling. She rejects him, stating that she will never be "that hungry". It is implied that this is not the first time the man has propositioned her.
Face 2 Face (Movie)
Both main characters are victims of abuse. There is a scene in which a young woman is raped by her father.
Faceless (Movie)
FaceOff (Movie)
A man impersonating a woman's husband has sex with her while she believes him to be her husband. The man gloats about this throughout the movie. A teenage boy attempts to assault/rape a teenage girl.
The Factory (Movie)
The movie is about a serial kidnapper who drugs and rapes women.
S3E2: a teacher is raped offscreen. One of the main characters is almost raped walking home from a party. S3E8: an elderly woman recounts a soldier attempting to rape her during World War II.
Faerie ()
Chapter 3 of this podcast talks about the events before, during, and after a supernatural rape.
Late in the movie (01:32:45-01:35:11), a woman is raped (during that started as a consensual sexual encounter) and has her head smashed against a bathroom counter.
Fairy Tail (TV Show)
Throughout the entire series, underage girls are sexualized. There are moments when both male and female characters are sexually harassed. Sexual violence is also a featured. One specific villain’s magic forces pleasure on those who have had sex, with close up visuals of crotches to hammer home the point.
The female perspective character is raped repeatedly when she is 17 years old, early in the book. It is described in frank language but without excessive detail. Her abuser is a medical provider in a position of authority over her. After she escapes that situation, she spends some narrative time coping with the trauma. The focus is on broader mental health and personal healing issues. The story separately involves two male stalkers (one who is actively threatening to his underage ex-girlfriend).
The Fall (TV Show)
Due to the nature of the show, it contains a number of references to rape, sexual violence and sexual sadism. A man breaks into a house and places underwear and a vibrator on the bed. A man holds a woman down on a bed, attacking her; she is wearing only underwear. References are made to the fact that a man is sexually aroused by violence. A teenage girl tries to kiss an adult man. A woman is shown injured, with blood on her face, wearing only underwear.
An adult man marries a 13-year-old girl, who eventually gives birth to several daughters. He has sexual attraction towards their eldest daughter when she is a child. He eventually rapes her and she dies giving birth. After the eldest daughter dies, he rapes another of their daughters when she is a child. This daughter has a sexual relationship with an adult man. The book contains both vivid descriptions of rape and implied descriptions.
Fallen Shinobi (Video Game)
The game allows you to sexually assault the main character.
Falling Down (Movie)
The main character gets into a fight wherein another man holds him at gunpoint. The man makes him bend over and handcuffs him, saying he will send him to prison and then describes prison rape. The man makes innuendos implying that he is going to rape the main character, but it is stopped before anything happens.
False Arrest (Movie)
The female protagonist is stripped, pinned to the floor and raped by a group of female inmates.
Family Guy (TV Show)
As an adult comedy series, most episodes contain some offensive material. The comedy often goes to dark places and may be distressing to some.
Family Ties (TV Show)
S1E6: an adult comes on to a young girl and tries to kiss her.
Fan Girl (Movie)
The film is about a 16 year old female fan stalking a male film star and staying in his house. While the girl is infatuated with him, there is a clear and dangerous imbalance of power and age. During the sex scene (01:14-01:19) she is an underaged virgin, under the influence of drugs and alcohol, it is loveless and it is clearly physically painful for her. The rest of the film from this point is about domestic violence.
Fando Y Lis (Movie)
This is a surreal movie and sexual assault is symbolically "implied*when a young is laid down between two men she meets backstage at a puppet show, and as she protests. The scene cuts to several hands squeezing eggs until they break. There is no nudity or below-the-belt touching or sexualized groping or even kissing. In a later scene where the main couple share some sexually charged kisses, the camera flashes to the scene of the woman with the men and when it flashes back to the present, she pushes him away as though she has been triggered. Shortly after this, there is a scene where the male protagonist invites three random men to touch his wife's naked body. She is guarding her genitals so nobody touches her down there, but as the men run their hands over her, one hand does run over her naked breast. She is not terribly thrilled by this scenario.
Fang (Movie)
A man coerces his girlfriend into pretending to be a sex worker in order to use her as bait to rob someone. When she gets in the man's car he pulls a gun on her and forces her to begin taking her clothes off, but he is stopped. A woman rips off another woman's dress and caresses her breasts.
Far Cry 3 (Video Game)
Far From Home (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, children are constantly abused (repeatedly spanked). At the end of this introductory sequences, the protagonist (a child) is assaulted by an old man who forces him to pee in front of him and then rapes him (off-screen). Later on, a sequence in a brothel shows a woman being sexually harassed by a group of men before escaping with the second protagonist.
Fargo (TV) (TV Show)
A woman, when asked if she is innocent of a certain crime, makes a joke about her own history by saying she "hasn't been innocent" since her uncle cornered her in a barn at age 9. Later on, a man confesses post-consensual-sex that the man who briefly fostered him as a child did "terrible things" to him. "Things you shouldn't do to a kid," he says over an ominous flashback of a menacing-looking man with his hand on a 9 year old boy's shoulder. S1E7: a man and a woman have sex, and the latter asks him to slow down because he is hurting her. He speeds up instead, while picturing her husband (who bullied him), as a revenge. She initially aggred to have sex with him because of a promise he made in return, which he knew was a lie/false promise. S2E5: a man touches a woman between her legs and threatens her at gunpoint. S4E2: a female character mentions that people "raped the native out of her". Just after that, a young girl get whistled by a man on the street. S4E3: a man receives an unsollicited handjob from a woman who thinks he is spying and hitting on her. S4E5: rape is mentioned three times throughout the episode. S5E4 mentions child molestation. S5E5: rapists are mentioned. S5E7: using puppets, a woman tells the story of a couple who take her in at age 15. After the wife leaves, the man later comes into the young woman’s room at night and sits on her bed. Nothing more is shown, but the ominous tone suggests abuse. They later marry and he regularly beats her. This is mentioned again in S5E8.
The Farm (Movie)
A women is bound and forcefully artificially inseminated (27:00-30:00).
Farscape (TV Show)
Fascination (Movie)
Fast X (Movie)
The male antagonist unconsentingly grabs one of the female characters and discusses what they will do later on, despite her clear disinterest. Later, he is seen outside of her house, watching her through the window while she is changing before implying that he is going in without her knowledge (potentially with the idea of raping her before kidnapping her). During another later scene, he has kidnapped this same female character, holds a knife to her throat, then kisses and licks her face. He climbs on top of another female character after shooting her and presses his fingers into her wound, enjoying her screams. Worthy of note: the same character kidnaps and threatens to kill a child.
Fat Girl (Movie)
The final scene of this film is designed to be shocking, in a film otherwise largely focused on the grooming of the main character's older sister (~15 years old) by a university aged man: a stranger suddenly murders the sister and her mother with an axe before graphically raping the protagonist (~12 years old).
Most of the sex scenes in this movie are consentual but somewhere in the beginning, the lead male role wants to have sex while the woman does not anymore, and he forces himself on her. He eventually stops but it was a clear attempted rape.
FateZero (TV Show)
S1E1: a young girl (about 5 years old) is thrown into a pit of worms while visibly naked. According to one of the other characters, the worms 'violated her from head to toe.' S2E7: a man is force-fed a worm that took the 'purity' of the girl from S1E1. S2E8: a female character is violently attacked by a male character. While she is not actually raped, the scene is shot to strongly visually resemble a rape scene. S2E11: a male character demands that a female character marry him. When she refuses, he attacks her with the stated goal of forcing her to agree to marry him.
Father Brown (TV Show)
S1E1: the episode opens with a man and woman in a bedroom getting dressed. She has clearly been raped by him under threat of her husband being killed otherwise, and to ‘pay back’ an unspecified debt. Although the episode makes it clear that the rapist is a bad person, the rape itself is treated by her and the other characters as though it was infidelity on her part, and is never openly acknowledged as a sexual assault. The rapist sexually harrasses another woman later, who throws her drink in his face. He gets murdered. S1E5: a cult leader exploits his female followers to obtain pornographic photos and, it is implied, sexual favours from them. S1E9: a missing young teenage girl’s diary says she was having a sexual relationship with a much older man: it later turns out this was not the case. It is heavily implied towards the end of the episode that she was being sexually abused long-term since her early childhood by another man, but this also turns out in the end not to have been the case. S2E3: a couple argue and the man kisses the woman against her will. It is implied to shut her up or in the heat of the moment. She initially resists but the sexual assault is then framed as a “romantic” kiss. S2E6: a pornographic film is played to a crowd of people who did not want to see it (as viewers, we hear only the soundtrack). A historic case of a teenager being raped and murdered is discussed at one point. S2E8: a young girl is kissed by her (adoptive) father in the start of an attempted rape, which is thankfully interrupted. She ends up in a romantic relationship with her (adoptive) brother. S2E9: sexual harassment happens in an office. S2E10: sexual harassment happens in a bathroom . S3E2: rape is mentioned in passing. S3E8: sex trade is a theme throughout this episode, and one woman in it is murdered. A lesbian character is repeatedly sexually harassed and groped by a sex buyer. S3E9: there is an on-screen attempted rape early in the episode (the victim gets away). S3E14: child sexual abuse and incest discussed throughout the episode, as one of the characters had been molested by her uncle as a young girl. The phenomenon of practicing Catholic paedophiles being protected by the seal of the confessional is alluded to. S4E1: there is a strongly implied rape scene. It is unclear whether the rape occurs or is just attempted, but it is shown onscreen in the form of the shadows/silhouettes of the characters with audio. S4E2: a woman's marriage is arranged by her father for his financial benefit. She describes herself as having been callously sold off by him.
Father's Day (Movie)
Numerous scenes of gratuitous sexual violence throughout.
Faults (Movie)
At one point in the film, the main female character lures an older man, who is hired to help her escape from a cult, into heavy kissing. As the film presents it, she has powers learned from her cult that she states in the scene “put her in control” of him. In the next scene, the same man finds the awoman engaging in sexual acts with her father while her mother watches.
The Favourite (Movie)
There are some sexual scenes with unclear power dynamics and attempts at manipulation throughout the film. A sexual relationship between an adult and a teenager is discussed.
Fear (Movie)
The main character is hesitant to have sex with a man, but this does not stop him from continuing what he is doing. A male character physically harasses a woman, followed by assaulting her off screen.
Fear and Hunger (Video Game)
A boss enemy rapes the player character when the player is defeated.
A male teen gropes a female teen at a bonfire. Later, two teen girls are shown to have their clothing ripped partially off while being searched for witch marks (it is not done enough to expose them).
S1E6: soldiers grab a teenage girl and try to get her to go off with them. Her step-brother attempts to fight them off and they leave her alone. S3E14: while a man is under the influence of drugs, he touches the waist of a waitress. This does not go any further as the waitress swipes his hands away quickly. One of the main characters is shown walking through a building which appears to be a brothel. Nothing explicit is shown but multiple different women are shown making out with different men in separate rooms. S3E15: a character lost his medical license before the events of the show due to what he calls 'a misunderstanding with a lady patient'. In the later episodes of season six, an antagonist attempts to groom a teenage girl. He says that he is the only one who understands her, and her occasionally kisses her hand or cheek. She ends up killing him in an argument.
The main character consumes coffee that was roofied/spiked. She then goes back to her motel room and goes to sleep. Upon waking up, a figure can be seen going into the closet of her room. The motel manager knocks on her door and says, "I have complaints. What are you making all those goofy noises for?" which implies that the rapist moaned while raping her.
Feast (Movie)
There is mention that one character has a history of being a rapist. They do not rape any of the other characters that are established in the film. The other characters in the scene are abhorred by this information.
Feel Good (TV Show)
S1E5: a man with a certain position of power offers a character a job. He then asks intrusive questions about her sexual history and requests a handjob (18:40-20:00). Although the character is able to leave and the man's behaviour is called out in the show, this leads to said character having an identity crisis in regards to her gender. Season 2: the protagonist (a woman) talks about having suffered child abuse (ans currently suffering from PTSD), as well as having a relationship as a teenager with a man who was in his 30s.
Felidae (Movie)
During one mating scene, the female hisses and scratches at the male after the act, which is usual for cats. A dead female cat is shown with her unborn kittens ripped from her stomach.
A character has sex with an automaton made to look like a woman. There are numerous violent and dubious sex scenes throughout the film.
Fellow Travelers (TV Show)
S1E3: a man is smacked on the butt by his male boss (17:25). S1E4: a man is aggressively turned around by another man and is penetrated anally against his will. he fights the man off and walks away (35:45). S1E5: there is a mention of one man getting another man drunk and sodomizing him (20:54). S1E7: a man tries to get other men to kiss by pushing them together, the one is very hesitant and clearly uncomfortable (35:55). As the scene plays out that the same man wants to have a threesome with the two other men, and the one is very uncomfortable throughout but participates anyways to please the man.
There are frequent scenes of sexual violence throughout the film.
Festen (Movie)
The plot of this movie revolves around a man who goes to his father’s birthday party and reveals in front of family and peers that his father had sexually abused of him and his late twin sister, who killed herself after his father started to assault her again. Almost everyone in the film pretends he is lying. It is a powerful commentary on gaslighting and keeping up appearances. There are also some scenes of general domestic violence (one of the brothers screams at his wife and has sex with her after the heated arguments, and hits his lover, leaving her unconscious).
Fierce People (Movie)
The main female character's son is raped just over halfway through the film. It is briefly discussed for the rest of the movie.
Multiple examples of ambiguous consent, coercion into performing extreme sexual acts, non-consensual BDSM acts performed. This is presented as romantic and erotic. The male lead is abused of screen by a woman and they have a BDSM relationship starting when he is 15.
The book surrounds the discussion of child sexual abuse. The topic is handled carefully and the author was also a victim, which lends some credit to the depictions. The scenes are not graphic, but the book can still be distressing.
Filth (Movie)
The protagonist coerces a teenage girl into giving him a blowjob (11:35-11:50) by threatening to tell her parents she was caught having sex with an adult, who is revealed to be under the age of consent. it quickly ends because the man does not like how the girl does it. Protagonist sexually harasses a coworker's wife by phone. Protagonist is raped and strangled until he blacks out by a former mistress (15:50-16:30). Protagonist crossdresses and gets sexually assaulted, and threatened with rape, by a thug.
A man and women are having consensual sex, but the man then grabs the woman and forces her to turn over (1:27:40). She tells him to stop and that he is hurting her, but he then commences to violently rape her anally. She is later shown waking up covered in scratches and bruises.
The Final Cut (Movie)
About a third of the way into the movie, the main character finds a memory of a father about to abuse his daughter. He is disgusted and hits delete before it happens
Final Fantasy VI (Video Game)
Video game. Central characters are abusive men (including a pedophile and an attempted rapist).
Final Fantasy XIV (Video Game)
In the level 27 main scenario quest (“Big Trouble in Little Ala Mhigo”,) a distraught girl mentions that she was being held captive by an extremist group. It is strongly, but briefly, implied that they sexually assaulted her. She is interrupted before she can finish explaining what happened, and the character is never spoken to again. The level 30 ("Dark Knight Job") introduction sidequest ("Ishgardian Justice") opens with an NPC explaining the benefits of vigilante justice to the player character. The NPC mentions killing a high-ranking member of the clergy if he 'harms a child in unspeakable ways.' After this conversation, the player learns that a woman was kidnapped by corrupt town guardsmen. A passerby notes, "If she doesn't fight back, they might let her go after..." The player prevents this by tracking down and defeating the guards. The woman thanks the player and is never spoken to again. (This quest is available after completing the level 50 main scenario quest "Before the Dawn" and entering the Heavensward expansion.) In the level 52 Samurai quest ("The Sands of Debt"), the player stops a predatory money lender from selling a young woman into sex slavery. Corrupt town guardsmen are once again involved. At the end of the level 70 main scenario quest ('The Darkness Below'), an NPC tells us that he is the child of an indigenous woman and an imperial soldier. The young man says that his mother 'did not welcome [his] arrival.' Throughout the Stormblood expansion, there is an NPC who delights in torturing and executing hostages. She is without doubt a war criminal. SPOILERS for her entire story arc below: As the player progresses through the expansion, they learn that she grew up in an abusive family who sold her to the 'pleasure houses.' Her former traffickers express panic and guilt over what they did to her. Her soldiers are willing to die for her, to keep her in power and out of sex slavery. In the level 64 main story quest ("All the Little Angels"), the Big Bad of this expansion pulls her hair and threatens to kill her in a scene deliberately evocative of domestic violence. The captain of her guard reacts with a proportionate level of concern. After her defeat in the level 67 main story quest ("The Die is Cast"), she resurfaces in the level 70 main story quest ("Gosetsu and Yotsuyu") with amnesia causing age regression, and serves as the doting 'daughter' to one of the player's elderly party members. When her abusive family tracks her down and restores her memory, she takes her revenge on them, killing most of them. This comes to a head in the level 70 main story quest ("The Primary Agreement") where she is transformed by magic and the players are forced to fight her. In order to survive the fight, the players must protect her from the vengeful souls of her abusive family and the traumatic memories of intimate partner violence at the hands of the Big Bad. After she is defeated, her brother shoots her in the ribs and stands over her hurling verbal and physical abuse. She lets him get close enough that she can kill him, too, and expresses relief that the cycle of violence is over. Before she dies, the player is given an opportunity to tell her that she deserved a chance at a better life, and that she will be mourned. Audience reactions to this story arc may vary. While it is upsetting and tragic, it offers a glimpse into the gentle person she could have become if she had had the love and support that she needed, and takes time to drive home the unfairness of her fate. At the same time, it confronts her with the consequences of her war crimes, rather than erasing them. In the two scenes where she is abused on-screen, she is framed with sympathy. Despite her association with sex trafficking, she is rarely framed seductively, especially not during scenes of abuse. Unlike previous depictions of abuse within FFXIV, the victim is not passive or forgotten -- but she is unfortunately introduced as a villain. The commentary on the cycle of violence may land better with some audiences than others. The level 80 Eden questline revolves around an adult male character attempting to groom a teenage girl who was once his lover in a past life into re-entering a romantic relationship with him. He attempts to isolate her from other people by erasing her memories. While his actions are portrayed negatively, he is also portrayed as a tragic villain in that he went insane from a century of isolation after being turned into a monster. The questline ends with the man being put out of his misery and the girl being freed from his manipulation.
Final Fantasy XVI (Video Game)
There are a few occurences of attempted rape, but is not performed and not directly spoken out as such.
Two women are catcalled and have their path blocked by two older men at night. A ghost makes rape jokes. A woman is chased by a group of men who tear off her shirt, and she is seen being raped by one of the men while the others watch.
A robber implies that he is going to rape a girl: he grabs her to another room but is stopped.
Fire (Movie)
A servant character is known to routinely watch pornographic films and masturbate while he is supposed to be caring for an elderly disabled woman who is unable to speak. We get the sense that he does not do this specifically to harm or involve her, but because the only television in the house is in her room. Still he watches the films in front of her, in spite of her visible discomfort. Another character is shown knowingly renting pornographic films to to boys who appear to be no older than ten years old. The protagonist's husbands force kisses on each of them at various points in the movie. One protagonist's husband initiates sex with her and only tells her afterwards that she might bleed. She is visibly distressed by her bleeding and he does nothing to help or comfort her. This can be viewed as marital rape.
Fire Emblem: Fates (Video Game)
The protagonist can both romance their blood and adoptive siblings, along with their cousin, through the supports of the game. This includes marriage and having children with them. Even if the player avoid this, the protagonist's adoptive sibling continuously sexually harasses them despite them being shown to be uncomfortable. The protagonist can also romance with child characters. There are several characters that are the children of other characters, that look no more than twelve that the adult protagonist can romance and marry. Along with that, these same child characters are sexualized through a cut scene where they talk directly to the player about how much in love they are with them. There is sexual harassment throughout the game. This includes the adoptive sibling throughout her support with the protagonist and the main story. Another character continuously sexually harasses other female characters in her supports. Another character stalks the protagonist in her supports. Despite the problematic nature of the relationships in these supports, if the characters are romanceable with each other, it will end with them marrying and having children (if possible). Worthy of note : in the Japanese version, there is more egregious content, including the (male) protagonist drugging a LGBTQ+ character to make her interested in him and increased sexualization of characters. The English version of the game toned down or took out these elements.
The game has a dating element where the protagonist (can be either male / female) who is the teacher can marry their students in the game. The protagonist is similar in age to most of the students, and when they are able to marry them, a timeskip has passed to make them all of age. However, the power dynamic and or age gap of some of students might bother players. This is however an optional mechanic and the player does not have to marry anyone / can marry non-students if they want. In several of the supports, there is implied or discussed sexual harassment or abuse. Ones of note are in some of Dorthea's support where she mentions being hit on as a child, even by who she suspects as her own biological father. Another is of Hanneman who in one of his supports with Edelgard talks about his sister who was sent into a forced marriage and made to have children until she died from the stress of the experience. One character heavily implies that he was sexually abused by nobles as a child.
Fire Force (TV Show)
This series covers mature topics such as death, religion, and abandonment, and handles it with grace. The tone of the show can be somber but is usually hopeful. One of the characters as a gimmick often finds her clothes slipping off her body, exposing her to those who happen to be around her at the time. This is played as a comedic bad luck, and she is upset whenever this happens thoroughout the anime. S2E12: a side character’s backstory is revealed that he was trained to become an assassin. At some point, his superior officer takes him to a storage closet where both he and the officer appear to be nude, for him to be whipped. The officer then says he is going to “defile him to the bone” before it cuts to black., heavily implying a rape. By the end of the episode the character kills him.
A man leaks a sex tape of him and another drunk man that the other man did not know was being filmed or posted online. One can infer that this has happened before and another character says that the man did not believe in “enthusiastic consent” and had pressured men into sexual before.
Firebrand (Movie)
A king repeatedly puts his hands on his wife in an attempt to subdue her or punish her. He puts fingers in her mouth and on top of her mouth. There are a few scenes where we see them having sex but she is clearly not enjoying it. She cannot refuse him, as she must secure a pregnancy. He later accuses her of being against him. He attacks her and tries to rape her, despite her pleas to look after their unborn child. She fights him off and injures him.
Firecrackers (Movie)
A possessive ex boyfriend character takes one of the teens away and assaults her. The protagonist finds her the day after, mentally distraught. There is a lot of implied victim blaming as well.
Firecreek (Movie)
The film contains a very graphic and violent rape scene.
Firefly (TV Show)
In the first episode, a character says that the Reavers (savages) will rape and kill those that they capture. In the last episode, an antagonist threatens a woman with rape to keep her from alerting the other members of the crew (20:34). He then tier her up without performing any sexual violence. The threat is then mentioned again (26:01) in order to forcer another character to assist the antagonist.
Firefly Lane (TV Show)
This series shows flashbacks of a rape scene as well as how the assault has affected the protagonist throughout her life. S1E1: one of the main characters is raped on-screen as a teenager. S1E2: in a flashback scene, one of the main character is date raped at a party. In season 2, the child of a main character is sexually assaulted at a frat party. S2E8: someone takes a photo of teenage girls in their underwear and then people post it all over the school: the principal makes the girls apologize for what the man did. S2E9: this episode features stalking and male bosses belittling female coworkers. S2E11-12: a teenage girl has a crush on her teacher. It is implied that he is into her as well.
The protagonist is raped by a teammate's parent. He gets her alone by claiming to have sensitive information on her, then he overpowers her in a hotel room. The protagonist dissociates, so there is no description of what happened. However, there is a lot of description of what he said to her, her feelings after the fact, and rape apologism expressed by people she knows (e.g. 'what were you thinking would happen when you were alone with him?). ' The protagonist overhears boys talking about her body in a sexual manner when they do not think she is around. Her brother defends her. There is discussion of a tradition called a "blanket party" in which groups of women apprehend someone who has "done something to a girl," wrap him in a blanket, take him to the woods, and beat him up. Worthy of note: for much of the book, the protagonist, who is 18, becomes romantically involved with an undercover FBI agent who is 22. Because the FBI agent seems young, towards the beginning of the book, he is pretending to be a high school student, and the protagonist doesn't know his true age or role at first. We later find out from the FBI agent's colleague that the FBI agent had the idea of pretending to date the protagonist in order to get close to her.
Chapter 3: a character implies that he committed murder because the victim sexually abused him when he was a child. In chapter 9, he confirms this, and provides details of the circumstances but not the assault itself. Chapter 9: a female character says she wakes up at night to her male housemate in her room watching her sleep, and that she fears assault
The male character forces himself on his best friend, first kissing her (which she rejects) then pushing her down onto the bed and touching her breasts. Though she takes her own clothes off, she looks uncomfortable throughout the encounter.
First Love (Movie)
There are a couple verbal and implied references to child sex abuse. There is also a scene in which a woman is held at gunpoint and is forced to strip (for ransom).
In the opening scene, a woman is restrained while forcefully examined. Many scenes strongly imply multiple women being restrained while a beast/devil/monster enters them. It shows two women restrained while the devil/monster brutally enters them. There are multiple scenes of unconsentual touching. Teenagers are included among the victims. It is revealed one of the main character's mother's was raped by the beast/monster, and he then does the same to her (incest). The scenes are violent, graphic, and frequent. A little girl licks an adult woman's face. A nun kisses another nun without her consent.
Fish Tank (Movie)
The film's plot revolves around a sexual relationship between a 15-year-old girl and her mother's new boyfriend. In one scene, two men attempt to rape a girl, holding her down to restrain her. She manages to escape.
Fist Fight (Movie)
A woman teacher mentions multiple times throughout the film that she fantasizes about and has had multiple sexual encounters with teens at the high-school. These are played off as jokes.
Flack (TV Show)
S1E1: a boy in the sex trade is briefly features. It is later mentioned that he was underage. S1E2: aA 17-year old female pop star is pressured to feature in a lesbian sex tape for the benefit of her career. Another young woman has been paid to appear in the tape. It later turns out that the pop star is a virgin and very uncomfortable with doing the tape. Her mother attempts to pressure her into doing it anyway. Attempts to recruit women in the sex trade to be body doubles are tried and fail, so in the end the pop star's mother pretends to be her own daughter in the tape. S1E4: a false allegation of domestic violence is made against a man by his wife. S1E5: the main character's client, sitting beside her on a flight for most of the episode, discloses that he has "the worst" material on his personal laptop. Most of the episode then revolves around the main character helping him to get away with this crime, while he justifies himself. At the end of the episode, the main character has a change of heart after an interaction with a little girl on the aeroplane, and she reports him to the police. S1E6: the events of the last episode are referred to in passing, confirming that it was child pornography that was found on the client's laptop. At a wedding, a young woman gets very intoxicated and is led away to a secluded area by two men (attempted rape). She is rescued by a colleague. S2E5: a false sexual assault allegation is made by a well-known woman trying to stay 'relevant.' The public identify a famous man as the most likely perpetrator, and she and her PR team allow his reputation to be damaged for their personal benefit.
Flash (Movie)
This is a sexploitation film, which starts with a consensual sex scene followed by a rape scene before the credits. The protagonist is repeatedly stalked and abused by his coworker, which conspires to abduce her and rape her with a colleague from her workplace. This rape scene continues for several minutes until the end of the movie, when she is rescued by his partner.
Flash Gordon (Movie)
The lead female character is mind controlled and remotely caressed over her whole body using alien technology. The assailant discuss her sexual response with another male character. The lead female character is forced into a sexual relationship with a male character and then forced to marry him (27:00-28:00). There is a discussion with a slave girl in which the lead female character discusses that she has decided not to fight the sexual relationship and marriage (50:42-51:12). The male character enters the bedroom, begins to remove his clothes and starts to caress a woman's leg, before realising that it is the wrong person (59:40-1:01:10). A female character is bound and whipped by a woman and a man. There is a strong suggestion that there is a sexual aspect and the man is later promised that he can marry the prisoner once she has been interrogated (1:42:06-1:42:36). There is an attempted forced marriage which during which the female lead is forcibly restrained.
Flashdance (Movie)
Throughout the film, the protagonist and her female friends work as cabaret dancers at a local club (one of them goes to a "proper" strip club later on). There are scenes of patrons harassing and groping the characters and the women sometimes retaliate (e.g., pouring a groper's beer on his groin). The romance plot of the film is centered on the relationship between the 18-year-old protagonist and her 40-something-year-old boss. She is initially opposed to it, but she is soon "won over". The relationship is depicted as consensual and sexual. At one point in the film [36:05-37:05], two antagonists wait for the protagonist and her friend outside their work. One of them grabs her, threatening to intoxicate her, with the implication that he will rape her. Her friend and her boss are able to fend the assailants off. Later [1:14:20-1:16:50], one character becomes a stripper: the protagonist pulls her off the stage and into the street, fully nude before giving her a coat to cover herself.
FLCL (TV Show)
A prominent dynamic exists between a young adult woman and a 12 year-old boy, with frequent sexual metaphors and innuendos shown in some intimate scenes.
Flee (Movie)
The subject of the documentary and his brother are arrested by corrupt Russian police and thrown into a car with a woman. The police discuss raping the woman openly in front of them before letting the men go, and we see them closing in around the woman as the narrator talks about wishing he would have done something to stop them.
Flesh and Bone (TV Show)
Flesh Gordon (Movie)
The film is a "sex comedy" and contains much consensual sex, but also contains various instances of non-consensual sex. Instances include a woman being tied down, and forced to perform oral sex while she cries out, and a woman being penetrated by two men, one who forces a gemstone into her vagina and one who forcefully removes it while she tries to stop him.
This game focuses on themes of extreme sexual violence, torture, dehumanization, and sexual slavery. Girls are kidnapped and turned into "living fleshlights (sex toys)" at illegal factories. The two main characters you play as can be captured or surrender to the enemy factories and become a living fleshlight as well.
S1E3 ('Mugged'): a supporting character briefly discusses her rape fantasies with the subject of her fantasies. S1E8 ('Girlfriends'): the episode revolves around a main character being abused by his girlfriend, culminating in an on-screen rape scene at the 20:41 mark and lasting until 21:09. There is an attempted rape at 13:29, which lasts until 14:13. Sexual harassment features in the episode, both between the man and his girlfriend and between another man and the girlfriend's friend (at one point, the former tracks and chases the latter down a dimly-lit street, trying to convince her to have sex with him). Discussions of rape culture and victim-blaming also occur.
The show is a crime procedural, and sexual assault is mentioned on occasion. In one episode, a woman is kidnapped and held hostage by her employer. A sexually manipulative relationship is heavily implied.
The main protagonist is a prostituted woman living in a motel with her daughter. At some point, an old man (presumably a pedophile) approaches the children playing outside (40:00-44:30). He is quickly spotted and pulled away by another adult.
Two children are the product of an incestuous relationship. A teenage brother and sister kiss one another in a romantic/sexual way. Later, they are shown lying in bed together; nothing is shown, but it is implied that they had sex.
Follow Me (Movie)
A young woman is sexually harassed by two men (15:40-16:35): they attack her, grope her and kiss/lick her until her boyfriend intervenes. Women are grabbed and pulled away from a bar violently with the implication that they will be kidnapped. One woman records people having sex without their knowledge.
Food Wars (TV Show)
Every single episode of this show has some kind of trigger. The scenes are always played for laughs. All scenes that pertain to assault are characters describing how certain foods make them feel. For example, one character describes an unexpected taste as “being violated” and imagines being naked and groped by the food in a cut scene. Adult characters often flirt with and act sexually towards the 15 year old main characters. There is extremely gratuitous sexual content throughout, including frequent imagined scenarios that sexualize the teenage characters.
The male romantic lead is a former slave who was conceived when his slave master raped his enslaved mother. The female romantic lead is tricked and robbed by a man who tries to take advantage of her sexually. The female romantic lead’s sister is a sex worker with two children. One of the children repeats that her mother wants to sell their virginity to one of her clients. That does not end up happening.
On-screen rape (30 minutes into the movie). Rape and other possible sexual abuse are briefly shown on a TV.
Discussion of the fact that two girls were raped and assumed dead. A sexual/romantic relationship between a nephew and his aunt-in-law.
Forensic Files (TV Show)
SPOILERS: A teenage boy tied up in a house claims that he and his sister had been kidnapped as children and held hostage, kept drugged to prevent escape. There is an implication that the two suffered sexual abuse. In the climax of the movie, doubt is cast on this claim, and things remain unclear by the movie's end.
A man pins down a woman and forcibly kisses her, reaching down to what looked like unbutton his pants. It is heavily implied that he had intentions of raping her (53:50-53:25).
One character mentions that travelers have propositioned him, sometimes not taking no for an answer, causing him to need to defend himself. Another character discusses a memory of soldiers gang raping his mother. At the time, he was trying to hide with his sisters, but he was found. The soldiers then forced him to rape his sisters.
Forrest Gump (Movie)
It is implied that a key female character was sexually abused by her father during her childhood. Later in the movie, as an adult, she is singing nude on stage and harassed by a male audience. The protagonist's mother agrees to have sex with the headmaster of a school in order to get her son, who is considered slow, enrolled. In a scene, the protagonist (as a young boy) sits on a swing outside his house while grunts from the headmaster can be heard, implying sex from within the house. When leaving the house, the man is wiping away sweat and tells the boy, "(his) mama really loves (him). The boy responds by making grunting noises meant to mock the man.
Fosse-Verdon (TV Show)
S1E3: the female protagonist freaks out when she finds out that her husband left their young daughter with an adult man in an hotel room when he was away (nothing bad happened). It is then showed through a flashback that she was raped as a teenager by a man who got her pregnant and whom she was forced to marry. The flashback also shows that he was an abusive husband. S1E4: the male protagonist (a choreographer), depicted as a manipulative womanizer throughout the show, becomes very insistent towards a female (younger) dancer after walking her home. He insists on going to bed with her: he gropes and kisses her against her will after she rebuffed him. The next morning, he becomes being particularly harsh to her in front of the rest of the cast and ends up giving her role to another woman. Later, the first woman (who rebuffed him) invites him to have a drink (and presumably have sex with her) in order to get her role back. S1E5: the male protagonist recounts how he lost his virginity (at 13 years old) with two 40 year old strippers who abused him. Flashbacks of them leaning onto him are showed. He jokingly recounts it but is visibly distressed by that memory. S1E6: the rape of the 13 year old male protagonist by two 40 year old women and its repercussions in his life is evoked and depicted by non graphic flashbacks. S1E7: the male protagonist is once again shown using his power position to have sex with one younger woman (implied off-screen), who is visibly uncomfortable (he came to her house late at night to ask for a favour).
The Fosters (TV Show)
One of the main characters discusses and describes how she was raped by her foster brother. Her PTSD is a subject of other episodes. A character has sex with his father's girlfriend while drunk, briefly onscreen. His trauma from this is a subject of later episodes. A teenage character is prostituted, and in one episode there is a verbal altercation between her, a pimp, and another character.
The plot concerns the aftermath of a teenage girl's rape, as she goes on a quest for revenge against her attacker and his accomplices. Rape, rape culture and sexual harassment are central to the plot.
Found (TV Show)
A grown man being in love with a women he kidnapped and held hostage for years when she was a child is a topic throughout the entire series. S1E1 mentions sexual harassment. A 22 year old regularly dates underage girls. S1E10: the main characters investigate a child trafficking ring. S1E12: a woman who was kidnapped discusses how the kidnapper drugs and rapes them with a lizard mask on. S2E5: it is revealed that a woman who was kidnapped as a child was raped and impregnated by her captor. S2E7: a man talks about how he was raped by a public figure and shamed into silence because he is gay.
Found (2012) (Movie)
While at school, two boys taunt another while in the bathroom and they peek under the stall to try and see his penis. In one of the movies being watched a man decapitates multiple women and rapes their head. The older son attacks his mother by slamming her head into the wall. He licks her neck then begins unzipping his pants. Later screaming is heard from another room and the older brother walks out of that room naked.
Foundation (TV Show)
A main character engages in a sexual relationship with an intelligent robot who has been programmed to serve him. She views the relationship as coercive, and claims that she would end it if she had the ability to. It ia unclear how much free will she has in regards to specific actions, but she is not able to leave him. S2E5: this episode features someone pretending to be someone's dead lover and kissing them.
The Langoliers: upon coming to a realisation, a main character grabs a young lady and sniffs her neck. She misunderstands this as sexual advances. If she consents or not is dubious. Secret Window, Secret Garden: multiple main characters are stalked. Library Policeman: a character begins retelling about his relationship with the villainess. Once he describes himself as being "horny enough to rape the Statue of Liberty". In a later scene, he sees the villainess crouching infront of a child and making strange noises. He assumes she was molesting the boy, but it is reveals she was not. The villainess instructs a character to kill a small child, and she tells him to "Do whatever he wants with her". However he does not go through with it. In a flashback, the main character, as a child, is brutally sexually assaulted by an adult, in a very graphic and detailed scene. It is heavily implied that the man has assaulted other children before.
Foxfire (Movie)
Chapter 7: sexual harassment. A violent rape scene is described around the middle of the book. Rape mentioned throughout the series. It is implied that a character had a sexual relationship with their adult coworker while underage. It is confirmed that a character experienced sexual abuse multiple times as a child.
Foxy Brown (Movie)
The main character is drugged twice with heroin for the purpose of being assaulted, once off screen and once on screen. The main character is sexually harassed several times throughout the movie by police men, henchmen, etc. In a movie within the movie, an African-American woman is performing sexual favors for her African-American boyfriend who is in the hospital while his face is bandaged. They continue to have sex, even though he did not really consent. A nurse is exposed to this un-consensually, she discovers them having sex. (She deals with indecent exposure.) It is mentioned that a judge raped a 9 year-old girl. It is claimed she "enjoyed it."
Fractale (TV Show)
This game follows a main character who is a child sexual abuse survivor. This is not outright stated except for by her abuser, who refers to the act in euphemism. However, he is depicted as overly physically controlling, and several scenes show him manipulating her body, the framing of which is not explicitly sexual but is crafted specifically to invoke immense discomfort in the viewer. Episode 7, has a man attack this same character. She is depicted as having a flashback to her sexual abuse, and uncomfortable comments are made about her reaction (dissociation). The game is rarely explicitly sexual bar some scenes played up for “comedy”, and the sexual abuse involved is part of a greater narrative that heavily implies that two of the main characters are parts in a dissociative system created due to childhood trauma. The game holds itself to a standard of “show, don’t tell”, and this can be easily missed by some viewers. Other viewers may see the visceral imagery presented (as the show is very aware of the discomfort it purposefully invokes) and be reminded of their own trauma. The narrative is overall thoughtful and considerate of the themes it presents, and the abusers are dealt appropriate justice on-screen. However, breaks are recommended for individuals with personal experiences in the subject matter.
Fran Bow (Video Game)
In Chapter 1, the protagonist (who is canonically 10 years old) gets asked by an adult man to give him a kiss, and to sit on is lap in exchange for a key. The player does not need to say yes to continue with the game, and no matter what option of dialogue he/she chooses, the character will end up refusing: he makes no further advances. Multiple children in the mental hospital are mentioned to have been victims of sexual abuse.
France (Movie)
The female protagonist awkwardly tries to kiss a man who is visibly not interested. A journalist pretends to be someone else in order to seduce and have sex with the female protagonist, and to write an article about her. She is visibly distressed when she learns it, and the man keeps stalking her after that. In the final scene of the movie, she eventually agrees to have a romantic relationship with him. In one of the last sequences of the film, the protagonist interviews the wife of a man who raped and killed a young girl. She asks her about the past of her husband, who was a known rapist and pedophile.
This is set in Victorian London and deals with period-typical themes of prostitution and the abuse of teenage girls. One teenage girl becomes pregnant from being raped by an older man. However, nothing is discussed explicitly or seen onscreen.
S3E7: the plot is centered around systematic sexual assault and harassment which leaves victims unheard. An attempted assault is shown on screen and victims share their experiences.
Three men sexually harass a woman walking home. Later, one of them attacks her and attempts to rape her. At a club, five men are sexually harassing various women but are stopped.
Freaky (Movie)
A person tells their friend that something they say is “rapey”. A girl asks another girl if a killer “did anything” to her. A man brings a girl into a room with two of his friends and they make lude comments about her. It’ i unsure whether or not the boys intend to rape her because she entered the room willingly (knowing that the main guy was looking for a hookup) and does not appear afraid or concerned. The boys are stopped before anything happens.
The title is based on the fact that the protagonist accuses his dad of molesting his younger brother. This isn't true but the brother is sent to a 'school for the sexually molested' with other sexually abused children. A woman attempts to perform oral sex on a man as a he repeatedly asks her to stop.
A person attempts to rape a young woman who is lying unconscious in a corn field after a rave/party. The antagonist kills both of them, technically stopping the rapist. Since his modus operandi includes killing people as punishment for "having sex", him killing the victim of the attempted rape as well as the rapist has troubling implications. A man kisses an unconscious woman and attempts to rape her at a party. One of the villains kisses the final girl without her consent. Later on the same villain puts his glove up the girls leg in a suggestive manner.
It is implied that a girl was molested by her father as a child. The word "date rape" is used.
Freeway (Movie)
The film's opening sequence has drawings of women in scenarios suggestive of sexual assault. A teenage girl's stepfather attempts to sexually assault her early on the film but is pushed off. Later, she is picked up on the road by a pedophile and murderer posing as a counselor. He gets her to open up about her sexual assault by her father in graphic detail, and then attempts to get her to say degrading sexual things as a form of therapy. When she tries to escape, he attempts to rape her.
Freeze Me (Movie)
Rape and revenge are central to the plot of this movie.
Frenzy (1972) (Movie)
The plot centers on a serial killer raping and strangling women: the crimes are discussed (and sometimes joked about) throughout, and there are multiple scenes involving the naked corpse of the victims. It contains a long graphic on-screen rape in the first quarter, and an off-screen rape scene a bit later.
Fresh Meat (TV Show)
One characters makes rape jokes all the time. They even go so far as to have a character call himself "DJ Rape". A professor uses his classroom to pick up his student. When the latter stops having sex with him, he threatens to report her to the school board if she does not continue. A main character makes up a story of rape when he was 12 by an older woman.
The protagonist tricks a woman into sex: this is viewed as comedic. There is catcalling and harassment, objectification of woman played for laughs throughout the series.
A young boy watches a woman through a window undressing. He does not see any nudity, but a shirtless woman has her back to the window and makes out with her boyfriend. His mother comes in and closes the blinds. The villain gets on top of the villain girl (despite the fact he could kill her with just his hand) implying he is gonna sexually assault her but is stopped before he can do anything. 2 EMTs bring in a dead body to a hospital morgue. They meet a doctor and the doctor jokes about a dead woman that was brought in. A male EMT says she was cute. The doctor jokes that she still is cute and he can just take his pants off and have his way with the corpse. A man makes " don't drop the soap" joke. A boy watches a group of teens go skinny dipping. The villain gets on top of the final girl in a suggestive position implying he will assault her
A TV at the beginning mentions sexual mutilation. Although never shown or stated outright is it vaguely implied that the villain raped the final girl. In one scene a character says “what would a weekend in the country be without sex?”, to which his girlfriend replies “cool it” . The final girl replies that what happened to her at the lake happened a long time ago (indicating she has sexual trauma). The final girl acts cold toward her boyfriend and does not let her boyfriend touch her something he comments on several times in the movie. Finally, when the final girl explains why she is cold to her boyfriend she tells the story about Jason (a flashback is played and cuts off after the part where he drags him) and how she blacked out (common for rape victims to do). She also mentions how she woke up in her bed (it is unusual for Jason to leave people alive the only other time he lets somebody live is in the reboot). It is agreed by many that the villain raped her. A man calls a woman a "Bitch" after she rejects him.
A rapist is stabbed while attempting to rape someone (1:07:30-1:09:00). A girl makes out with a male teacher without his consent.
About one hour into the movie, one character walks in on another character who is peeing with the verbal intent to rape: the second character passes out in fear. Shortly after, the second character is able to defend himself and subdue the first one. Later on, another character is sexually assaulted by a landlady, who tries to force him to have sex: his wife interferes and saves her husband.
S1E2: while waiting for a friend at a diner, a woman walks back to her truck and a man attempts to rape her. She fights off and flees. The same man shows up while stalking her in S2E1, and he attempts to do it again in S2E2. That time, her friend smashes his head with a lead pipe and they both dump the body in a river. The rest of the season mentions the investigation and the incident. S1E20: [description missing (around 35 minutes)].
It is implied that a character becomes a vengeful witch as an adult because she was raped by two boys while at an orphanage.
Friends (TV Show)
S1E11: two characters catcall a man, which leads to him being hit by a car and put into a coma. Despite being a stranger to them, they become obsessed and continue to visit him in the hospital, shaving him, touching him and changing his clothes (implying that they have seen him naked) all whilst he is still unconscious throughout the episode. When he finally wakes the two characters are upset that he does not want to date them and criticize him for "not giving anything back". S1E12: one characters is giving a massage to a man when he begins to grope/touch her without her consent, before exposing his erection to her (10:40). This is played off as a funny moment before another character uses this to their advantage in hopes of splitting the man up from his girlfriend instead of providing support to the friend who has been assaulted. S1E22: one of the main female characters (age 26) has sex with a boyfriend who afterward reveals that he is 17 (he had told her before that he was a senior in college, ostensibly 21). S2E1: one of the male characters is groped by a tailor measuring him for pants. This is done off-screen, but his reaction is shown. Him telling his friends the story is played for laughs, as is the reveal that another character has had this happen to him consistently since he was a teenager. S2E13: a character is tricked into removing his clothes in a public place by a partner as a revenge plot. The partner then steals his clothes and runs away, leaving him in female underwear and nothing else. The character's friends then come into the room and ogle and openly mock him, refusing to help him by not giving him clothes. The character is forced to take a door off the wall and use it as coverage as he leaves the public place. S2E14: a character attends a job interview where the interviewer seems to become sexually aroused while ordering the character to make food. He makes inappropriate comments, sexual innuendos and even moans, forcing the character to leave and miss out on the job opportunity. She later expresses that she had to take multiple showers to "wash the interview off of her" this is all played down for comedic effect. S3E16: A woman manipulates a drunk character to have sex with him without his consent. S4E4: a character develops a crush on her massage client. Whilst she is massaging him (naked), she ogles him biting his upper thigh/asscheek without his consent. She then openly professes her feelings whilst he is still nude in her massage room alone. S4E13: when a character tries to break up with his girlfriend (his friend's boss), she makes a sexual advance on him to convince him otherwise. She then leaves him pant-less and handcuffed in her office while she leaves the building and refuses to come back. He openly does not want to be left while handcuffed and in a vulnerable state, even repeating to her on the phone that she needs to come back and uncuff him, becoming very distressed. His friend breaks into the office and finds the character, she refuses to help him out of the situation in fears that she may be fired, handcuffing him to another item of furniture, all while he is still only wearing a shirt. S6E7: a male character picks up a hitchhiker while driving a female character who is sleeping. When she wakes up she tells the character “he might be a rapist!” And later asks the hitchhiker if he is a rapist. S8E4: a character is filming himself when another character enters and they begin to have sex. The second party is not aware of the camera rolling, and the first party claims to have "forgotten" it was there. However he does not destroy the recording, instead making it into a tape and keeping it. He does not plan on telling the second party nor destroying the tape until it is accidentally revealed during an argument. S8E7: a male character willfully has sex with a woman, under the belief that she is her identical twin sister, whom he is dating. On realising the truth, the woman he is dating breaks up with him. While it is not confirmed whether or not the woman he has sex with intended to pretend to be her sister, she is a character notorious for deceiving people and being greatly apathetic.
Friends Like Her (TV Show)
Throughout the entire show, there are inferences to and flashbacks of an attempted rape, it is unclear until the end of the season whether it was attempted or just rape. There is nothing explicitly shown.
Fright (Movie)
The main protagonist's boyfriend is super pushy about sex and at some points tells her to shut up when she tells him to stop undressing her. Consent is dubious at best and she eventually kicks him out of the house before things go further. She is later sexually assaulted on-screen by an intruder, around the 01:00:00 mark. Rape is implied after this but happens off-screen.
Frogman (Movie)
In the last 15 minutes of the film, a young woman is found to be captured and in a coma like state where she is pregnant. It is strongly implied she was raped by the titular antagonist. However, it is never discussed by the characters or given details about the events leading to her discovered state.
From Beyond (TV Show)
The primary antagonist forcefully holds a woman hostage and rips open her nightdress, exposing her breasts. He gropes and mentions that in 'another life' he would enjoy her 'another way'. Later, said woman (under the influence of the villain's invention), gropes an unconscious man (nothing is shown) and straddles him. She is stopped by another character.
In From the Cold (TV Show)
S1E4: a spy has to have sex with her mark as part of an operation. She was blackmailed into the mission in the first place. A spy is disguised as a possibly teenage male: she is actually a woman. The spy is groped by a man who has been having a sexual relationship with the teenager male. S1E5+6: an adult man seduces a teenage girl, while lying to her. He is trying to catch her mom, a spy. S1E6: a spy seduces a woman so she can get to her father.
From the Dead (Movie)
A man blackmails a woman, telling her she will have to have sex with him whenever he wants in order for him to keep silent. He leaves when she says that she will need to think about it, but he later breaks into her house while she is out, goes through her underwear and masturbates on her bed. He comes back again another night and tries to force her to perform oral sex on him. He tells her to strip at knifepoint, but is stopped before anything further happens.
One of the major characters is a convicted rapist/murderer who rapes and murders a hostage early in the film, then repeatedly fantasizes about a teenage girl, hallucinating that she's asking him for sexual favors.
From Hell (Movie)
It is revealed that a teenage boy abused his psychic powers to rape multiple (teenage) girls before killing them. The corpse of a girl with her tank top from her shoulder on her bed is shown. It is implied that two teenage children are pressured by their kidnappers to mate with each other to make a baby as part of an evil plan. Two kids are hinting to perform sexual acts on each other, as part of a Bonobo-stress (they get sexually aroused when in extreme stressfull situation), but they stop before anything happens.
In the first segment, a man forcibly kisses a woman before strangling her. He then later rapes her corpse.
Frontier (TV Show)
Frontiere(S) (Movie)
A man forces himself onto his adopted daughter: this is now shown but talked about. Two sisters (it is unsure if they are adopted or blood related) kiss and strip each other before having sex with two men side by side.
The premise of the show is that the main character (a teenage boy) is hiding a girl in his house and has to gamble to earn money for their daily expenses. The girl is later revealed to be a victim of human and sex trafficking that was saved by the protagonist. S1E1: a woman begs the underage main character to let her win deliberately as she took a large loan from the yakuza and needs to pay it. Because he refuses, she takes his hand and presses it on her breasts, offering to have sex with him if he helps her. S13+4: a flashback shows the main character accepting to gamble with a stranger he met online and being led to a secluded area. He realizes that the men are part of a sex trafficking ring. While rape is not shown on screen, there are other graphic depictions of physical violence against women that are quite upsetting. The main character is forced to stay and gamble. It is said that if he loses the game, he will have to pay off his debt by shooting pornographic movies with them. The men make various degrading comments and are amused by his helplessness (e.g., they laugh at the thought of taking his virginity). The main character eventually wins the game. Instead of money, he "buys" one of the girls who were being abused, as she helped him and he wants her to be free. While he is shown to be respectful, it is worth mentioning that she depends on the boy completely as she is in a foreign country with no documents or money. S2E2: a woman reveals to be a survivor of child sex abuse (committed by her father). In episode 4, a brief flashback is shown (not graphic). S2E4: a teenage girl gets forcefully undressed and groped by an old man. She remains in a state of partial undressing as she is forced to gamble.
S1E9: rape is mentioned. S1E12: rape on-screen. S1E13: hostage situation, non-consensual touching of a teenager by an adult, who becomes aroused and takes the teenager into a different room to assault her. However, it does not happen. There is a non-consensual relationship between a teacher and a student.
A girl is drugged and almost raped but dies before it. At the end of the movie, a girl is almost raped. The villain in the story also turns out to be a registered sex offender.
The film contains violent rape scenes.
Worthy of note: there are several episodes where a child appears to be naked. In one of the episodes, the child is pinned down on a table to be experimented on. He is naked in this scene as well. Although no sexual assault happens in this scene, the image could trigger some viewers as the child is crying and trying to free himself.
Funan (Movie)
In a prisoner camp, a girl is raped by a guard off-screen. She is told by a woman to take advantage of the situation to obtain food: she kills herself.
The protagonist asks her best friend to take her virginity early in the book. This does not end up happening. The friend later tells another friend about this incident, who in turn spreads this information and many people make sexual jokes on social media at the protagonist's expense. At a party, a group of boys takes advantage of a girl while she is extremely drunk. This group coerces her and another girl to kiss in front of them for their amusement.
A man kisses a woman without asking for permission. After that, the woman tells him that she did not wanted to be kissed and he answers that everybody wants to be kissed anyway A magazine director says ironically that she will have to drug a young lady to get her to Paris There is a very short scene in which a woman yells at man, who seem to be her lover, and says that he is disgusting. In response the man slaps her violently in the face. She directly seem to feel calm again and kisses him During a conversation a man forces the protagonist into having sex although she specifically express her disagreement. She eventually knocks him out and runs away.
The protagonist (as a young child) has to witness her mother be tortured to death by violent men, with parts bringing rape to mind. A few scenes mention that the child was "guarded" from lecherous people. Multiple scenes in the film focus on the child being stolen away from her family. The protagonist is used as a trading chip between two parties. She is to become a future wife to one of the men's sons in return for the other party to gain authority. Multiple women are seen shown locked away in a vault, wearing chastity style belts. A main antagonist says that the child will grow to become one of his "mothers", strongly implying rape. An adult antagonist fondles the main character (still a child)'s hair while they watch an imprisoned woman give birth (inbreeding is implied). He later takes her during the night, cuts off her chastity belt and there is focus on him touching her hair before she escapes. She then has to hide that she is female in order to avoid sexual violence. A man tries to upset a traumatized woman by making remarks about raping her mother.
Fushigi Yugi (TV Show)
On two different occasions, characters are lead to believe they are sexually assaulted. One character quickly realizes the truth while the other believes she was assaulted through almost the entire series A character is drugged and raped by a woman he believes is his girlfriend. S1E1: two characters are nearly human trafficked, one can put together it may be sex trafficking. Later in the episode, one character is nearly sold again and her skirt is looked up.
Futurama (TV Show)
S3E1: female on male rape as a means of execution.
The Planet Express crew discover a planet-sized, tentacle-covered alien which wants to copulate with every citizen of planet Earth using its tentacles. This is the central plot of the film.
Future Diary (TV Show)
Multiple Characters describe being raped with flashbacks. At some point we see a character naked and tied in a prison against her will. Attempted rape against the female lead by multiple men. The male lead gets pushed into an unconsenting abusive relationship.
Future Man (TV) (TV Show)
Accidental incest occurs as a result of time travel. On-screen scene where consent is unclear; definitely not enthusiastic.
G. I Jane (Movie)
Gabriel (Movie)
A story is told about a woman who was raped by a man who then forced her to work as a prostitute. In a later scene two men hit her and hold her down in an attempt to rape her but are killed before anything further happens. The main character restrains and forcibly detoxes and heals several people against their will.
Gacy (Movie)
The movie is about a serial killer and rapist.
Gadjo Dilo (Movie)
Early in the film, a old drunken man grabs a woman because he needs her help for speaking with a stranger. When she flees, he threatens to rape her. The scene is played for laughs. Near the end of the movie, the same man begs her to have sex with him and tries to rape her before the aforementioned stranger stops him. Another scene shoes the main male character spying on women taking a shower before being spotted. The scene is played for laughs. A young girl (seemingly underage) is seen dancing sexually for enjoyment of old men.
A rape scene occurs from chapter 8.94 to chapter 8.97.
Galavant (TV Show)
S1E1: main character is kidnapped by the harasser. S1E7-S2E6: variaton of incest normalized within the time setting (marriage between cousins) is repeatedly used as a joke, called out for a purely comedic effect, without any sensitivity. It eventually becomes a plot-line: one of the main characters is being forced to marry her cousin, who is still a child; she is held captive and at the end has to give him her bra to break off the engagement.
Story 1: a woman is being held against her will and having medical experiments done on her. At one point she is shown naked and restrained as the medical staff hose her down. Story 3: there is a human/computer hybrid in a man's apartment. Two other men break in and after penetrating it with their fingers begins to open their pants, but the man returns and fights them off.
Very graphic rape scene of a female protagonist.
Galveston (Movie)
A child is revealed to be the product of rape. Near the end of the film, a woman is found dead, naked, and posed in such a way that implies she was raped.
The Game (2014) (TV Show)
S1E2: a man touches a woman's knee and then attempts to climb on top of her, on a bed. S1E6: while never explicitly stated, it's heavily implied that a main character was sexually abused by his father. Throughout the series, multiple characters are pressured by superior officers into having sex with enemy agents in order to manipulate information from them.
Game Over (Movie)
Game of Thrones (TV Show)
S1E1: a young woman is forced by her brother to marry a man she does not want to. Her brother threatens that he will make sure she is raped if she does not comply: she is raped on her wedding night. A twin brother and sister have consensual sex with one another on-screen. A young woman is touched in a sexual fashion by her older brother; although she does not resist, it is implied that she is uncomfortable. S1E2: in the beginning of the episode, a female character is raped by her forced-marriage husband. The scene is not graphic but she does not consent and is visibly upset. One character makes a remark to another about some convicted 'rapers' who were sent to The Wall as punishment. A woman talks about how her mother sold her into sex slavery when she was a young child. S1E4: a man pins his sister down and it is implied that he had intentions of raping her. S1E5: two men talk about how it' i rumored that a man is a paedophile and/or a necrophile. S1E7: a (presumably) teen boy talks about an older man touching his thigh and asking to see his genitals. S1E8: village women are raped indiscriminately by an invading army. S1E9: a man tells a story about how he once saved a woman from being raped before falling in love with and briefly marrying her. The man's father then forces him to watch and she is raped and 'paid' by a number of his men (an allusion to the fact that she is supposedly a sex worker who his father secretly hired for him; this sub-plot is mentioned at least once in every subsequent season). S2E1: a sub-plot involving a father who systematically rapes and impregnates his daughters, killing any sons they produce and keeping any daughters as future sex slaves, is introduced in this episode. S2E2: sub-plot featuring systematic incestuous rape. At another point, a man intimately gropes a woman he does not know is his sister in an attempt to seduce her. S2E3: sub-plot featuring systematic incestuous rape. S2E4: a man forcibly tears a teenage girl's clothes in front of other people. S2E5: a man talks about how he has raped women for many years. S2E6: a young woman is nearly gang raped during a riot. S2E9: a main character is rescued from being gang-raped during a military raid by another character. Earlier in the same episode, an older woman bluntly tells her that she and all of the other noblewomen present will be raped if they are found by the soldiers. S3E3: a woman is going to be raped by her captors before her fellow prisoner convinces them that she is from a very rich family and that they will receive a large amount of money if she is returned home safely. In the same episode, a man who is being kept prisoner is released and then recaptured. When he is recaptured, a soldier threatens to rape him, pulling down his own trousers as he does so. A sub-plot revolving around systematic incestuous rape features in this episode. S3E4: a man describes how, as a child, he was drugged and castrated by an older man. Similarly, in the same episode, it is revealed that recruits to the Unsullied army are castrated as children in order to make them better warriors. A sub-plot revolving around systematic incestuous rape features in this episode. S3E6: a woman is shown tied to an antagonist's bed, dead from arrow wounds. S3E7: a man asks another man if he was kicked out of the Order of the Maesters because he 'fondled one boy too many.' A man is being kept prisoner and cannot help but become aroused when two women are sent into his cell to seduce him. When this happens, a group of men enter the room and castrate him. S3E8, a woman seduces a man. He consents to sex with her, but it is a trick and she ties him up in order to drain his blood using leeches for use in a magical ritual. A teenage girl is forced to marry an adult man who she does not want to marry; he chooses never to consummate the marriage due to her displeasure with the situation. A man at the wedding ceremony jokes that her new husband might like to rape her. S4E1, two characters travelling together encounter a group of soldiers harassing and touching a woman in a tavern, while her father begs them to stop; the two travellers confront and kill the soldiers. S4E2: a man rapes his twin sister in the presence of the corpse of their son (note: this scene has been very controversial and some have argued that it was not intended to be read as rape). S4E3: men convicted of rape are shown on screen, and a man fears for a woman's safety because she is surrounded by "rapers." S4E4: women are heard being raped and begging. Sexual assaults are shown on screen. The wives of a male character are visibly and nakedly being raped in the background. S4E5: a (presumably teenage) girl is captured by traitors alongside her companions and one of them threatens to rape her, although they escape before this can happen. This episode also features a lengthy and graphic montage of soldiers raping women (who have previously been forced into sex slavery under their tyrannical father). S4E7: a group of soldiers are found on the verge of raping an innkeeper's daughter and imply that they have committed many more rapes during the process of destroying the town they are in. S4E8: a character mentions that an older man tried to touch him sexually once, although nothing came of it. In the same episode, another character repeatedly mentions how the man he wants to fight and kill raped and killed his sister and killed her children. S5E3: a very young king consummates his marriage to an adult woman; they are seen in bed together on their wedding night and it is implied that they slept together. Although he does not seem unhappy, he is clearly very young. S5E4: a grown man passionately kisses a teenage girl. S5E5: a man describes to his illegitimate son how he was conceived through rape. S5E6: a young woman’s unwilling marriage to an extremely violent and abusive adult man begins in this episode. He rapes her on their wedding night and forces his prisoner to watch. S5E7: a group of men intend to rape a woman and sexually harasse her before she is rescued. A woman is locked in a room and raped every night. S5E9: a man goes to a brothel and requests younger women until he is given a child to rape. S5E10: a man beats children he is implied to be raping. A woman is stripped, forcefully washed, her hair is cut, and then she is made to walk naked through a city while she is attacked and verbally berrated. S6E1: a woman is repeatedly threatened with rape. S6E4: a man threatens to gang rape a main character. S6E6: a man repeatedly assaults his young wife. [Further reviews pending] Worthy of note: in one of the animated 'Histories and Lore' stories released on Blu-ray (season 4, The Kingsguard), a character describes how he was forced to stand guard outside the room of a former king while he raped his wife, whose screams can be heard. When he asks his peers whether they should intervene, they respond negatively. In the show's main episodes, it is implied that these experiences deeply shook the character who stood guard.
Gangsta (TV Show)
The plot of the film centers women and girls sold into prostitution against their will. An opening scene depicts one such girl on her first night at the brothel: the scene fades to black, but sexual assault is heavily implied. Later in the film, a 15 year old girl is married to a man implied to be in his twenties.
Gannibal (TV Show)
The main character is a police officer working on a case where the perpetrator holds little girls at knifepoint and gropes them. It is brought up a few times but never shown- S1E1: the main character's daughter is getting groomed by the perpetrator but he does not get the chance to assault her.
Gantz (TV Show)
The main character fondles a girl he is interested in, grabs her breasts and tries to convince her to have sex with him, even though she is clearly not interested and uncomfortable. Another guy tries to rape her early on, drags her off-screen and she can be heard screaming. She is saved in time; again when a couple of gangsters try to gangrape her later on. In one of the later episodes, a clearly drugged and unconscious woman in her underwear is beaten by a teen, while his buddy takes a picture of her exposed breasts, saying they will make money off of her.
Garde a Vue (Movie)
The film addresses the story of a man suspected of having raped and killed to children.
The entire film deals with the abuse experienced by two characters, as well as its aftermath. The two protagonists, both aged 17, escape the home of their abuser and enter into sex work.
Gate (TV Show)
The Gathering (Movie)
It seems heavily implied that a boy was abused, possibly physically and sexually, by several men.
Gator Bait (Movie)
The Gauntlet (Movie)
There are sections that discuss incest in purely theoretical terms, specifically Sigmund Freud's and Claude Lévi-Strauss' theories about incest's role in culture.
General Hospital (TV Show)
Sexual violence is frequent, gratuitous, and handled in with genre-typical sensationalism and insensitivity.
Genesis (Movie)
Genius (TV Show)
S2E3: a female character is abused and raped by her husband in the opening scene.
Genocyber (TV Show)
Two children, a boy and a girl, both get sexually abused right in front of each other. The girl almost gets raped.
Gentleman Jack (TV Show)
S1E4: a woman discusses how she had sex with a man without her consent because she did not know how to say no. He then uses this fact to try to blackmail her into marrying him. S2E3: a woman tells her husband that their daughter is being touched sexually by her uncle in law. S2E4: it is discussed that a man is raping his 18 year old niece.
A woman fights with a man who ends up pinning her down on a desk and attempting to rape her. He is stopped and murdered by the victim's husband. It is implied that a man was forced (on drugs) to perform sexual acts on a pig. The scene was filmed as a form of blackmail: we hear the sound of video being played.
The protagonist fantasises about violently raping a young woman. This is shown with her chained to the ground, being choked, and surrounded by cameras. In the next panel,he smashes her head with a hammer. The protagonist visits a sex worker, and describes her as "villainous". He thinks about following and murdering the above-mentioned woman. He then meets with her, has sex with her, and tells her about how he wanted to rape and murder her. She laughs about it. The woman says that the first time she had sex was with a 60-year-old, and she was 16 (this is somehow lega where the book is set). While the two characters are having sex, they are being watched by members of the government, despite being assured that their room was safe. The protagonist is stripped naked and tortured while in prison.
Georgia Rule (Movie)
The film centers around a teenager who accuses her stepfather of sexually assaulting her. For the most part of the film it is left ambiguous whether he actually did it or she is lying, but eventually it comes out that she is telling the truth. Nothing graphic is shown on screen.
Gerald's Game (Movie)
Film centres around a husband who handcuffs his wife to the bed for sexual purposes, and attempts to roleplay nonconsensual scenes. One scene shows a father sexually assaulting his daughter. The child sex abuse scene is clearly shown towards the end of the movie and there are hints of it leading up to this point.
German Angst (Movie)
This film contains a lot of torture and sexual assaults.
Get Away (Movie)
The premise involves a family renting a vacation home, which is rigged with secret passageways behind two-way mirrors and cameras through which the owner of the home watches the teenage daughter. While the family is away, he sneaks into her room and wears her bra and underwear. In a later scene, a village elder later speaks with the homeowner, calling him a pervert and that she has seen attractive men and women come to his home drunk and laughing and leave crying, implying that he assaults them. He drugs the family and climbs into bed with the daughter, intending to assault her. Before he can assault her, he is murdered. SPOILERS: The family in the film are actually a group of serial killers posing as a family to kill more easily together. They pretended to be drugged and lured the homeowner upstairs to the daughter in order to kill him. It is not clear if the "daughter" character is actually a teenager, or a young-looking adult.
The Get Down (TV Show)
A woman discusses how a male character coerced her into oral sex before firing her. In S1E6, she then coerces the man to give her oral sex as an act of revenge, telling him that nobody will believe him if he reports the rape.
A male character is raped by a woman.
Worthy of note (Spoilers): The malfunctioning gynoid sex robots have an illegal 'ghost' (soul/awareness) which is duplicated from captured human little girls. Early in the film, one of them repeatedly says 'please help me'. Some of them get released at the end of the movie.
The protagonist of "The Lake" is a child predator. She lures to teenage boys to her home, tells them not to tell anyone where they are, and strips naked in front of them. In "Like Daughter" a character is physically abused by her father and sexually abused by an uncle as a child. In "Herd Immunity," the protagonist cuts off her hair to avoid being "an obvious rape target." She later kisses someone on the mouth while he's sleeping, despite the fact that he told her to keep her distance. In "Carriers," the protagonist recalls being restrained and raped in a medical setting.
The central theme of the game is the occupation of an island by a foreign (barbarian) army. There are frequent sounds of women screaming as soldiers enter villages, and some hinted rapes (eg. soldiers chasing a woman fleeing into her house). In one of the first scenes of the game, a main female character pretends to be afraid of a soldier coming to her house, begging for his mercy. However, she quickly kills him. A small subplot (The Tale of Yuna) features a main female character explaining (non graphically) that she suffered from sexual abuses from a man who took her and her brother as slaves during her childhood. One side quest in Umagi Cove (about one-third into the game, titled "A Thief of Innocence") requires to search for a missing girl and talk to witnesses. One of the witnesses is a ronin, who is asked "have you seen a girl named Kuma?" He replies, "Girls. Boys. Chickens. I have whatever you could want for the night, and for the right price, you can call them whatever you like..." indicating that child trafficking and beastiality are being used to help finance the war.
Ghost Voyage (Movie)
A male character threatens to rape a female character at the beginning of the film. About halfway through, a male character tries to rape a terrified female character but is driven away by ghosts. The female character recounts the attempt to another male character.
Ghost Wars (TV Show)
S1E5: there is a flashback in which a male character drugs a younger female character with the intent to rape her. She dies from the drug before anything happens.
One character, while possessed by a ghost, tries to seduce a man who refuses to sleep with her. In another scene, a ghost hand grabs a woman's breast and holds her down, pulling down her shirt to reveal her body. Two people kiss passionately while possessed by evil spirits. There is a dream sequence in which a man receives oral sex without his consent. Two main male characters lightly stalk the female character: one of them also gaslights her in order to go on a date and uses his professorship power to deceive a student into going on a date in the first scene, which is a clear abuse of power.
Ghostland (Movie)
Ghostwatch (Movie)
The plot involves a woman and two young girls being haunted by the malevolent spirit of a man. On a couple of occasions the girls cry out that the spirit is touching them and/or hurting them, although it is not stated that the touching is sexual in nature. However, later in the film (01:20:30) a caller to a TV phone-in suggests that the spirit is of a convicted child molester. The caller claims to have been his social worker at the time of the convictions.
Chapter 4: the aftermath of a rape scene is discussed in detail. It is used derogatorily against the victim.
Gia (1998) (Movie)
It is revealed that a male character was repeatedly molested by his father as a child. The film also contains several scenes of domestic violence.
A man drugs a woman and videotapes himself laying her on a bed. It's heavily implied that he raped her as an act of revenge on her husband.
The Gilded Age (TV Show)
S1E1: an older female character refers to her marriage and implies that she was abused throughout that marriage. Another female character later explains to a third party that the late husband in question "wasn't a man you would want to be alone with". It is not mentioned in any greater detail than this in season 1. S1E4: a young woman tells her friend that she was raped or molested by possibly her dad or brother and her mom did nothing about it. Nothing explicit is discussed however the woman is shown to be uncomfortable in romantic situations. Also in the episode, a woman gets into bed with a married man naked, the man at first believes this is his wife, but he realizes and pushes her away before it gets any father.
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.
Ginger & Rosa (Movie)
A sexual encounter between a teenager and an adult is seen briefly from the point of view of another teenager. The scene is not explicit, although sexual noises can be heard and the moment becomes a central focus of the film thereafter as the teenager involved in the encounter falls pregnant as a result.
There is a werewolf attack early in the film; it is graphic and resembles sexual assault. It looks like the werewolf is biting a girl’s crotch while she is on her period. There is a lot of screaming. There is constant ogling and cat calling by high school boys to high school girls. A teen girl and boy are kissing in a car: the girl becomes forceful and rapes the boy. There are multiple scenes where girls are cornered or pinned down by a boy. A girl is worried her sister will be raped: it does not happen. There is a scene indicative of incest: a character tells her sibling they are “almost not related anymore” and asks to “swap some juices” and gets on top of her against her will. A girl attempts to rape another boy. He tells her multiple times to stop and she does not. He eventually pushes her off of him.
An employee at a rehab centre extorts sex from female patients, some of whom are teenagers.
Ginny & Georgia (TV Show)
Most of the offending material takes place or is implied to have happened during the flashback sequences. The main character and her sister also get in a fight in the present where it is discussed heavily. Nothing graphic happens on screen. S1E1: in the last five minutes of the episode (52:58-53:30), a scene shows a stepdad touching the daughter's legs and getting closer to her genitals while pretending to help her with yoga. S1E6: discussion between two characters about child sexual abuse by a family member (41:00-43:00). S1E7: discussion between two characters about child sexual abuse by a family member (47:00-48:00). Season 2 mentions incest again, and has a lot of depictions of abuse and sexual harassment and assault. It is handled sensitively but the season could be very triggering.
Two girls hold a boy down and undress him (they take his underwear) and he runs away upset. They are all around 10-13. His friend (the main girl) allows it reluctantly. There is a scene in which the main character and her two friends (all children) visit strangers door-to-door selling fake lottery tickets. Once found out and already invited inside, a group of old men sat around a table in suits insist that the main girl kisses their cheeks as an apology before the girls are all allowed to leave. They clearly get a kick out of it. The main girl (10) does so reluctantly.
A father rapes his daughter on-screen in a basement. The films contains a scene of on-screen childbirth and miscarriage.
The Girl Before (TV Show)
A woman was sexually assaulted prior to the events of the show: it is discussed throughout. S1E2: the sexual assault (the woman being forced to perform oral sex on a man) it shown through flashbacks. S1E4: the rape is shown in more details.
S1E1: relationship between an adult and a teenager. S1E2: rape on-screen. S2E4: rape on-screen. S2E5: sexual harassment and mention of sexual assault.
The film follows the stories of different girls at an in-patient psychiatric facility. The main character is admitted after attempting suicide: she had an unconsensual sexual relationship with an adult man who assaulted her when she was at least 17. One of the patients in a psychiatric ward is raped repeatedly by her father (not on-screen) and is mocked by it by another patient, who states that she "knows (she) liked it" and that she cannot be cured. Following this incident, the patient who was being abused by her father commits suicide. A character escapes from a mental institution and is left penniless as a result. She remarks in tears that she had to perform oral sex for money in order to take a bus back to the institution (this incident is not shown on-screen). There are several scenes in which the main character is shown both before and after having sex with her 'boyfriend.' In both instances, the characters have an uncomfortable conversation before the encounter but the sex itself is consensual.
The Girl King (Movie)
Prior to the events of the book, the main female character was in a relationship with the son of a powerful family. She got into the relationship because the guy wore her down by asking her out every day for two years, despite the fact that she always said no. She described the relationship thusly: "I was with a guy ... And once I agreed to be with him, I suppose that meant, in his mind, that I always agreed ... I mean, he didn't really care if I said yes. Most people don't care about yes. A few more people care about no." Throughout the book, although they are broken up, this ex harasses her and slut shames her publicly while secretly trying to win her back by sending her flowers and presents. There is a scene where she and her sister are in a restaurant and two men come up to her table and ask, "When you gonna give me a ride, babe?"
Tha main character is gang-raped by a man she had met in a club.
A girl is tied up and relentlessly tortured in a basement by her aunt and neighborhood boys. She is sexually assaulted, humiliated, raped, and eventually murdered due to the abuse.
A woman is asleep in bed when a man creeps into her rooms and begins to have intercourse with her. At first, she resists, but then she is seemingly overcome with lust and apparently responds positively.
This is a horror movie based on a true story of a woman who was kidnapped on her way back home from school by a man. He brought her to his home where he bound her with zip ties so tight that they left scars, stuck tape over her eyes, wrapped a t-shirt around her head, and forced her into a motorcycle helmet. Then, he raped her. For nine months, she remained his prisoner. Though the movie does not have any on-screen rapes, the story behind the movie can be disturbing to many viewers especially considering this is a grown man and a child, though the movie takes a big step away from how the true events unfolded as sexual assault wasn’t even implied. There is one scene in the movie where he attempts to kiss her and she backs away.
A man starts to initiate sex with his girlfriend. When she tells him no he lays on top of her while she is crying and says that he was not asking. Later he i seen in the shower while she is still laying on the couch.
The main character is raped by her kidnapper. It cuts away right as the attack starts. The same girl is also forced to watch porn with her kidnapper.
A woman is made to perform oral sex for money. Later, she washes her own mouth out with soap. Graphic rape scene where a woman is handcuffed and stripped. In revenge, the woman who was raped later rapes the man who raped her with a sex toy.
The main character's state-appointed guardian extorts her into performing oral sex on him by threatening to have her institutionalized. Later, they have a meeting at his apartment that includes an extremely graphic and brutal rape scene. It is revealed later in the movie that several characters were sexually abused by family members throughout their childhood.
This book has a section named for each of the 12 main characters. Many of their stories involve some form of sexual violence. Dominique's story involves child sexual abuse at the hands of a relative. Carole is gang raped as a teenager by a group of adult men. Bummi is sexually harassed by her pastor and coerced into sleeping with him for money. LaTisha suffers date rape. Penelope, a teacher, observes that male teachers sexually harass and even have sex with female students with no repercussions. Grace is sexually harassed while on the job as a maid.
There is a mentioned rape between a foster father and his daughter. There is also detailed degradation and mentioned forced sexual abuse of an unconscious teenager.
Girls (2012) (TV Show)
Jokes are made throughout about rape, child sex abuse etc. They are not treated seriously but neither is anything in this show. S2E9: a man tells his girlfriend to crawl on the floor: she does so reluctantly. Ge then performs oral sex on her after she refuses. Afterwards, he ejaculates on her in a manner in which refused. She afterwards seems disturbed saying “I really did not like that.” S3E1: a character confides in a rehab group that she was raped by her uncle. A main character responds unsympathetically. S6E3: the main character is invited to the home of an author she admires who has had sexual assault allegations made against him. He convinces her that the allegations are false before inviting her to lay down with him, he puts his penis on her leg without consent.
The sexual violence in this book is pretty extreme and graphic. The following occur throughout the book: rape at the hands of a friend's parent, marital rape, sex trafficking, child sexual abuse, and sexual assault at gunpoint. Victim blaming, both external and internalized, are frequent themes, along with general misogyny.
Discussion of past sex between adult and a 14 year old girl (not nonconsensual, exactly, but she has a lot of mixed feelings about it afterward). Pervasive misogynistic microaggression. sex between two adults who have been drinking. The woman is much more drunk than the man and regrets it the next morning. Implication that he may have deliberately stayed more sober than she. Mention of past sex between a college boy and a high school girl who was too drunk to remember what happened.
Given (Movie)
One of the characters, whilst coming out of an unhealthy relationship and under the influence of alcohol, gets angry at his best friend and says "You're in love with me, right?" before attempting to force sex onto him. Despite the fact that his friend visibly struggles and asks him to stop, after the fact the assailant describes the interaction as "practically consensual." The relevant scene occurs between the 19:30-21:47 minute marks.
In a brief scene, a grandmother inappropriately touches a preteen boy, though nothing is shown on screen. It is implied that she also abused his father. An older man kisses and gropes a teenage girl. The girl convinces him to stop without any violence.
Glee (TV Show)
S1E1: a teenage boy tries to pressure a teenage girl into showing him her bra in exchange for a positive review (5:00 minute mark). S1E7: a teenage boy tries to coerce a teenage girl into giving him some of her dirty underwear in order to protect her friend's secret (09:00-10:00 minute mark). It is implied later in the episode that she did so. S1E12: a man confronts his wife over her having faked a pregnancy, pushing her against a wall and raising her shirt to see the fake pregnancy belly (25:48-28:47). S1E14: a woman talks about having drugged a man and slept with him, and then blackmailed him with the threat of telling his wife about the incident (4:00-5:00 minute mark). They are seen lying in bed together. Between the 37:00-38:00 minute mark a teenage girl mentions in passing that she is carrying a rape whistle. S1E15: a girl talks about her boyfriend becoming angry at her when she tells him she doesn't want to have sex. A pamphlet titled 'Help! I'm in love with my Step Dad!' is shown briefly on-screen. Both of these scenes occur within the first 6 minutes of the episode. S1E17: a teenage girl mentions that she has 'made out' with the school janitor (10:00-10:30). S1E21: a man is coerced into kissing a woman (he is given the choice between this and another undesirable option). He is about to comply when she changes her mind, meaning that the kiss doesn't happen. S2E1: a teenage girl is instructed to falsely accuse a female teacher of touching her inappropriately, with the intention of ending that teacher's career. She does so before admitting, when reminded of the consequences of her actions, that the accusation is fabricated (30:30-31:40). S2E6: a character confronts another character for bullying him (for being gay). They have a heated argument, and then the other character forces a kiss on him (28:58-30:06). He is visibly traumatized, and shoves the other boy away when he tries to go in for a second kiss. It acts as a reasoning for the bullying (the bully is closeted and in denial of his sexuality), and is therefore quite intense to watch. One season three plot arc involves the sexual tension and 'will-they-won't-they' uncertainty between an adult woman and the teenage biological father of her adopted daughter (the boy in question also attends the school that she works at, and is her biological daughter's ex-boyfriend). They kiss once (S3E4), following which she rebuffs him. They have sex (S3E7) and then breaks their relationship off entirely, stating that it was a mistake to sleep with him. The same teenage boy's tendency to sleep with adult women is a running joke in earlier seasons. S3E5: a character is pressured to have sex by his drunk boyfriend, and is distressed before he leaves the situation. S3E6: a woman mentions having accused a man of sexually assaulting automobiles (28:30-29:00). Worthy of note: towards the end of the episode a lesbian teenager is also publicly outed without her permission - this story line continues into the next episode. S3E7: a lesbian is propositioned with corrective sexual assault/rape (this is portrayed in a negative light). S3E18+20: these episodes contain a storyline about domestic abuse. S4E2: there is a mention of childhood sexual assault, although it is said in a very joking manner by a character who is known to have lied on multiple occasions in the past. It is never made clear if this is a misguided attempt at bravado (which is self-consciously the purpose of the statement) or if it is really based in reality. The subject is never brought up again. S4E11: hypothetical sexual assault is mentioned in passing, in a joking tone (1:00-2:00 minute mark). S4E20: a teenage boy reveals that he was sexually abused by a teenage girl as a child. The reactions of some other teenage boys in the room is dismissive; they suggest that this should have been a pleasurable experience for him, and that he is lucky. They are reprimanded by their teacher and peers (17:30-19:00). In the scene immediately following this, a teenage girl describes a similar experience she had as a child, and the social exclusion which followed as a result (until the 21:30-minute mark). Throughout the show, a high schooler regularly discusses having sex with older women (this is portrayed in a positive light).
Glitch (TV Show)
S2E4: a woman witnesses her friend's rape and is told that she will be next (23:40-24:15) . S3E2: a woman is held hostage against her will by people who believe that she has 'miracle blood' and can save people.
Glorious (Movie)
The main character believes he will be required to have sex with a creature through a glory hole in order to save the universe. This is a misunderstanding and never occurs, however, we see the man go through mental distress while deciding whether or not to go through with it. He inserts his penis into a gloryhole and is then corrected. SPOILERS At the end of the film, it is revealed that the main character raped and/or murdered multiple women. There are several polaroid photos of various women in distress shown during this sequence.
The Glory (TV Show)
S1E1: a teenager is bullied and tortured by her high school classmates. One of them is ordered to "shut her up" by the ringleader and forcibly, non consensually kisses her while she cries and screams for help. S1E9: a teenager who was bullied then killed is revealed to have died pregnant with the child of one of her bullies, strongly implying she was raped. S1E16: there is a brief flashback of a male character sexually assaulting a secondary female character whom he used to bully.
Gnosia (Video Game)
There is some uncomfortable flirting and comments by two particular characters that other characters explicitly shows discomfort to, however they are in very small scenes and said scenes will only be seen once in a playthrough. There is another character who has sexual assault in his backstory, and this is referenced though it is not said super explicitly. He does however experience flashbacks and panic attacks relating to this which are depicted on-screen.
The protagonist gets set up on a date with a boy who turns out to be "all hands" when they get alone. The protagonist and a friend, who are teenagers, go to a party with adults. The adults drug and rape them. She and that same friend later start dating college students. A character was raped throughout her childhood by her stepfather. Foster siblings also assaulted her. The protagonist is coerced to perform sexual favors for an adult man in exchange for drugs. Later, the protagonist is overpowered and forcibly kissed by a stranger while walking in a park. A 13-year-old character describes becoming a "baby prostitute" at the age of 10 due to drug addiction.
The main female character is gang raped.
Go With Me (Movie)
A main female character is sexually harassed. A young women is seen handcuffed to a bed naked: it is strongly implied that men have been paying to abuse her.
Goblin Slayer (TV Show)
One of the antagonists' routine acts of evil is to rape any women they find. S1E1: a young female adventurer is raped in a graphic scene.
[The four first paragraphs of this description concern scenes from the extended version only.] A flashback shows a character having her clothes torn off before being assaulted (2:42-2:44). A few seconds later the victim is heard screaming and her attackers laughing, but the act is not shown on-screen. After that, the victim appears with a battered face and tears streaming from her eyes. Two monsters approach a main character with the intent to assault her, but she is rescued in time (3:17). During these shots, her unconcious friend is laying by her, with her clothes mostly been ripped off. A girl gets tackled to the floor by monsters who begin to rip off her shirt: however she is saved before getting assaulted further (11:12). Few seconds later, the main character is cornered by a giant monster. She says "No" multiple times as it approaches and it is implied that she would be sexually assaulted. She eventually gets bitten but the scene is framed to appear like a sexual assault. We then briefly see the girl having her clothes torn off again. The main male character awakens in bed next to the underage main female character (completely naked). Nothing sexual has happened between the two, but the scene is still suggestive. She awakens, clearly embarassed at the situation. [The following time marks refer to the regular version.] While the main character and her friend are taking a bath, the former makes a comment about the latter's breast size, to which she becomes visibly uncomfortable (6:45). At 15:20, a naked and bruised woman is shown laying unconcious on an altar/shrine. We later learn that she has been sexually assaulted. In a flashback (21:40), the same woman sees an unconcious female ally being dragged away by monster. She pleads and she is heavily implied to be assaulted as her clothes are ripped. She is sexually assaulted off-screen. Few flashing images of a sexual assault are shown around 27:50. After 28:40, we see shots of battered, half naked women, chained up and sobbing, or unconcious in jail cells. At around 35:50, a woman has flashbacks of monsters pulling her limbs and hair, exposing her bare back as she is branded. She screams in agony with tears streaming down her face.
Due to the main characters in this movie - a middle-aged man and a 16-year-old girl - there is frequent speculation and discussion by other characters about the nature of their relationship, which is actually strictly platonic and unromantic. The girl says that her mother's boyfriend rapes her every night. This is later revealed to be false. A pedophile makes several salacious comments to the man regarding the girl: the main character chokes him to death. There is a mention of 'boys raping their mothers' during a movie watched by the protagonists.
Women are kidnapped at a young age to join a satanic cult: they are beaten up on screen. A woman is shown being sexually assaulted by at least one man at a "party" on screen. It is strongly applied this has happened to all of the women/girls before.
It is revealed that two siblings once engaged in consensual intercourse with one another. A woman is sexually harassed by police officers when she attempts to report a crime. A young boy is sexually assaulted by a stranger - the scene is quite descriptive, as is the account of his resulting trauma.
S1E1: a man is raped off-screen roughly 45 minutes into the episode. S1E3: implied off-screen rape of a black woman by a police officer (first 5 minutes of the episode): the build up to the event is on screen. There is frequent discussion of this event throughout the episode. At the end, the rapist is raped off-screen. S2E5: a character is blackmailed for participating in sex with prostitutes. S2E7: a character discusses her rape and subsequent abortion . There is nudity, consensual sex scenes, and prostitution throughout the series.
Godless (2017) (TV Show)
S1E1: during a flasback scene depicting a train robbery, a woman is violently gang-raped by two bandits and others are presumed to be sexually assaulted off-screen (the two men are eventually stopped by another man). Later on, one character suggest that the band responsible for this robbery will probably come into a town mostly inhabited by women and sexually assault them/killing them. This is the show's main narrative arc (even though sexual assault is not explicitly discussed further). S1E2: a man (the antagonist) tells how his family was attacked by strangers when he was a child, and how the women were raped in front of him. After that, he forces the people he is adressing, to choose which woman he will rape. A few scenes later, we see him waking up next to a woman who is sobbing, clearly traumatised. Her rape is discussed on-screen, and her injuries are shown later in the show. S1E4: in a flashback, a group of men violently try to rape a woman (a man eventually kill them), leaving her severely wounded. The physical scars from this encounter are seen in S1E6. One of the main characters discusses how his sister was raped. One girl is publicly spanked butt-naked by her uncle because she flirted with a boy. S1E5: a woman says that a man asked her sexual favours in exchange for an advertisement in his newspaper.
Throughout the film, the protagonist makes suggestive comments to young men. At one point, after the protagonist puts a gas mask on his young friend, he takes advantage of his impaired vision and gropes him, and there is a (non-sexually) violent retaliatory scene following.
Rape within a male prison between inmates is mentioned frequently as a ‘joke’ within the film and this is then shown on screen very graphically and played for laughs.
The main character is sexually assaulted within the first twenty pages of the book. The event plays a central part to the story and is brought up often.
This fictional nomad society has a rape culture. It is explained to the main character that it is their way and that she should not intervene. The main character does intervene in a specific scenario where a woman is orally raped but is held back by the main love interest. The same love interest who raped her in the beginning of the book. Some other women talk about their experiences being raped in this nomad society but it eventually just gets pushed to the side as a normal thing in favor of focusing on the romance aspect of this book.
GoldenEye (Movie)
One of the antagonist (a woman) seduces her male victims before murdering them. Halfway into the movie she tries to distract the protagonist by aggressively kissing him (1:05:00-1:06:00). He plays along with it but knows her true motives. Later, the male antagonist aggressively grabs and kisses another woman, who is held as hostage, for a few seconds before she slaps him (1:27:20). The titular character's inappropiate behaviour towards women, is lampshaded in this movie, but never seriously addressed and ultimately portrayed as harmless or even charming. The titular character flirts with a female colleague despite knowing she has just been on a date with another man and is thus likely not interested: she calls this out as sexual harassment, but jokingly so. A man hacks into the computer of his female co-worker and locks it, requiring a password to unlock it again. The password is a synonym for breasts. It is implied that similar things have happened in the past. A man kisses a woman against her will. It is heavily implied that he is planning to rape her, but he is interrupted before he can go through with it. The titular character kisses a woman without her consent. She tries to pull back, but he does not let her.: she then kisses him again, implying that she enjoyed this.
The protagonist (a boy) mentions in passing that when he was 16, he was sleeping with a woman in her 30s in exchange for alcohol: it does not go into much more detail. His best friend (aged 15-16) makes remarks about wanting to sleep with his best friend's step mother: when it is pointed out that this would be rape, he responds with “i wish”. He also ends up in a relationship with an 18 year old girl and in addition to the entire relationship being very toxic, he states that he hit her. Additionally, he is nearly sold into sex trafficking as a child. Both characters sleep together several times while both are drunk and underage.
Goldfinger (Movie)
There is a scene in which the main character attempts to initiate sex with a woman (openly a lesbian) in a barn. She clearly rejects his advances, both verbally and physically, prompting a fight scene in which she tries to stop him from kissing her, and which ends with him on top of her as she punches him but eventually relents. This scene is largely played for laughs. At various points, the protagonist slaps women's behinds. One of the running themes in the film is the moral ambiguity of the main character. Arguably, the above scene could be interpreted as an exploration of this theme.
Child sex abuse is strongly implied (visually) and discussed.
A protagonist lies multiple times about having been raped by her husband and other men, even going so far as to collect DNA from the men and harm her own genitals to make her lies appear true. There is mention of a group of homeless men gang raping a girl, but this is a rumor. It is mentioned in passing.
A husband (drunk) picks up his wife and carries her up the stairs against her will, and the next scene is of them in the morning, after an implied night of 'love-making' - this could be interpreted as marital rape.
Between 15:00 and 21:00, rapes committed by the Hell's Angels are mentioned. While witnesses talk about a gang-rape during a party (which nobody tried to stop), illustrative images are shown on-screen. It is mentioned that the protagonist audio taped the scene.
A man is wanted on numerous accounts of rape. A man beats a woman and it is implied that she is raped.
Good Deeds (Movie)
A woman and her daughter are sleeping in a homeless shelter when a creepy old man comes up behind them and reaches for the daugther's privates parts under the blanket. Te mother wakes up, starts screaming and fights off the man before grabbing her child and running out of the room.
Good Dick (Movie)
The whole film revolves around a man stalking a woman and trying to figure out ways to get into her home. The inappropriate nature of their relationship is discussed throughout. It is implied that the main female character has experienced some kind of sexual abuse in the past from her father. None is shown on-screen.
S1E10: a male doctor touches a female doctor on the lower back at work and it makes her uncomfortable. Later in the episode the male doctor asks out the female doctor. When she rejects him he becomes angry and threatens her. S2E2: discussion of graphic child abuse. S2E9: one doctor mentions that one patient raped a child (11:10). The episode is centered on diagnosing this said patient. S6E8: one patient goes to the hospital for a headache. Doctors find out that she was drugged and flashbacks show that she was raped. One doctor talks about being raped when she was a student.
The Good Fight (TV Show)
S1E6: frequent and intermittent occurrences of people aggressively reading violent online threats depicting graphic rape scenes. S1E8: the episode deals with an accused clergy member and a teenager. S6E1: a woman is sexually assaulted in VR (virtual reality) on-screen. The episode is all about if this is the same as an in person assault. S6E10: someone being sexually assaulted by their boss (a prominent politician) is mentioned. It is revealed that the character made up the sexual assault. Past sexual assaults by a law firm partner is mentioned: the grandchild of the perpetrator asks his mom about it.
SPOILER: Aa sexual assault case goes to court but the perpetrator wins the case, leaving the victims with a spike in mental health issues
S1E1: a woman's boss tries to coerce her into a sexual relationship (29:50-31:50). They are interrupted before anything can happen. Near the end of the episode, he attempts to rape her but is stopped by her sister (40:30-41:25). Both scenes are graphic. S1E2: mention of the aforementioned attempted rape (03:50). S2E3 : it is implied that this same character rapes another woman. S2E7: three women are held up in a house by men with guns and told to 'go to the basement' with an armed man.
The show contains several adult teenager relationships. Rookies and date rape are mentioned several times. An attempted sexual assault occurs.
The main character goes to a party and a boy makes an unwanted advance on her. She leaves before it is too late. A teen girl is said to have had sex with two grown men in the past, one being her teacher. A character is found out to have been selling date rape drugs. One of her regular clients, who is a side character in the book, is revealed to have raped several women in the past, including the dealer’s sister. Worthy of note: near the end, the main character, who’s 17-18, is slipped a date rape drug. However, the reason wasn’t for sexual assault, but for a character to be able to escape with the main character stopping her, SPOILER: There is a sexual relationship between a teacher and one of his students. This can be considered very upsetting because the teacher is a trusted character in the book.
A character who is possessed by a demon forces a teenage girl (probably 13 years old) to give him oral sex. Later, this character goes to kill another character, who in turn thinks he will rape her. In the climax, this possessed character plans to rape his ex-wife before killing her. He strips some clothes off of her, but is stopped before he can complete the act. We learn that the grandmother to whom the titular house belongs to inherited the house from an affair she was coerced into. She was a Black maid serving a white man in his home, and he later willed the house to her. The main character occasionally thinks back to having been abused by an older man when she was 13 years old, which culminated in a rape at that time, although this is not described in any detail.
Good Kill (Movie)
There are two moments in the film when the main characters helplessly watch a man raping a woman on a monitor.
The Good Liar (Movie)
Near the end of the movie, one character grabs a girl’s butt violently without her consent. He then goes on to rape another teenage girl on screen.
A Good Person (Movie)
A girl (16 years-old) has a sexual relationship with a man (20 years-old). At some point, she is unresponsive while high/drunk and lays in bed with him. Nothing happens as the grandfather steps in: the man claims that he only wanted to 'make out' with the minor.
The Good Place (TV Show)
S1E3: in one of the flashback scenes of a woman's life, her then-boyfriend tells her not to buy coffee from someone on their street because he was revealed to be sexually harassing people. He shows her a button-cam video that a reporter took while pretending to interview for a job of the man groping her breasts; this is shown from the chest point of view, since the camera was attached to her chest. At the time of the flashback, the woman doesn't think that this is a big deal and signs up as a rewards customer out of spite for her now-ex boyfriend. This is supposed to demonstrate one of the many ways in which she was a horrible person while alive on Earth, but is also somewhat played for humour. S2E7: A character implies she was sexually abused by a teacher while in school. S2E8: a character mentions that the teachers at the high school he went to would sleep with their students. S2E12: a man mentions attempting to have sex with a woman he stalked, after which he gets maced (12:00). This happens in conversation and is not shown on screen. S4E11: a main character mentions that she slept with her boyfriend's twin without realising it until halfway through, and that she thought she might as well finish. It is not specified whether or not the twin was deliberately impersonating her boyfriend, and therefore committing rape, or genuinely thought that she wanted to have sex with him and not his brother. A minor character is revealed to have sexually harassed his female employees. A character films two other characters having sex without their knowledge.
The film showcases a fairly long scene (2-3 minutes total) of a new sex worker crying during one of her first client interactions. Throughout most of the film, she appears fearful and anxious.
A woman is groped and is forced to say she wants to have sex, but she fights her assaillant off. The scene is a central point of the plot. Later, the same woman is asked "how much?" by a store attendant when he sees she is buying more stuff than last time and assumes she is selling her body.
Gossip Girl (TV Show)
S1E1: a male character is shown trying to force sexual advances on two girls. One manages to push him off and the other gets help from her brother. This character is redeemed throughout the show and his victim forgives him in a brief scene. S2E16: a woman is trapped in a room, violently groped and almost assaulted before being rescued by her son. S2E17: a female teacher has sex with a male high school student. This is not presented as an explicitly negative thing. The main character lies to the other main character (who she is in love with) in order to get him to sleep with her. She purposely records them without his consent, then tells him it was an accident and lies about deleting it. Later the man is told that in order do plead date rape, he had to say no. One character has sexual relationships with a high schooler when he is a adult.
In the first few episodes, full grown adults take pictures of a 15 year old with her shirt off and her boyfriend and post them on social media. Later, these same adults receive a video of a 17 year old having sex. Nowhere in the TV show, does anyone point out that these pictures and the video are legally considered child pornography. S1E4: a teacher sleeps with a 17 year old student of his. The age of consent in New York is 17, so this is not illegal, but a teacher is abusing his position of power and blames the student for this behavior in S1E7. The student films the encounter without the teachers knowledge or consent and sends the video to a social media account. S1E7: the teacher who slept with his student admits that he was wrong and quits teaching at the schoo. He also encourages the other adults to quit bullying the students. Worthy of note: cheating is a frequent occurrence on the show and the characters do not properly inform their supposedly monogamous partners, thus non consensually exposing them to possible STIs. S1E8: this episode features a storyline about a man who serially gets women drunk and has sex with them. He is a rich white man who tries to have his lawyers disprove what happened. There is a discussion about how only 2 to 6% of rape accusations are made up and how usually the perpetrator gets away with it. S1E9: there are conversations about how horribleteachers are being to the students by bullying them, tracking them, taking photos and video without consent. The episode explores how hard it is to prove that someone is a serial sexual consent violator. There is a lot of nuance and discussing how victims are damaged when they come forward, and how it is never a victim's responsibility to come forward and how the justice system fails rape victims. There is also a discussion on how women are constantly harassed by men when a bunch of drunk "Santa Con" goers grope and sexually harass women. S1E10: the show continues exploring a rich white man serial rapist. It includes some discussions about hard hard it is for victimes, with mentions of several actual public figures who are rapists and still work. S1E12: characters get a teenager drunk, despite her repeatedly saying she should not drink. S2E1: the season 1 recap shows an adult grooming a teenagerm and a text on screen says that the teacher groomed him during the first part of the actual episode (the sexual predator is on screen). An orgy is mentioned, which includes adults and teenagers. An adult asks teenagers to take pictures of other teenagers having a threesome. S2E2: a throuple tries to stay in the closet by pressuring the third into sexual situations with other people. These people also pressure him for sex (which he does not want). S2E4: someone uses their partner as a cover for dating a guy her parents do not like. The one partner thinks they are in love, but she uses sex to distract him while the other sneaks out. A girl cheats on both her boyfriends with her twin brother: the sex is consensual and a joke is made about "twincest". S2E5+6: a main character (16 years old ) has sex with a guy who she did not know was filming. She was also lying about her identity to him. He blackmails the actual person who he thought he was filming non consensually, who is also a teenager (17 or 18). S2E6: a main character is drugged and her clothes changed while is drugged A main character's dad being a rapist is brought up again. It is revealed that he got one of his victims pregnant and that he buried her in legal fees so she could not sue him. S2E7: a girl wants to drug two teenagers and stages them naked on top of each other. S2E8: a joke about pedophilia is made.
Gotham (TV Show)
S1E2: a minor threatens to accuse someone of 'touching' her. S1E6: a male character stalks and harasses a female character who has told him multiple times that she is not interested in him. He does not do this maliciously, but he still is being generally creepy. S3E4: a male character is introduced alongside his sister. While talking with another character, the sister says 'but then he [her brother] started putting other thoughts in my head, thoughts a brother should never have.' This heavily implies that he is sexually attracted to his sister. Some may find the interactions between these characters uncomfortable at times.
Gothika (Movie)
This film is centred on a murderer who is sexually violent towards women, and who films their encounters. In one scene, a woman is tied to a bed. In another, a woman is thrown up against a cell window and it is strongly implied that she is being raped.
Grace (Movie)
The Graduate (Movie)
The sexual relationship between the protagonist and an older woman begins with her undressing in front of him without his consent and also blocking the exit to the room with her body. She does not use physical force on him but she is coercive. The female lead falsely accuses the male lead of raping her while she was drunk, in order to hide their consensual affair to her daughter.
Graduation (Movie)
Grafted (Movie)
There is a prominent relationship between a university professor and his student. A woman has a compromising picture taken of her without her consent. A woman who has taken the form of another woman is put into a sexual situation with a man. She is shown aggressively bathing after this scene, implying the sex was coercive.
Gran Hotel (TV Show)
S2E28: implied rape of a main character by her husband.
Gran Torino (Movie)
Some verbal references to rape. A woman is approached by three men, who forcefully grope her and make sexual remarks. It is implied that a woman was violently raped; her beaten and bloody face and body are shown. This incident is referred to once; 'she was raped.' It is discussed that a man raped his own family member (his cousin).
Grand Army (TV Show)
S1E3: two boys sexually assault a girl in a taxi cab towards the end of the episode. Her rape is a major plot line for the rest of the show.
Grand Theft Auto V (Video Game)
Sexual assault/harassment is mentioned throughout the game. It is implied in one of Trevor’s switch scenes that he raped Floyd. When the player is introduced to the character Trevor, it depicts him having sex with a drug-addicted woman, a person he appears to have implicit power over as a drug dealer. This abuse of authority and subjugation narrative is deepened when Trevor kills her partner moments later. Before the murdered partner dies, he objects to Trevor’s behaviour and confirms to the player his and his partner’s shared drug addiction. Trevor’s power over this man is abused to exploit physical vulnerability, which Trevor avails to commit murder. A few more moments later he gloats about the sex he had to the dead man’s friends, who share their objection both to the killing and then sexual activity. Trevor shows no remorse, his sociopathy treated for amusement throughout the game. Trevor’s abuse of power and the implied lack of consent in the context of this scene strongly suggests that his behaviour would be classified as rape or sexual assault. In the movie theater one of the advertisements shows a man engaging in sexual intercourse with a monkey. During one of the cutscenes in "Scouting the port", one character (the protagonist) takes off his pants and reveals his penis to another character without their consent. On a different mission "I fought the law", he grope one of the racer's genital.
This book contains - repeated domestic violence (husband on wife) in flashbacks: description of bodily damage in the aftermath; some details of particular occurrences including while protagonist was pregnant; -marital rape- referenced without detail multiple times, often in conjunction with some detail about domestic violence being given. These passages can all be avoided by careful skimming and/or outright skipping of the flashbacks about Grandma Gatewood's marriage that are interwoven at points throughout the narrative. There is also one very brief teen-and-teen rape mention (a news story, not developed characters) in the section about rising teen/youth violence in the news in the early 1950s.
There is a few scenes of sexual harassment. Mainly, a villain in a flashback harassing a girl but this ever time is stopped as the protagonist intervenes. Throughout several, recurring scenes in the novels one of the main love interest becomes drunk. It is described that he acts like a child when drunk and never remembers what happens afterwards. The protagonist teases and flirts with him in this state and while drunk the love interest reciprocates. However, near the end of last book, they perform sexual act while this happens. The drunk love interest wakes up during this act shocked about what happened and the protagonist feels as if he has violated him. We do not get insight into the drunk love interest's thoughts, but it appears he also thought he had violated the protagonist. This is resolved later, however the lack of clear consent that was involved in this is not mentioned or explored more than that. In the middle of the book, during a flashback sequence, the protagonist is blindfolded during a competition. Someone sneaks up on him and forcibly kisses him. It is not revealed then but the person who kissed him was the love interest. A major reveal near the end of the novels is that one of the villains unknowingly married his biological half-sister, both were unaware at the time they were married that this happened and had a child together. Another reveal in a flashback near the end of the story has this same villain torturing his father by having him be raped by numerous women as he was sick and dying. The women also did not consent to being forced to do this so therefore both the father and women were raped. This is not described explicitly, however it is talked about and there is a brief scene where the protagonist sees it in a censored flashback. Near the very end of the book, the protagonist and love interest have sex and the protagonist asks the love interest why he didn't do this to him when they were teenagers, however it is put in a way that makes it sound as if the protagonist wishes the love interest would have raped him rather than had consensual sex. In the extras in the last book, there is a explicit rape scene in a dream sequence between the protagonist and love interest.
Grange Hill (TV Show)
Sexual violence occurs multiple times in various episodes of the show, and is usually handled sensitively and used to make points regarding consent/sexism. However, in season 30 a sexual assault is excused because the victim was drunk and the perpetrator faces no blame or consequences.
A man asks his daughter to undress in front of him. This is not shown on-screen.
Grease (1978) (Movie)
A woman is upskirted. A song alludes to date rape. The boys sing a song asking the male protagonist how it went with the female protagonist: the lyrics include 'did she put up a fight'. A much older dance host tries to drug a woman's coke with the date rape drug Rohypnal. She catches him but thought it was asprin. The male protagoniste attempts to date rape the female protagonist in his car. He suddenly pins her down under him and she reacts in shock. We hear her scream 'Don't' and 'Get off me'. The film has 'minor' sexual assault and mysogyny littered throughout. Despite the attempted rape, the male protagonist 'gets the girl' and she becomes his girlfriend at the end (only after she completely changes how she looks for him.
The Great (TV Show)
The lead character is assaulted by a clergymen in the first episode and this is mentioned throughout the first season as the character seems to have trauma from it. There are also multiple scenes in which a female character is shown to be disinterested in having intercourse. There are many scenes in which the emperor has sex with wives of men in his court: there is a large power imbalance and the women are implied to be forced to consent for them and their husbands. Additionnally, there is one especially troubling scene in which a man is about to penetrate a corpse. S2E6: incest between a brother and sister is mentioned. S2E7: rape is mentioned. S3E1: a rape joke is made. S3E2: a main character's aunt non consensually watches him have sex with his wife. This character frequently has non consensual sexual relationships throughout the series. S3E3: one of the main characters describes multiple sexual assaults as a 12 year old. Also, they want to force people to "fluff" a horse so it will breed. S3E5: a person is pretending to be Peter the Great in order to obtain oral sex. Rape is mentioned several times. S3E7: a woman blackmails her boss into kissing her. Jokes about fingerings a minor, about paedophilia and about incest are made. A depiction of having sex with a horse is shown in a play. S3E8: marriage to those under 15 id discussed. A woman talks about forcing another woman.
There is a lot of rape in the series, happening multiple times. As this is a narration of myths with a mix of classical pictures and animation, the rapes are not acted out on screen, but narrated in the story, sometimes with still drawings of naked women.
Great Pretender (TV Show)
Child trafficking - mostly within the sex trade - features in case 4. In some scenes, children can be seen being touched by wealthy people. In an attempt to seduce a man (her target), a woman undresses and swims naked in a pool. The man tries to get hold of her but she gets away.
The film's villain (a man) forces a kiss onto a woman and implies he will give her money in exchange for sex. Later, he attempts to rape her in front of her lover, while the lover is held down by another man.
It is mentioned several times that enemy soldiers commit rapes: the male protagonist even describes an instance where the wife of a village chief was gang-raped in front of the rest of the village as a punishment. In the last part of the film, a female character is used as a "distraction" when soldiers want to capture an enemy: she thus has to sleep with him. After she does, her brother-in-law despises her for a few scenes before acknowledging her sacrifice.
A long scene shows a virginity test being used on the female characters. The virgin woman is then taken to a hut, where she is drugged off screen: it is implied that she is raped. Later on, one of the women is tied up and a tribe is about to mutilate her genitals. She escapes before she gets cut. Female genital mutilation is talked about during several points of the film as well.
Aa character talks about her sexual assault and decapitation, her scenes include lines such as “don’t touch me! You should know better, you’re a knight” and “what will I get in return for my services?” A character awakens nude. A scene involves an on-screen sexual encounter with dubious consent.
A man is framed for the rape and murder of two little girls. A character is groped Several times a character is sexually harassed, groped, etc. While no characters are raped on screen the scene of the two little girls fades to black with screams, cries, begs, etc.
Greenleaf (TV Show)
A major plot point of the show involves a member of the family having sexually abused his niece (leading to her suicide) and other teenage girls in the community. This is discussed at length in some episodes. S2E8: the same character gives a young girl alcohol and then attempts to assault her as she sleeps (31:55-33:53). She awakens, struggles, and is ultimately able to escape.
A young girl interviews for what she believes is a housekeeping job and is asked if she is a virgin. There is another indirect reference to the girl participating in sex work.
Grey's Anatomy (TV Show)
S1E2: a victim of a rape is shown to have major injuries. It is revealed that she fought off her attacker. S1E3: one of the main characters is kissed without her consent. The titular character is sexually harassed by a male colleague. Another doctor is continually sexually harassed by a patient. S1E4: a main character has photos she took modeling non consentually posted of her all over the hospital. S2E12: the titular character refers to an uncle who "can't be left alone with the teenage girls" S2E19: a main character has sex onscreen with an intoxicated woman who is clearly too drunk to consent. S2E23: a character working on their marriage has sex with his wife after being motivated by seeing his ex girlfriend with someone new and does not tell his wife. S7E8: this episode features consensual foreplay and a consent check, but then when one partner asks to slow down, she gets yelled at and the guy storm's off. She is traumatized. S8E20: a patient talks about kidnapping and sexual assault she dealt with as a child. S9E7: one patient non consensually grabs doctors. They are shown as having a history of harassment then excused as a symptom. S9E8: a character talks about a time she sleepwalk in college and woke up having sex with a guy (29:09). S9E22: in the beginning of the episode, women joke about getting roofied by a guy at a bar. S12E7: a woman hugs and then forcibly kisses a man. He pushes her away and makes an excuse to leave, then avoids her. S12E9: this episode features an on screen attack of a female character by a male character. It is not sexual, but is very traumatizing and the man does get on top of her. S12E24: a female character gets drunk and a male coworker takes her home and helps her get into bed. She falls, and he falls on top of her. At that moment, the woman's boyfriend comes home and, seeing the man on top of her, beats him up before he can say anything to defend himself. The woman screams for her boyfriend to stop, but he does not. S13E1: the woman's boyfriend says that he thought the man was sexually assaulting the woman. No actual sexual assault occurs in the episode, but the storyline does deal with the false allegation and belief of it and the physical assault to the man. S13E23: a character recounts a past incident when someone attempted to rape and kill her. S13E24: the attempted rape of a patient is a major plot point. The rapist is loose in the hospital and takes a female doctor and a young girl hostage. S14E20: sexual harassement and assault mentioned at length. S14E21: sexual assault and harassment are mentioned throughout the entire episode. Season 15: sexual assault becomes part of the sub-plot and is discussed throughout. It is brought up abruptly in random episodes. S15E19: sexual assault is discussed with a patient at great length. S16E18: human trafficking of a teen girl central to the theme of the episode. S17E4-7: human trafficking storyline. S17E6: human trafficking is a part of the main plot line. A character discusses systemic sexual violence against women of color. S18E13: incest joke. One of the male doctors forcefully puts his hands inside his female friend's shirt attempting to retrieve an intentionally hidden item.
Grimm (TV Show)
A female character disguises herself as an ex of the protagonist in order to trick him into having sex with her. The same female character takes advantage of another male character while he is under the influence of magic in order to have sex with him and uses mind control magic to seduce a third man. S1E1: a man character mentions that a suspect was wanted for rape. S1E4: magical creatures use pheromones to trick women into wanting them. A woman begs one to kiss her as he kills her. The creature is a serial rapist who impregnates women. S1E11: a woman comes back to a man's apartment after an art show. They kiss, but she then decides that she does not want to go further: he violently kisses her, but she turns the tables on him and kills him. She is clearly traumatized by the event. S1E14: a female knocks a man to the ground, gets on top of him, kisses and and rips his shirt open. She then shows a stalker behavior. In a season 2 story arc, two characters are put under a spell to be attracted to each other. There is kissing that they are both confused by and upset by: it is traumatic for both of them. S2E2: a woman in a coma is kissed by someone she does not know, to magically wake her. After she awaks, another man (her boyfriend) then kisses her, but it turns out she has amnesia and is clearly distraught that a stranger is kissing her. S2E3: a 17 years-old girl is kidnapped by her family, who wants to rape her as part of a cultural tradition. S2E4: a man very graphically hits on a woman while she is working: she gets upset and rejects him. S2E6: a female character kills a man attempting to rape her. S2E13: two characters are under a spell, forced to have deep sexual attraction to each other. They try and fight it, but have extreme foreplay and a physical altercation. S2E17: a man guses magical pheramones to convince a lady to go back to his hotel room, where she did not want to go. S2E20: a woman uses magical powers to seduce various men. S3E11: viewers discover that the motive of a killer is that she was gang raped a number of years ago whilst working in the military. She kills as a form of revenge against her attackers who walked free. S3E19: a young woman is approached by two men in a truck who attempt to assault her in a field. It looks as though they succeed but it is later revealed that she murdered them before they could. A woman pretends to be someones girlfriend and has sex with him. S3E4: a man claims someone was going to rape his daughters (he makes it up). S3E5: a man attempts to rape a woman but is killed before he does. S3E14: a monster sneaks into pregnant women's bedrooms at night, sticks his tongue up their vagina and drinks the abiotic fluid which kills the babies. S4E5: a woman is told that she must have sex with her fiance while in the form of another woman (in order to reverse a spell). S4E12: a pimp is shown forcing a woman to continue doing prostitution. S4E14: a woman seduces a man by pretending her husband has left her. They make out. Before they have sex, it is revealed to be a grift. S4E16: a girl is harrased by men because she is always distant and accused of thinking she is "too good for them." A man comes on to her and she asks him not to touch he: he tries to grab her to confess his love for her and she woges into a poison frog and he dies. Later, another man tells her that he is going to take from her what she never gave to anyone. He woges into a wolf and pins her to a wall and tears open her shirt. She woges and her poison kills him. It is revealed that her mother and her grandmother were also a victims of multiple attempts of rape: the grandmother tries to burn her face and screams: "it must be done or you'll be raped like your mother and me!" S5E3: a rape kit is mentioned. S5E16: a woman disguises herself as a man to sleep with someone for information. S5E21: a child uses voodoo dolls to get her parents, who are no longer together, to make out. S6E7: the whole casting is under a spell to be in love with people they do not actually love (they kiss each other). S6E11-13: a child is meant to be the bride of Satan.
Grotesquerie (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman mentions that an orderly in her hospital impregnated a 19-year-old coma patient. S1E2: a woman walks in on her comatose husband’s caretaker masturbating him. S1E5: this episode depicts violence against pregnant women and though it is relevant to the story, it may be triggering for some viewers S1E6: pregnant women are seen restrained against their will and attached to machines collecting breast milk. [Currently under review].
Mentions of sexual abuse, rape, assault, child abuse, kidnapping, and addiction to opioids. The premise is that an influential 28-year-old celebrity grooms the protagonist, who is 17 at the start of the narrative, into a relationship with him. He kidnaps her, repeatedly sexually violates her, and abuses her verbally, emotionally, physically, and financially. We later learn that his victimization of teen girls is a pattern of behavior. Early on in the book, the protagonist is almost raped by a classmate. The abuser character confesses that he "lost his virginity" with an adult woman when he was 14. The author reveals in the author's note that her first relationship was with a 22-year-old man when she was only 15. The book has many parallels to the R. Kelly case, although the author states that the book is not about him, but the many men like him and the systems that facilitated his abuse.
The main male character has dinner with one of his employees and then they both go back to her house. She is initially on board with having sex but then changes her mind, but he continues anyway as she continues to say no and push him off (15:30-16:50).
Guilty At 17 (Movie)
The film begins with a detective examining a highly dismembered corpse: the victim is later revealed to have been raped (parts of her genitals are cut off). One of the protagonists is tricked into doing pornography. She later gets raped while having an affair with someone met on the street, and is forced to call her husband during the act. She then meets a girl who gets her involved in prostitution with her rapist pimping her. One of the protagonists is involved in a BDSM-type affair. Her lover calls her while parked under her house and blackmails her to come out in a highly sexual manner. He later comes to her house. then he repeatedly calls her on the phone. The way he addresses her borders the line between consensual/non-consensual. One of the protagonists was a victim of incest from her father.
Gully (Movie)
A clearly uncomfortable younger man/teenager is pressured into giving oral sex to a much older man. It is discussed by other characters that this may have been going on since the victim was younger (29:30-32:06). It is used as a plot point throughout the film. Other characters offer support to the victim, confront and attack the perpetrator later on in the movie (58:20-01:02:16). A group of men break into a couple’s house, attack the man and violently rape the woman. The perpetrators brag about it afterwards (37:30-38:40). A group sex scene where consent is questionable. All members are on drugs and alcohol and the men lied to the women by telling them that one of the men was famous. There is then a 1:1 scene where consent is similarly questionable (42:30-45:10) The women are seen being interviewed by police the next day (46:15-46:25).
Gummo (Movie)
In a clip, a young girl speaks (voice over) about her father molesting her. In another clip, a drunk man asks another man to kiss him and despite his refusal, tries to kiss him. He also says that he was abused by his parents as a kid. In another clip, a boy speaks about a man who uses to have drugged sex with women in front of children. The two protagonists (male teenagers) go to a man's house to have paid sex with his mentally disabled young sister (off-screen). An elderly man puts his hand up a young girl's skirt, but her sisters defend her and drive the man away.
Gun Frontier (TV Show)
Relevant scenes do nothing to progress the plot and may seem gratuitous as a result.
Gun Woman (Movie)
The many examples of sexual assault and implied rape are used for the sake of comedy or suspense throughout the show. S1E7: the main character tears up the outfit of the magical girl she is battling up to her breasts and panties, before forcing her to “ride” a panda rocking horse with a gag in her mouth whilst whipping her. At the end of the battle, the magical girl is “mind broken”, as she then proceeds to lick the main character’s shoes and beg her to hurt her more.
Gutterballs (Movie)
A woman is raped and has a bowling pin inserted into her genitals. Several other characters experience sexual violence throughout the film.
Victims of an infection get's grabbed by advanced technologic entities that sticks a huge tube in their anus and mouths (shown in detail). One woman is grabbed by see-through tentacles, while she yells no and gets dragged.
One of the main characters is a caregiver that rapes a woman in coma. It is not explicit but is discussed.
Hagazussa (Movie)
A child is inappropriately touched (22:00). The main character is raped on-screen (56:00).
Half Nelson (Movie)
The sexual assault takes place when the main character shows up wasted at his lover's house. He forces kisses whilst holding her as she struggles, he then pins her to the couch and rips her top off. She eventually breaks free by hitting him and manages to get away. The assault is never mentioned during the rest of the film.
A man makes crude sexual remarks towards a teenage girl; the daughter of his partner. A teenage girl jokes about a man making inappropriate sexual advances towards her. A 10-year-old boy walks into his sister's room and tickles her bare thigh; she becomes angry when she realises that her brother is the one doing it. A girl is raped at a mental hospital. Note: this scene is not included in the Theatrical Version of the film.
In the released alternate cut of this film, it is implied that a a teenager is raped and impregnated by her uncle. A radio host makes sexual comments towards a girl despite her being uncomfortable.
Necrophilia is mentioned and discussed.
This movie begins with an on-screen rape during a home invasion.
This book involves a caravan of people who are formerly exiles due to being considered "mad" by society traveling across a desert towards some unknown thing. During their journey, there is a massive storm and, after sheltering in tents for many days, when they emerge the main character discovers that some soldiers raped the women who were in a tent with them. Subsequently one of those women starts having sex with men in the caravan for favors, and the way the other women react to that exemplifies the (negative) way that survivors are slut-shamed or their behavior is not seen through the lens of trauma. It felt like crucial and traumatic events once again just being thrown in to add "realism" to a fantasy or scifi setting. There are well-written female characters and positive depictions of consenting sex in this book as well.
Hammerhead (Movie)
Women are used, likely without their consent, as part of a scientist's breeding program for cross-species humans.
A doctor briefly sexually harasses a patient.
A woman's uncle forces her to read erotic passages to a group of men. A history of childhood sexual abuse is implied, as she was trained to read pornographic material to men from childhood. Non-consensual touching/grabbing occurs on quite a few occasions. Non-sexual violence is used to create fear in a child. Rape and sexual assault are implied in a pornographic image and in a casual conversation between two characters. Attempted rape scene occurs near the end of the film.
The story of The Handmaids Tale is set in a dystopian future where due to declining fertility rates, fertile women are conscripted into becoming 'Handmaids.' This involves state-sanctioned rape and, as such, rape and sexual violence/control are running themes throughout the show. Related themes include female genital mutilation, sex trafficking and domestic violence. S1E1: mention of campus sexual assault (16:00-17:00). Description of gang-rape, by the victim; a group of women are compelled to tell her that this was her fault (25:00-27:00). Ceremonial rape on-screen (ceremony begins at 28:30, sexual contact and direct aftermath from 29:20-32:30). A man who has been convicted of rape is presented to a crowd of women for punishment, and the nature of his crime is described (42:20-45:50). S1E2: episode begins with ceremonial rape on-screen (until the 2:00 minute mark). S1E4: ceremonial rape on-screen (ceremony begins at 26:10, sexual contact between 29:00-29:45, although no actual intercourse occurs). S1E5: ceremonial rape on-screen (ceremony begins at 19:50, sexual contact between 22:40-24:10). This process is repeated with a different man, with the ceremony beginning at 26:50 and sexual contact occurring between 27:25-28:18. S1E6: a man tells a woman to kiss him. She complies, but it is clear that declining is not an option and she is disturbed by the encounter (23:30-24:45). Discussion of rape, explicit description (42:51-43:00). Mention of rape (46:40-46:50). S1E8: a man sexually assaults a woman on-screen (31:30-32:30). Much of this episode takes place in a brothel/sex club where it is made clear that women are forced to work. Various sexual acts and encounters between these women and men visiting the club are shown on-screen. Although none of the women physically resist the men, it is clear that they have no ability to reject their advances. S1E9: ceremonial rape on-screen (ceremony begins at 22:25, sexual contact and direct aftermath from 22:50-23:20). The victim is visibly distressed and resistant. Rape on-screen 23:35-24:25, with the direct aftermath of this event shown until 25:40. S1E10: mention of rape (34:40-34:50). S2E5: a group of adolescent girls are married off to adult men. S2E6: an adult and adolescent (15) have marital sex. The scene includes the preparation and the direct aftermath (37:14-40:37). S2E8: the episode recap shows on-screen rape(1:13-1:20). A woman is asked to testify against her abusers. Her testimony includes an extended description of the rape and abuse she endured (17:00-22:40). S2E10: ceremonial rape on-screen (1:30-3:20). A man violently rapes a pregnant woman (26:00-30:10). S4E1: a child describes how several men sexually abused her (33:10-35:00). S4E4: a woman is forced to gived a handjob (37:05-38:00). S4E7: a woman rapes her husband on-screen (41:40-43:20). S4E10: the recap includes scenes of rape (0:00-1:40). There is also an on-screen rape at 07:05-07:20.
The Handmaid's Tale is set in a dystopian future where, due to declining fertility rates, fertile women are conscripted into becoming 'Handmaids.' This involves state-sanctioned rape and, as such, rape and sexual violence/control are running themes throughout the book. Related themes include female genital mutilation, sex trafficking and domestic violence.
A transgender woman describes having sex with a character while he was intoxicated in graphic detail to him, now sober, and this is played for laughs.
The caretaker of the protagonist gets kidnapped: her captor licks her face and attempts to finger-rape her. Women in a boat are imprisoned as sex slaves.
A man attempts to have intecourse with a gay women he is friends with and touches her without concent while in a gym showroom. There are implied incestuous thoughts of the main characters that impacts their actions and implied incestuous abusive relationship between twins (the brother abused his lesbian sister in the past). There is an implied child abuse from that same character: he has allegations of child molestation in the story and emotionally manipulats a child into killing a cat during the narrative. A man has his seminal fluid forcefully extracted while sleeping (off-screen). There is a scene at the end whitch Is heavily Implied to be concenting but one of the characters is partially drugged and manipulated and does a sexual act that is nit incestuous but reminiscent of incest (breastfeeding feeding a man).
Hannibal (TV) (TV Show)
S2E10: a woman is implied to lie about being on birth control in order to get pregnant. S2E11: an antagonist is implied to have away with child abuse and sexual violence because of his wealth, and emotionally abuses a child in a scene with sexual overtones. He also has his sister's uterus forcefully removed so she cannot bear children, and is all but state to have molested and/or preyed on her throughout the series (partially out of sadism, and partially out of lesbophobia). He verbally harasses several female characters across episodes. S3E7: implied bestiality and incestuous impregnation. There is a briefly discussed off-screen rape in which an antagonist is sedated and has his prostate milked with a cattle prod. [Contested] The protagonist "gets into the head" of a serial killer who rapes his female victims and partially mutilates their bodie after death. He partially mentions this while retracing the steps of the killing. This is also mentioned later on. S3E12: brief threat of prison rape. A man is stripped naked while he is unconscious and then tortured in a scene with sexual overtones. He is filmed naked without his consent, told what to say, and then has his lips bitten off.
Hap and Leonard (TV Show)
S3E4: two men drag a woman to their truck before she is rescued by another man. The latter is then arrested, released, and later found dead.
Paedophilia is a theme: a father speaks to his son about various sexual topics, including how he raped two children who were his son's friends. He drugs his family in order to rape one of the boys. He tells his son that he masturbates to avoid raping him. A character masturbates to teenagers' magazines. A woman confides in a man, telling him that she was raped by the doorman of her building.
Two boys are sexually assaulted by an adult male off screen. A male character graphically discusses rape fantasies. Worthy of note: in one scene, a sumo wrestler gets on top of his girlfriend and she starts making distressed noises, but this is due to his weight.
Happy! (TV Show)
The entire show has overtones of implied childhood sexual assault. S1E7: long and graphic rape scene played for laughs.
Happy Endings (TV Show)
Characters joke about, and possibly were sexually assaulted by their therapists. Rape jokes are consistently made throughout the show. Rape and pedophilia often the subject of jokes
Happy Sugar Life (TV Show)
A teenage girl kidnaps an 8 year old girl and is obsessively in love with her. The child is groomed into wanting to stay with her abductor and when her older brother finds her, she declines his offer to come stay with him. In episode 11, she has a wedding with the 8 year old and kisses her. A teenage boy is kidnapped and raped by a female manager. Another woman kidnaps and ties him up later on in the series. Because of this, he sees himself as "dirty" and develops an obsession with the 8 year old girl mentioned above. A woman was raped by a boy as a teenager and gets pregnant as a result. Her parents and the parents of the boy then force her into an arranged marriage with her rapist as a way of making him take responsibility for impregnating her.
Happy Valley (TV Show)
S1E2: on-screen rape.
Hard Candy (Movie)
The film's plot revolves around a teenage girl's attempts to expose a man who she suspects is a paedophile (having spoken to him in sexually suggestive terms via an online chatroom for weeks prior).
Hard Rain (Movie)
A man looks at an unconscious woman, and it is clear that he has sexual intentions: he is then shown taking her away from a group to a secluded location (01:11:00-01:11:30). After that, an attempted rape takes place (01:13:25-01:15:00).
Attemped rape of a woman by several police officers. Her clothes are being torn off as one of the men removes his pants. This is interrupted and stopped by the main character. The woman is disheveled but not nude. The main character then mutilates the genitals of the police officer with his trousers off through his boxers. The scene is quite violent, and occurs around the 54:00 minute mark. When they enter a brothel, the main character is touched by prostitutes and they undress him while he is unconscious. The main character's wife is groped about ten minutes into the movie. At the end of the movie, the main villain kisses the main character while he is barely conscious and unable to stop him from doing so.
Hardware (Movie)
A women is stalked by a man who watches her have sex with her boyfriend through a telescope. He calls her on the phone and talks about what he wants to do with her. He eventually shows up at her door and comes in without permission and acts threateningly: he is killed by a robot before anything can happen.
Harland Manor (Movie)
A man tells a story from the past when a 15 year old girl was brought to a hospital for treatment and it is later revealed that she is pregnant. After attempting to perform an abortion, the doctor kills her and it is revealed that he had been sexually abusing young girls who were in his hospital. This is referenced several times after the story is told while the crew is doing the walkthrough of the house.
Harlots (TV Show)
Harmonium (Movie)
A man tries to have sex with a woman as she is repeatedly saying no. She eventually pushes him off her.
About 30 minutes in, prisoners are forced to provide oral sex to the prison guards (referred to as ‘cockmeat sandwich’). It is treated as a joke within the movie and one prisoner appears to be scared and panicking.
Harpoon (Movie)
During the first 20 minutes of the film, a shipworker invites a woman on a tour of his ship to get her alone with the intent to rape: he is interrupted after pinning her down and beginning to undress. There is also a nrief story told about a high school teacher who was abusing students.
Harriet (Movie)
Someone briefly mentions that young slave girls (children) are raped in the plantations (1:33:26). In one of the final scenes of the movie, a man tells the antagonist (a slave owner purchasing her escaped slave, the titular character) that he will have some 'alone time with her' once he catches her.
The main character, who was previously a victim of rape, ends up in a romantic relationship with the main villain who assaults and attempts to rape her on multiple occasions and does rape her at least once. He never receives any consequences for his abuse and it is never acknowledged as such.
Harry Wild (TV Show)
Within the show, any sexual violence is mentioned or discussed rather than shown. One episode focusses on a case of a sexual predator who is protected by the establishment. There are multiple conversations about him targeting his victims, about what they felt after the assault, about their fear of coming forward. Worthy of note: there are conversations about suicide, the possibility of one of his victims going to prison for fighting back and about the man's wife protecting him. S1E1: a convicted sex offender is muredered and his victim is suspected. S1E5: this episode involves several serial rapists. S2E5: this episode contains a description of sexual harassment.
Harry's Law (TV Show)
S1E4: a stranger brutally attacks a young woman at night in an alley, pinning her down on the asphalt. When she tries to fight, screaming her lungs out, he beats her hard, threatening to kill her, then he starts to undress (03:31-04:51). She is saved at the eleventh hour when her father chases the attacker away. She ends up in hospital bloodied and bruised. The attack is being handled sensitively afterwards and is being discussed throughout the rest of the episode.
Harvester (Movie)
This video game involves heavy themes of assault of both adults and children. It is not protrayed as a good thing, however, like the rest of the game, it is sometimes played for Black Comedy.
The main character frequently expresses his sexual attraction to a woman, oblivious to the fact that she is actually his daughter (season 3 onward). In one episode (season 3 or 4), a man rapes a female intern. The scene has no bearing on the plot and is never mentioned again.
Hatchet II (Movie)
A man films girls/women nude under false pretenses and tries to get a minor to strip for him.
In a flashback, a man is forced to walk naked through the snow and perform fellatio on another man.
There is a constant mention and threat of sexual violence in the book. Marital rape is also discussed in many occasions. The narrative is that men do not have the ability to control themselves and that sexual violence towards women is expected both in daily life and in times of war. It is mentioned that the female lead endured marital sexual violence from her really old husband starting since they were married. She was around 12-15 when they got married. The male love interest rapes the female lead in the beginning of the book, after her escape from the husband's house: initially, he saves her from drowning but then she loses her consciousness. While she is unconscious, he starts having sex with her. The scene is described vividly. In another scene the male love interest contemplates raping the female lead again, but he does not act on the urges. The scene starts with him saving her in the fishing hut (where she is unconscious). Additionally, there is an antagonist male whose plan is to rape the female lead and get married with her. There are some scenes with him and the female lead where he is being really threatening.
The Haunted (Movie)
The main male character is raped by a ghost/demon.
Chapter 2: a boy mentions that his uncle always says "weird things" to him, and that his mother calls the uncle a pervert- Chapter 32: brief mention of prison rape.
The movie is a sort of dark humor comedy. The main character's girlfriend asks the main character not to film them when they're having sex, but he does it anyway. At around 56:50, a man gets assaulted by a ghost: he is asleep in bed and is moved around by the ghost into a sexual position (while still asleep) and then his pants are pulled down and he wakes up to the ghost assaulting him. The scene is played for laughs despite the man letting out a scream of horror and it is clear that the man was upset by it the next day.
A possessed man tries to rape his wife: she fights him off (01:05:00).
This story centers around a man stalking a woman that he is in love with, and his intent is that she should reciprocate his feelings. There is a scene in which he forces himself on her, but over the course of the story she begins to develop feelings for him. By the end of the story they are in an ostensibly consensual relationship. The male lead spends most of the book tracking down a pedophile ring and human traffickers. There are mentions of rape, sexually violent dark web sites, a scene with dozens of women and girls being held in a warehouse and scenes with other children being kidnapped individually. Though there is no graphic description of what happens to any of these children/women it plays a large part of the plot of the story and is discussed frequently.
The book's central theme is misogyny and generational trauma experienced by the protagonist and her ancestors. Many of her ancestors experienced some form of sexual violence.
The series often has people possessed and forced to do things beyond their control, including suicide. S1E1: a young boy watches a grown woman undress (without her knowledge) for a brief period before she realises he is there. S1E3: when a woman and her future lover are chatting at a table over tea, she talks about how many women leave their pupilage due to men sexually harassing and groping them. S1E7/8/9: a man recounts to his mother how his father would rape him as a child, and that his father sexually assaulted other children as well. He is angry with her for telling him the abuse was normal and for not protecting him as a child or an adult. Two ghosts who were lovers in life possess a brother and a sister: it is implied that they will continue their relationship now that they are once again corporeal.
Haunting Ground (Video Game)
The 18-year-old protagonist is chased after by numerous assailants, one of which plans to rape and impregnate her if he successfully catches her. While canonically this does not occur, on the game over screens during his segment of the game, you can hear the sounds of her clothes being torn away, alongside his grunts.
S1E1: mention of metaphorical rape in passing (43:00-43:10). S1E3: a child psychologist suspects that her patient is being sexually abused by her foster father, based on her drawings in sessions with her. (This psychologist has the ability to feel what someone else is feeling as if it is happening to her whenever she is touched physically). She visits her patients house suspicious about the abuse and realises that the little girl was being raped by her foster father in their basement, as the basement had features from the girls drawings. In this scene the psychologist is physically acting out the rape experience as if it happening to her in real time due to her psychic ability. It was very graphic and triggering. This is what he was doing to the little girl.
Havenhurst (TV Show)
A foster child is abused by her drunk foster father when her foster mother is absent (34:00-37:00). The child fights him off by stabbing him with scissors and then kicking him in the face before fleeing.
Hawaii Five-0 (TV Show)
Hazbin Hotel (Movie)
Multiple scenes have sexual misconduct played for laughs (buttock slapping, nonconsensual exposure to kinks, offering to perform sexual acts in a completely unrelated conversation, etc.) A main character is a porn star/prostitute, and several explicit references are made to his line of work. That said, this character is under the physical and psychological influence of his manager who hits him, forces him to act in violent pornographic films and to prostitute himself against his will. S1E4: this episode contains scenes at the pornstar's work that feature dubious consent as well as relationship abuse and violence. Later in the episode, someone attempts to drug him with the intention of raping him but is stopped before the character is drugged.
He Got Game (Movie)
A 17/18 year-old girl has a sexual relationship with an adult man. Two adult women have sex with a 17/18 year-old boy. A sex worker is very bored/unhappy while in bed with a client.
Head-On (Movie)
In the second part of the movie, the main female character is raped during her drunk sleep in a bar. Just after she has been thrown out by the agressor, three men harass her on the street. They severley beat her up and one of them stabs her before leaving her for dead.
Headless (Movie)
The above-mentioned scenes are extremely violent and include necrophilia.
Headshot (Movie)
The movie is about an abusive, neglectful and drug-addicted woman who lets other people sexually exploit her child, sometimes even encouraging it. At various points in the movie her child is raped.
At the beginning of the second chapter, the female romantic lead is reflecting on how she hates giving blowjobs, while she is giving her boyfriend a blowjob. She feels like he expects her to do this for him, and he pushes her head while she is doing it. Towards the end of the book, a tertiary character is mentioned to have been ousted from his job after several women accuse him of sexual harassment.
The whole show revolves around two teenage girls making a map that is discovered, revealing to the whole school who has hooked up with whom. It contains a lot of sexual harassment, as well as attempted sexual assault. During season 1, it is slowly revealed that someone was the victim of an attempted sexual assault, and successful kidnapping. Season 1 recap shows an attempted sexual assault. S1E1: a teacher is accused of raping a student People are bullied for their sexuality and or lack of it Three teenagers are incapacitated by alcohol, and a traumatic event and then have a threesome. S1E2: this episode features PTSD about a sexual assault. S2E2: this episode blames the victim for her assault. S2E6: this episode eveals that someone has been lying about their identity while seducing people. S2E8: this episode talks about sexual harassment.
S3E1: a female character is raped on screen by a male character. The scene is extremely violent and she is blindfolded during the attack. She goes to a hospital with her husband and is examined by doctors. She has extremely negative emotions after being raped. The rapist tries again twice, but is unsuccessful She has some difficulty with having him arrested, but he is arrested at the end of the episode.
The main character's boyfriend often forcefully kisses her without her consent. After she breaks up with him, he does it again, this time pinning her to the couch until she punches him and breaks free. In another scene, he wraps his arms around her after she dumps him, despite her clearly not wanting him to, and she again has to shove him off. Two football players are stated to be date-rapists. One has sex with a girl he's on a date with, but it's unclear how consensual this is. A teenage girl is coerced into performing oral sex on a college student. A college student makes a pass at the protagonist and she responds by quickly leaving.
A female character has a seizure and falls unconscious while arguing with a male character. After she is unconscious, the male character starts removing her clothing and fondling her. He is stopped before raping her, but he clearly would have done that if not interrupted. Later, whenever he reflected on this incident, he tells himself that she was so alluring that "she did it to him." A child character is forcibly institutionalized. The other patients are mostly adult men. One of the attendants is a sexual predator and takes advantage of boys, knowing they either are incapable of speaking against him or won't be believed if they do. This predator prepares to rape the main child character, but he is interrupted.
The main female protagonist gets tortured and brutally raped by Viet Cong officers when being interogated. She is forced to be a prostitute to provide for her child.
The author's note reads as follows: "Please be aware that this book contains violence and abuse, body horror, mass murder, toxic relationship dynamics, discussions of reproductive coercion, allusions to childhood sexual abuse, and references to miscarriage, domestic violence, sexual assault, and suicide." The protagonist is repeatedly referred to as a whore based on her polyamorous relationships and just generally because she is a powerful woman. The toxic relationship dynamics in question relate to the protagonist's marriage to a man who, based on the in-world magic system, has a lot of physical and psychological power over her. He is very controlling of her and frequently threatens to kill people she cares about. A character mentions that he was considered a pretty child when he was younger, and that his father would leave him alone in rooms with grown men, implying that they assaulted him or were otherwise inappropriate. A tertiary character escapes an abusive husband. He comes looking for her and excuses his physical abuse by claiming she hit him first. After further questioning, we find out that she hit him first because he was trying to force her to have sex with him. Throughout the book, many women are killed and mutilated in very sexualized ways, particularly having their breasts cut off.
Heaven's Gate (Movie)
Parts of this film take place in a brothel. About 02:20:00 into the movie, the madam (a main character) is raped by three men. Additionnal shots show other female prostitutes dead and naked (presumably raped and killed by the same group of men). The scene is about 6 minutes long.
Heavy Metal (Movie)
28:17-28:18 minutes: a man mistakenly gropes a woman's breasts in the dark. 34:47 minutes: a man is accused of 37 counts of rape. 36:58-37:01 minutes: mention of an underage prostitute ring. 49:53-50:10: there is a scene in which a man attacks a woman - this may be interpreted as an attempted rape. 1:13:23-1:13:41: two men cat-call and talk about a woman in sexual terms. One of them tries to grab her and she knocks him to the ground. 1:16:48-1:17:11: worthy of note: a woman is tied down naked and whipped. Nothing explicitly sexual occurs beyond these events and the actual tying up is not shown.
Heavy Traffic (Movie)
In addition to the fact that characters are groped at various points, the main male character is sexually assaulted by a prostitute hired to take his virginity.
The Heike Story (TV Show)
It is mentioned how a 9 year old girl had to marry an adult man. It is also implied that other young girls had to marry adult men. Not much of this is shown on screen, but it is mentioned/implied. Worthy of note: the story is based on an old Japanese tale. The family did actually exist: an adult woman (who is also a character in this anime) married a 12 year old boy.
Season 1: gang rape.
Helen of Troy (TV Show)
The titular character is raped by a man in public display. The same character is forced by her fiancee/husband to stand naked for display in front of men.
Hell Girl (TV Show)
S1E6: rape is the main point of this episode.
A woman is tricked into helping a family of bandits on a cross-country scheme. They threaten her with rape, although one of the bandits steps in to say that no one should touch her. Later, she partially undresses to wash herself in a spring and one of the bandits follows her, watches her, and then attempts to rape her after she catches him spying. She is once again saved by one of the other bandits. One of the bandits gets into trouble after raping and murdering (off-screen) a woman the viewers never see. He blames her for this, claiming that she egged him on.
A main character's uncle attempts to rape her (01:48:50-01:50:45): she pretends that she will do what he wants as long as she is not otherwise physically harmed, but instead sets the room on fire, saying "I would rather burn".
Hellraiser (Movie)
The most significant relevant scene occurs between 58:06-59:43. SPOILERS: A male character encourages the protagonist to get drunk, which she does. It is implied that they have sex later that night. In a flashback, the protagonist's stepmother is assaulted at knifepoint by her brother-in-law on the eve of her wedding. The movie portrays her as having enjoyed this. She is romantically involved with her rapist in the film, fantasizing about him and aiding in his resurrection. The same brother-in-law, resurrected and wearing his brother's (his victim's husband's) skin, attempts to rape the protagonist (his niece). The demonic characters in the film are embodiments of sexual torture and violence, and their character designs are oriented around this concept. Scenes featuring severed body parts (including genitalia) hanging from hooks occur near the beginning and end of the film.
Portion of the plot revolved around a father sexually abusing his daughter (this is not shown explicitly). A woman dreams of her past: it is implied that she was raped. A man makes unwanted sexual comments about the main character's breasts.
A man asks his ex-girlfriend to come over. He heavily implies he wants her to have sex with him. When she says no, he coerces and cajoles her until she begins to give in (38:22). When she changes her mind, he grabs her by the belt and drags her toward him. It is possible his intent was to kill her (as another woman had been killed), not rape her, but the scene is ambiguous and heavily implies his intent is rape. During the assault, the aggressor uses the phrase "Come to daddy" to coerce his ex-girlfriend to come near him, ostensibly for sex (44:24). This is the same phrase as was used in the first Hellraiser, in which the main female character's uncle attempted to rape her. If the viewer is aware of this reference to incest, in addition to the idea of "daddy" being used out of context as a sexual term, it may be particularly triggering. The scene ends at 45:52, after which the victim sacrifices her rapist to a supernatural evil force and he dies.
A detective briefly mentions how a missing man has gotten in trouble before for child porn. Later on, the detectives go into the missing man’s house and one of them goes onto his laptop which shows a popup for a child porn site. Several female cenobites touch and lick a man without his consent
A woman revokes consent during consensual sex and is then killed after saying to the rapist to get off of her. A woman and her brother kiss (although it is later revealed that it is not actually her brother).
While giving a woman a ride into town, a man continues to try and touch her and makes suggestive comments. When they get out of the car he pins her down, kills her, then rapes her. This is shown again later in a brief flashback.
HellS Paradise (TV Show)
One character often has visions where she is groped by beheaded corpses, but this is only a manifestation of her guilt over killing them. S1E11: adult characters attempt to abduct a child character for a breeding ritual. She is visibly opposed to going with them, but nothing happens and the adult characters are killed. This is vaguely referenced again in S1E12, and it is implied that the child was previously assaulted by them. S1E13: one female character is helping another female character apply bandages while licking her hand. When asked “is that really necessary?”, the other responds “not at all!” This is played for laughs and neither character seems to be uncomfortable.
S1E1: a character is verbally threatened with rape. The attempt does not succeed because both her and her assailant are shot. S1E7: a man murders a woman, tears the shirt off her corpse, and proceeds to rape her. The women’s child is hidden in closet a forced to watch so she is not found. S1E8: it is revealed that the protagonist was repeated rape as a child and was a sex slave but escaping and becoming a soldier. The clip showing this is very shortly but can be very distressing due to how clearly young he is and the dialogue that goes along with it.
Helpless (Movie)
A woman's mother is mentioned as having been raped and murdered. It is implied that a woman is forced into prostitution to pay off her father's loans, eventually leading her to become pregnant through rape.
The lead comes on to her female manager by straddling her, kissing her against her will, and then commenting on how turned on she is about this. She then coerces the manager to perform oral sex on her. Later the same lead character forces herself onto the manager's boyfriend against both the manager and his will. She forces her to watch her assault the boyfriend and it is pretty horrific. The screen switches between showing the scene and the managers crying face. She perpetual continues to assault this couple by force feeding them drugs via kisses and making requests of them in sexual and violent manners. There is a power play element to all of the main characters sexual encounters. Prior to her assaulting her manager we see her have sex twice, once with a producer where she seems passive about it but needs to do so for work and once with her boyfriend in a public area that makes some feel uncomfortable.
Hemlock Grove (TV Show)
One male character has romantic and sexual feelings for each of his two half-sisters, both before he knows that they are his half-sisters (the first is played out in season 1, and the second in season 3). The same character experiences sexual tension with his estranged mother in season 1. S1E5: a teenage character is getting a blow job from a middle-aged adult woman. S1E7: a fairly graphic rape scene is shown on screen, with the woman begging for the man to stop and the man ignoring her. S1E8: during a dream sequence, a character is groped by the naked image of his mother and shows physical repulsion. S1E13: flashbacks to a mind control rape between half-brother and sister. SPOILERS: The first of these incestuous relationships is the result of vampiric mind control: the half-brother and sister involved are not aware of what is happening/in control of their actions.
The film opens with a close-up on the corpse of a naked woman. After that, several dead bodies of women (with their clothes ripped off) are lingered on by the camera, with voice overs of their murders and sometimes their rape. This is cut with images of the titular character preparing to kill his victims. The main female character talks about her father repeatedly raping her and beating her for years when she was a child. The titular character tells her that his mother (a prostitute) forced him to watch her having sex with clients when he was a child. The two main male characters take prostitutes in their car and start having sex with them. When the titular character gets violent, one of them protests and he kills both women. The two main male characters go on a killing spree and film their crimes. At some point, we see one videotape, showing them killing a couple and their kid, and one of them sexually assaulting the mother. The same man is about to rape her after murdering her, but he is stopped by the other man. The videotape is shown again, immediately after (in slow motion), and then some time later. A man gets on top of another man and hops him while the man screams at him to get off. A teenage girl kisses an adult man and attempts to seduce him, despite the man rejecting her, the girl insists to the point of threatening suicide. Throughout the film, one of the main male characters makes inappropriate comments and gestures towards his sister (who lives with him). He asks her to dance naked for him, tries to watch her when she is undressing, and then tries to have her sit on his lap and kiss him: he is stopped by the male protagonist. In one of the last scenes of the film, he violently rapes his sister and tries to kill her before he is stopped by the protagonist. Prior to that, the same character, selling drugs to a man, puts his hand on his thigh: the client punches him and leaves.
Henry VIII (Movie)
The film contains a non-historical assault to demonstrate a power imbalance.
There are passing mentions of marital rape throughout. There are references to rape in literature, such as in The Color Purple by Alice Walker. Psychologists, other doctors, and court judges discussed at some points in the book believed that queer women would indoctrinate or sexually assault their children. One person in the study discusses who she was sexually abused by her father.
Hereafter (Movie)
It is implied a father sexually abused his daughter. ("...he's sorry for what he did to you...").
The Heretics (Movie)
The main character coerces a guy into sex while she is delirious with fever.
At 01:05:47-01:06:47, the protagonist watches the memory of a raid in the convent during the war, in which several nuns suffer violence: it could be implied that they were sexually assaulted. In this same memory, she witness a specific rape of one of the nuns, which is graphically shown on-screen. After that, there are some other flashes of this same assault, since the whole plot is how the protagonist got pregnant through rape.
Heroes (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode features a sex worker under threat of violence. The sexual violence does not happen S1E3: a 16 year old cheerleader is almost raped before being accidentally murdered during a party by the quarterback of the football team (31:47-33:15). He is shown pinning her down, and her trying to physically fight him off, screaming and crying for help. She gets accidentally stabbed in the neck by a tree branch. The scene is very intense and long. S1E4: the cheerleader confronts the rapist. He admits to assaulting multiple women but blames all of them and tells the cheerleader that there is nothing she can do about it. Another girl mentions to said cheerleader (who is immortal) that she was raped by the same man. The rape is mentioned in the next few episodes. This episode features a person seducing someone for the purpose of blackmail. She is also being coerced to do this by blackmail. S1E6: it is revealed that a woman was getting close to a man, and seducing him just to get information. S1E7: when asked if he is an alien, a character jokingly says yes and add that he is going to “anally probe” the asker. S3E5: a man forces a woman to kiss him. S4E2 includes references to child molestation and pornography. S4E6: one character takes over another character's body and has sex with his wife.
S1E1: Holy Roman Empire aggressively asks a young Italy (known as Chibitalia) to "become one with him"; this is played off as an awkward confession of love as both are young children, but this is still upsetting to Italy. This dynamic is continued in later Chibitalia segments. S1E10: Holy Roman Empire lifts up Italy's skirt and looks at his underwear while trying to chase a mouse. S1E12: France, due to his leader pressuring him into it, proposes to England. When England refuses, France forces him to sign a marriage registration. When England further resists, France restrains England and forcibly drags him away (due to the nature of the scene, some viewers have interpreted this as a prelude to France assaulting England off-screen, but this is not confirmed). Later in the same episode, Italy gives Japan a surprise hug; Japan treats Italy as if he had made an explicit sexual advance, and demands Italy "takes responsibility [for Japan]". S1E15: Japan sees Italy and Germany undressed in public due to the heat; when Japan expresses discomfort with this and asks them to put on clothing, they refuse. S2E6: Rome, as a ghost, harasses Germany for details on his sex life, despite Germany making it clear he is uncomfortable with the conversation. Rome also asks Germany if he is attracted to young boys, noting that relationships between older men and young boys were common when he was alive. S2E9: France, wanting to start a nudist Olympics event, publicly undresses himself and encourages other people to also undress for the event. When England calls him out on indecent behavior, he starts forcibly undressing England and does not back down until a third party steps in. S2E11: after France sarcastically tells Italy to flash his buttocks to other people, Italy misinterprets it as a serious suggestion and flashes Japan without consent. S2E16: Belarus sexually harasses her older brother, Russia, and even destroys some of his property when he refuses to marry her. S3E1.5: Hungary, who Prussia mistakenly believes is a cis man, complains of throbbing pain in her chest. Prussia responds by groping her and joking that it is her "weak spot", however, upon noticing she actually has breasts, he reacts with shame while Hungary laughs him off. S3E7: France stalks Austria, muses to himself about how he finds Austria attractive, and says he wants to make Austria "French territory". Later in the episode, there is a flashback with Italy as a young teenager visiting France, who openly fantasizes about Italy belonging to him and then exposes him to pornographic material. S3E12: after Prussia conquers Austrian territory, Austria states that Prussia has "invaded [his] vital regions", with other characters expressing embarrassment at his wording. While no sexual assault is actually involved, this line became a fandom meme, often in jokes involving sexual assault. S3E15: another Chibitalia segment focuses on Italy accidentally flashing his underwear to Holy Roman Empire while trying to reach a pantry; When Italy gets stuck, Holy Roman Empire hesitates because he is afraid that if he pulls Italy out, he will think Holy Roman Empire is assaulting him. Ultimately, he accidentally pulls off Italy's underwear, but Italy is otherwise unharmed and unaware of the situation. S3E17+18: there are no sexual advances, but Sweden repeatedly gets physically affectionate with Finland and even calls Finland his "wife" (even though Finland is male), despite Finland being visibly uncomfortable with Sweden getting affectionate with him. S4E14: after Hungary is wounded in a fight, Prussia rips clothing from his crotch to bandage her up. She refuses the bandaging due to it being from Prussia's crotch, but he tries to force it on her regardless (and only backs down once he sees her breasts and remembers she is a woman). S4E19: after Poland agrees to marry Lithuania for political purposes, Poland demands that he sees Lithuania's penis, despite Lithuania's discomfort with this. S5E3: exclusive to the English dub: after seeing Hungary swim, Italy makes multiple sexually-charged jokes towards her without her consent (this is not present in the original Japanese dialogue). S5E4: in a segment depicting Russia and Ukraine as children, Russia asks Ukraine how to make people listen to him. She suggests that Russia shows people "[his] breasts", to his discomfort. S5E11: multiple characters are blackmailed into dressing in embarrassing outfits, many of which are skimpy or sexually revealing clothing. S5E12: America destroys a window to talk to Japan, who is currently naked and taking a bath. S5E19: an adult man flirts with a young girl, and tells her he wants to make a pass at her when she is older. Several webcomic-exclusive strips and web-exclusive supplementary material, especially holiday special comics, often have sexual assault references that are much more explicit than the anime. - 'April Fool's 2007' involves France encouraging Spain to strip naked to appease a fictional god; Spain consents to this, but it is quickly revealed that France was purposely deceiving him. Supplementary material published alongside the comic depicts France forcibly stripping and groping several characters, as well as taking revealing photos without their consent, in response to fan requests. - 'Christmas 2007' heavily focuses on France stripping and sexually assaulting several characters; furthermore, there is a scene where France says he is attracted to children, and poses with two young boys while naked. There is also a scene where France assaults Austria, and his wife Hungary is visibly aroused by the assault. - 'Christmas 2010' has a major plot point of finding a person with a mole on their chest to prevent an apocalypse. While it is later revealed there were no sexual intentions, a significant part of the comic focuses on several characters (including minors) either being kidnapped then forcibly undressed, re-dressed in sexually revealing outfits without consent, or undressing themselves despite being uncomfortable, all with the purpose of finding someone with a matching mole. - The strip 'Botticelli's Erotic Paintings' involves France and Spain forcing a child to strip, groping him, and fantasizing about having sex with him. - In 'Comic Diary 7', Spain asks two children (Romano and Italy) to marry him when they are older. As an adult, Romano conditionally accepts the marriage proposal. - A running gag involves webcomic-exclusive character South Korea groping and caressing other people's breasts without consent. - The supplementary visual novel ('Gakuen Hetalia'), involves two instances of sexual assault; England chains Seychelles to a dog collar and mandating that she submits to all of his demands. Later, France ostensibly defends Seychelles from England, but then follows this up with getting physically affectionate with her and trying to undress her against her will. Worthy of note: two popular ships in the fandom are America/England and Spain/Romano, and while neither are confirmed canon, there have been some hints in canon material about romantic relationships involving these characters (mainly in webcomic material omitted from the anime). However, these ships have been considered problematic by some viewers due to the fact that Spain and England were formerly parental figures to Romano and America as children, respectively, and England also considered America an adoptive brother (though it has been confirmed in the manga they no longer consider each other siblings). Additionally, there are multiple running gags throughout the show involving Italy and Romano: Italy often strips naked: it isnot his intention to flash people, however, he often unintentionally flashes people and runs around naked (to many characters' discomfort). Another running gag involves Italy sleeping in the same bed as Germany, often while undressed, even though Germany expresses discomfort with this. Italy and Romano have protruding hair curls that serve as erogenous zones; when their curls are touched, they will become aroused. There are multiple gags where characters run into awkward situations upon pulling their curls, unintentionally or otherwise (a notable example is S4E1, where an adult Spain pulls on a child Romano's curl).
Hex (1973) (Movie)
The relevant scene occurs from the 28:00-32: 00-minute mark.
There is a character who was physically and sexually abused by a husband who is dead at the time the book takes place. This is periodically discussed in an unkind way throughout the novel. Another character who has been tortured attempts to rape this character. The novel centers around a murdered witch who haunts a small town. One of the teen boys cuts her dress to expose and mutilate one of her breasts. He accused her of raping his mother.
Hi, Mom! (Movie)
During a theatrical performance , woman has her clothes stripped off and is threatened with rape.
Hick (2011) (Movie)
There is a scene where the main character (a 13-year old girl) is in the bathroom, and a man comes in and attempts to rape her. Later, she is raped (off-screen) by an adult who kidnaps her. Another character then talks about being raped and getting pregnant as a result.
Hidden (TV) (TV Show)
The first season is centred around a human trafficking case in which the main villain, who is an adult man (noticeably older), kidnaps young/very young teenage girls and keeps them in his basement where he sexually abuses them. This is mentioned throughout. One scene features an attempted rape of one of these girls but she fights back and he gives up. There are frequent discussions and visuals of the aftermath of the abuse.
This book is about a family of 12 siblings, half of which develop schizophrenia. There is loads of mentions of physical and mental abuse to start, then about halfway through they start to mention the older siblings sexually abusing the younger ones.
High Life (Movie)
A woman is harassed and then raped on-screen by a man. In another scene, a woman is raped on-screen.
High-Rise (Movie)
S1E4: sexual situations between teens and adults. A small child could be interpreted as loli-con.
High Seas (TV Show)
In the beginning of the film, an imaginary scene shows a man performing a sexual act onto a severed head. The same man kidnaps a young woman and it is implied that he has kidnapped many other young women in the past. He admits to finding her sexually attractive and since he kills all other members of the family, we have to assume that he abducts thewomen for sexual purposes.
Highlander (Movie)
The movie villain acts threateningly to a woman while fighting another character, and after killing the character he grabs her. The scene cuts, but later in the film the villain boasts about having raped her. This antagonist also has violent sex with a woman and it is commented that she was traumatised by it. He also goes on to repeat his threatening comments and kidnap other female characters. Overall the film contains extensive themes of rape and sexual assault.
This show contains multiple torture scenes involving little girls. There is a recurrent theme of abuse on a orphaned little girl by a family member. A boy acts like a pervert to one of the twins at times (for laughs). A strange disease causes a young man to have bizarre erotic fantasies involving his classmates, including three girls who are no more than 13 years old.
The Hike (Movie)
There are multiple scenes in the movie with women being chased, pinned down, forcibly kissed and assaulted. The women are trying to go on a camping trip and they encounter a group of men who later capture and rape them. The film opens with a different group of women who are all running and being killed or captured making it clear that this is not the first time these men have done this.
Hillbilly (Movie)
About halfway through the documentary, the rape scene from Deliverance is briefly shown to emphasize the harmful ways that the Appalachian community is often depicted in media.
A man (or possibly teenage boy) rapes a teenage girl: the audience sees him initiate and hears her screams for several minutes, though the sexual assault itself is not shown. He is stopped by another man, who then proceeds to rape the girl himself. This is not shown or heard, but the girl has scars and bruises and is obviously traumatized afterward.
A man licks and sucks a woman's chest and breasts against her will: she cannot resist because he is holding a gun to her infant child. A teenage girl is raped by a mutant man. Her sister is groped and then murdered in front of her. Both scenes are graphic and violent.
A kidnapped woman is raped.
Hippopotamus (Movie)
The main female character is raped: her flat mate is shown grabbing her and pushing her onto her bed, removing her clothes while she is shouting for him to stop. He punches her in the face until she stops making noise. The camera moves out of the room but the shadows on the wall show that he proceeds to rape her while she is unconscious (this is also discussed and confirmed as rape). This explains how the woman ends up kidnapped and is relevent to the story line.
The rape scenes in this book were not handled with care at all and seemed to be mostly done for shock value. It contains a graphic gang rape scene, and the sexual exploitation of a teenager ends up being a major plotline which is unskippable. SPOILERS: From the killer's perspective, we get the lines, "They let her. They could have said no. There is always a choice." The sixteen year old girls are on drugs after being pressured to take them.
HIStory (TV Show)
S2E1: sexual harassment. S3E7: a character drugs and attempts to rape one of the main characters, but is fought off fairly quickly.
An ambiguous but intense scene which some may find distressing: a violent argument between a married couple transitions into a very aggressive sex scene which some may interpret as rape.
During the French Revolution segment, a woman is gangraped. It is played up for laughs, but it includes the king calling for her to be gangraped, and descriptions of genitalia.
Hitman: Absolution (Video Game)
The main antagonist may attempt to "Distract" the protagonist with a strip tease. He has no reaction to this whatsoever and simply shoots her. A man threatens to rape the protagonist’s corpse after killing him. When assassinated, the same man may ask why he has a boner from dying. A man may offer the protagonist a “Reach around” in exchange for sparing his life. In the Vixen Club level, the owner of a strip club is heavily implied to be killing and/or raping the dancers. The player can happen upon two dogs having sex as an Easter egg, albeit, finding this on accident is highly unlikely.
Hold the Dark (Movie)
Holidate (Movie)
The girlfriend of a main character starts making out with him even though he is clearly against it and verbally objecting (removing her shirt then initiating kissing and fondling). WHile he continues to object, she moves off-screen and the change in the man's demeanor and facial expression strongly implied that she is performing oral sex.
A woman is drugged and impregnated; although her rape is not shown, a man is seen standing over her bed. She is then kept as a prisoner by women who want access to the baby she is pregnant with.
An invisible man pulls off a woman's robe and rapes her. A man tells a rape joke.
Hollyoaks (TV Show)
This is a long-running soap with many characters, so some stories are in the past and will be referenced infrequently in present episodes. Stories are normally sensitively, albeit imperfectly. As this is a pre-watershed program violence has to be off-screen but events are often played for emotional drama, and will be discussed frequently in a way that may cause some viewers distress. Crimes are generally recognized as such and several plotlines involve offenders being taken to court; while this is generally a positive point, it also could be distressing.
Hollywood Cop (Movie)
Holy Smoke (Movie)
Holy Spider (Movie)
The movie revolves around a serial killer targeting prostitutes. The main character is a female journalist who investigates these crimes and, in the process, endures all the hardships that prostitutes in a conservative Islamic country might face.
Home Fires (TV Show)
A woman is emotionally and physically abused by her husband. In at least one scene, it's implied that she feels pressured into sex with him.
Child marriage and the rape of slaves by slave masters both occur.
Homeland (TV Show)
A woman attempts to seduce a coworker by pressing up against him in S1E1. This is non-consensual. In S1E1 a man has violent sex with his wife, however, the nature of the encounter is very much forced. In S4E2, there is a sexual encounter between a very drunk man and a sober woman.
The lead character is put in a situation where his awareness is obscured and a priestess touches and grabs him in an attempt to entice him into a ceremonial orgy against his will. He manages to break away before anything happens to him. The scene is not graphic.
One female character (antagonist) uses psionics to force a woman into a sexual encounter. This is explicitly mentioned to be non consensual.
Homunculus (Movie)
A high school student is raped by an adult man (51:45-55:25). It is implied that her "subconscious" wants it and that he is just trying to help.
Honeydew (Movie)
Near the end of the film, an old woman who mutilated and ate multiple victims grabs one character and forces them upon the another one.
Worthy of note: a woman stabs herself between the legs in an attempt to remove something inside her.
The film's premise revolves around a preacher who has been accused of sexual misconduct with teenage boys. None of this is shown on screen but there are mentions of the boys being groomed and the scandal being covered up.
The main male character's mother was gang raped prior to the events of the book and bore a child as a result. The main female character, who is a free Black woman, assumed that she was conceived from an affair between her mother and her mother's slavemaster. It is later revealed that the actual father was the slavemaster's son. The relationship between her mother and the slavemaster's son is framed as consensual, and there is no mention of an age difference. However, the inherent power difference in this relationship is highlighted frequently. A Confederate soldier threatens to sell the main female character into prostitution, and makes veiled allusions to the fact that he would rape her if she were his slave. This book takes place during the United States Civil War, and the primary couple in this book consists of a free Black woman who spies for the Union cause and a white Scottish Union soldier. The characters have honest conversations about this power dynamic and how their coupling would be perceived by other people.
Horns (2013) (Movie)
A woman is beaten and raped.
One character's boss repeatedly sexually harasses him in his workplace despite the fact that he clearly has no desire to reciprocate and is soon to be married; this is played for laughs. She repeatedly orders him to have sex with her, despite his refusals. At one point, she locks him in a room with her and implores him to have sex with her while she is practically naked. In another scene, she invites his fiancèe to the office, claiming that the free dental work is a wedding gift. He is unable to explain why he does not want his fiancèe to get this work done and while she is unconscious his boss implores him to have sex with her on top of his fiancèe's unconscious body. She threatens to show his fiancèe nude photos of him which she took without his consent while he was unconscious unless he sleeps with her. He manages to escape the situation. The same woman routinely sexually touches her unconscious patients. The man who is being sexually harassed explains that he would like to leave his job but can't because he was wrongfully placed on the sex offenders register for urinating in public. His harasser is aware of this and uses it to manipulate him.
Necrophilia and the drugging of women for "sexual games" are main plot points.
Horror House (Movie)
There is one story in this anthology movie that involves sexual abuse. In this short, a girl makes herself look like her favorite doll to escape and cope with her mother's abuse. She tries to get one of her mom's boyfriends to "play" with her, but her mom interrupts them before anything can go further. Another one of her mom's boyfriends try to get her to "shake his hand" while he is standing in the dark, but she pretends like she canot speak english to get him to leave her alone. The mother is also very physically and verbally abusive to the girl. Later in the short, another one of her mom's boyfriends calls her a "real life doll" and says "i wonder what kind of doll you really are". She asks him to play with her, he then unzips his pants. We do not hear or see anything other than that, but we do see the girl lying completely still on her back in the morning. Her mother verbally abuses her again, not knowing she was assaulted. This short ends with her mother selling her daughter in a box at a garage sale, calling her "some old junk".
Vengeance: three men drug and rape a woman at a party as revenge against her for speaking out that she was raped by one of the men's brother in the past. Creeper: a man breaks into a woman's house with the intention of raping her, but she forces him to cut his penis off. End Preview: a man rips open the shirt of a woman who he has tied to the bed.
Horsemen (Movie)
Photographic evidence of a man sexually assaulting his adopted daughter is shown twice (around the 45-50 minute mark). It is implied that this also happens to his other daughters.
Hostages (2013) (TV Show)
A surveillance video of a rape which, whilst not graphic, is played several times in both seasons.
A woman is pinned down by a man who unzipps his pants. She hits him around the head and gets away.
Hostiles (Movie)
It is strongly implied that kidnapped women were raped, One of them is asked if she can ride the horse before they move on.
The protagonist hears from her friend that her grandfather makes her get undressed before spanking her. Such a scene is depicted in one of the comic panels. The protagonist tells her own mother about this, which alarms the mother.
Two men are forced to have oral sex after a confrontation with another group of men. This is played for laughs Early in the movie, one male character says of another male that he is "raping angels".
Hotel De Sade (Movie)
A man visits an underground sex hotel where all requests are catered to. Animal crushing is mentioned and implied off-screen, as well as implied off-screen sex with children. Towards the end of the film, the antagonist rapes the protagonist's underage daughter and forces him to watch.
Hotel Rwanda (Movie)
Hotline Miami (Video Game)
A female character is shown in a room surrounded by cameras and appearing to have been drugged and abused. Another character rescues her: she moves in with him.
During the prologue, the player punches a woman to the floor and gets on top of her to rape her. The action is stopped when he puts down his pants by a filmmaker, since the scene is actually a film being shot. In the opening of the game, the player can choose to skip the last part of this scene. Worthy of note: later, a detective enters a woman's apartment without being invited to and after the woman said that she was about to get changed. Nothing further happens.
Hounddog (Movie)
A 12-year-old girl is raped on-screen.
A woman is kidnapped, tied to a bed, stripped and implied to have been raped several times by her captors.
House (TV Show)
Throughout the show, the main protagonist comments on his boss' cleavage and backside. This is handled mostly as a joke, and the topic of sexual harassment is brought up multiple times to then be brushed aside or cast as a joke. The theme is constant throughout the whole series, until the original boss leaves in the second to last season. S1E15: whether or not the male patient was a victim of prison rape is discussed repeatedly. S1E17: date rape is discussed. A female patient is diagnosed with "sexsomnia" and told that she has been repeatedly initiating sex while unconscious with her ex-boyfriend, and that he cannot be held accountable for the violation that she feels from it. S1E19: a 12-year old girl turns out to be pregnant and has an abortion. There are some slight hints in the episode that she is being molested by her adult swimming coach but the father is never identified or punished: the titular character colludes in keeping the rape a secret. The patient claims that she was able to consent to the sex and knew what she was doing. S2E2: a possibly terminally ill 9 year old patient asks her 30 year old male doctor to kiss her, which he does. As part of the differential diagnosis doctors speculate about whether she's been raped or not. S2E7: a woman takes drugs to cope with distress and makes a sexual advance on a man. He is initially apprehensive about her state and presence of mind, but ultimately, they sleep together. Aa man uses information gained from secretly accessing a therapist's file to get closer to a woman and manipulate her feelings about him in hopes of initiating a sexual and/or romantic relationship. S2E12: the episode starts with a violent onscreen attempted rape as what appears to be part of a sexually-motivated home invasion, but it later turns out to be a pre-arranged roleplay between the couple. At one point, the titular character is denied permission to cavity search the woman for concealed poisons, which a male colleague compares to a rape. S2E13: a father admits to having sex with his daughter. Throughout the episode, the titular character makes repeated sexual comments abouts the body of his 15 year old patient to her face, dad, staff, and a waiting room full of patients. At one point, he makes a bet with a coworker on whether her breast is real or fake. She is generally sexualised by every male character without being met with much protest. At the end, she removes her hospital gown and all men in the scene stand and stare until she covers herself again. S2E15: the episode starts with a violent onscreen attempted rape as what appears to be part of a sexually-motivated home invasion, but it later turns out to be a pre-arranged roleplay between the couple. At one point, the titular character is denied permission to cavity search the woman for concealed poisons, which a male colleague compares to a rape. S3E2: sexual abuse is considered in the differential of a young boy with rectal bleeding, but was not the cause. S3E4: a 17-year-old girl repeatedly sexually harrasses the titular character at his workplace, talking a lot about how the US age of consent is arbitrary, unimportant and too old. It is strongly implied in this episode and the next that he would have liked to sleep with her, although he does not. S3E5: a male patient is punished for being annoying by having a rectal thermometer left in him for several hours. A brother-sister incest is part of the plot. S3E12: a character is raped and has become pregnant. S3E13: the episode opens on a young couple in a car. The girl is initiating sexual contact, and the guy tries to turn her down multiple times, which she brushes off. She begins to touch him intimately and he grimaces in discomfort, possibly due to the oncoming medical episode he is experiencing. S3E19: there is a strong suggestion that a 6-year-old girl is being sexually abused by her father, but in the end it turns out she is not. At one point she is given a vaginal exam whilst incapable of speech and therefore is not clearly able to consent. Her older brother sexually harrasses a woman in the workplace. S3E22: a woman receives a breast exam while her doctor is high, and he winks at her unprofessionally. The titular character gets a much younger woman to agree to go on a date with him, by lying to her that it is a job interview. S4E4: while having a seizure, a character hallucinates that she is being raped by one of the corpses she is working on. S4E10: the titular character asks a young girl sexually inappropriate questions with no medical justification, only to try and make her uncomfortable. S4E15: the episode starts in a strip club. S5E2: a little girl is shown crying in pain as she receives a rectal endoscopy, for which there is very little medical justification. S5E3: a male patient briefly and unexpectedly attempts to assault, possibly sexually, a female doctor, but she hits him and gets away quickly. S5E5: a female patient is someone a female character has slept with; the titular character makes inappropriate comments about lesbian sex throughout. S5E8: a teenage girl patient claims that her father has raped her. She turns out to be lying. S5E11: a schoolgirl patient turns out to have had a baby with a boy at her school involved in bullying her. She claims the sex was consensual and then dies of the complications. S5E15: a priest is said to have molested a child 4 years prior to the episode. This is talked about throughout the episode but is not shown. The priest is thought to have aids and the child (who is now a teenager) is found in a scene and told to get tested, he is repulsed when the priest's name is mentioned. The teenager visits the priest and they apologise to eachother, it is implied the teenager made up the assault story. S6E1: a character very casually mentions being molested by his uncle. S6E4: a man describes the brutal kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of his wife. It is later revealed he was actually one of perpetrators who was forced to commit these acts, and did not know the her. S6E7: a teenage girl recounts being drugged and touched by an adult man. She is lying, but the events she is describing are shown as she speaks. S6E12: a patient falsely accuses a doctor of sexual harassment. S6E13: a man jokes about "only barely" being raped in prison. S6E15: a woman offhandedly recounts dating a 30-year-old man when she was 17. S6E16: an adult man has had sex with his son's teenage girlfriend. The girl was not a minor at the time, but was emotionally vulnerable and it is implied she may have been drinking. S7E10: an edited nude picture of a man is shared online in order to humiliate him. The situation is played for laughs throughout the episode. Someone the same man has slept with is revealed to be a minor. S7E22: a man at a strip club touches the dancer (in a non-sexual fashion) because she has a concerning mole on her back. She tells him not to touch her, but he does so again and is kicked out. He waits for her in the parking lotto talk to her about it and she panics and pulls a gun, thinking he has ulterior motives. She implies this is not the first time she has been accosted by men during or after work. S8E2: a young woman recounts being groped by her boss. S8E4: the consequences of the prior sexual harassment incident are discussed in the lead-up to a disciplinary hearing. The perpetrator is painted as sympathetic, and the young woman he harassed is painted as the aggressor because she defended herself physically. The titular character gropes a man to provoke a reaction. S8E6: a teenage boy is revealed to have been molested by his father as a child, causing him to contract an STD. He does not remember what happened, and his mother as well as the doctors decide not to tell him the true reason he got sick.
House of Cards (TV Show)
Season 2 contains the detailed discussion of rape from the perspective of survivors from episode 15 onwards. The long-term impacts of sexual assault are woven into the plot for the remainder of the season. The emotional impact of rape is the focus of the narrative, and there are no grim or graphic depictions or details offered. Season 3 contains a number of scenes that depict violence within a marital relationship, one of which has a potentially very distressing sexual element. In season 4 there are some scenes of domestic violence which are presented as fantasies. This could be distressing to some audiences.
A man from a 'rape play fantasy' site enters a woman's house and tries to forcefully have sex with her, but she has not consented and does not know what is happening (because someone pretended to be her on the site). He grabs her but gets knocked out before anything else can happen.
The entire film is about trapping woman so a satanic cult can impregnate her with Satan's baby. Something is summoned into a restrained victim's womb: the character is not nude and their genitalia is not touched, as this happens externally and through magic. The main female character tries to kill herself, but it does not work and in the end, she is in a coma and it is implied she will carry the baby to full term. There is a simulated rape scene at the end of this film.
S1E1: a main character calls another a rapist and uses a sword to castrate him (21:00). Rape is mentioned again (23:00), as is bestiality at a later point. A father suggests that his teenage daughter go "give comfort" to a king. Nothing happens, but it is implied that she is to start a relationship with him. S1E2: flirting continues between the teenage girl and king. It is suggested that the king might marry a twelve-year-old (his cousin) but he instead marries a fifteen-year-old. S1E3: an seventeen-year-old girl is told that she should marry. A teenage bride has a baby after having sex with a king. S1E4: a child proposes to a 17-18 year old. An eighteen-year-old has sex with her much older husband: she clearly does not like it. An adult uncle has sex with his teenage niece (ostensibly consensual). A princess is ordered to marry her cousin. A sexual encounter between two characters has questionable consent, since the only word the man says is 'stop'. He is uncomfortable and there is a power imbalance between them: he thus feels objectified, exploited, then discarded). S1E5: two cousins get married. They are not sexually interested in each other, but vow to give the realm heirs. A niece tells her uncle to fight for her and make her his bride. S1E6: the marriage of a child to a fully-grown man is mentioned. S1E7: two brothers discuss one of them marrying their sister. The idea of keeping the bloodline pure is discussed. There is a consensual in-depth sex scene between an uncle and niece. It is presented romantically. An uncle marries his niece. S1E8: a royal rapes a commoner and when she comes forwards, she is paid in order to keep quiet (19:21). More marriages between relatives are proposed. Marital rape is strongly implied when a female character talks about her marriage to her brother and says: “it isn’t so bad, mostly he just ignores you, except sometimes when he’s drunk”. S1E9: a thirteen-year-old boy having sex with an adult sex worker is mentioned. There is a discussion that women with royal wombs are expected to have babies and that this is all they are good for. S2E3: mild sexual harassment of a bar maid. A brother taunts his sibling about choice of sex partners: he also walks in on him during a sexual monent. This is repeated in the recap on episode 4. S2E5 contains a vision of a son sleeping with his mom. S2E6: a woman tells about her father repeatedly raping her.
A woman explicitly states she was raped repeatedly. Her rapist also carved the word "harlot" into her groin area with a knife. A 22 year old man has a relationship with a 12 year old girl, but says he will not do anything sexual with her until she is 16, which is still underage. None of the characters seem to point out the problematic nature of their relationship. A man is strongly implied to have raped women and children. A girl has an incestuous attraction to her older brother. He does not reciprocate her feelings and expresses disgust. At one point, she disguises herself as the woman he likes and tries to kiss him while he is sleeping.
In one of the first scenes of the movie, the main male character attempts to raoe the female protagonist (a blind dancer) in a brothel. He is stopped by the police. The female protagonist is partially undressed during a swordfight. The male protagonist, who is pretending to be someone else, watches the female protagonist bathing despite promising her not to. She then reveals that she knew he was there: they initiate sex but she stop him. About 1:20:00 minutes into the movie, another man attempts to rape the female protagonist: she is rescued.
A pair of adult twins share a consensual incestuous relationship (along with their mutual mistress). Throughout the book, blood-drinking (and at times, other kinds of bodily consumption) is a direct metaphor for possessive sex. This is initially portrayed as darkly romantic, and becomes disturbingly obsessive and abusive. There is no non-consensual sex, but there is lots of non-consensual sensual intimacy. It is also strongly implied that the act of repeatedly having one's blood drained creates a supernatural affection similar to Stockholm Syndrome. One character discusses her childhood relationship with her father in language that heavily implies incest. The father repeatedly drank his daughter's blood, making his wife jealous.
A man asks a woman to his house to visit his wife, but when they arrive at his home the wife is not there, and he attempts to have sex with her, saying she owes him due to the fact that he made her money. He forces a kiss on her. She leaves before anything else happens.
In the very beginning of the movie, the patients of a mental institution start a riot. They violently grope and undress nurses against their will, further assault is implied. Later in the movie, a male character seemingly kisses and touches a female corpse in a sexual way. He also gives her an injection into her lower region with a syringe. It is quickly revealed that the woman is alive and has a sexual relationship with the man. It remains unclear how conscious she was when he started kissing and touching her.
One of the female characters reveals that she was sexually abused as a child by her uncle and that her parents knew about it. Later in the haunted house, they are in a room where the abuse took place: she is attacked by her uncle. He pins her down to the couch and taunts her bottom there is no on screen sexual abuse. Worth noting: another character is harassed for being gay, while in the haunted house he finds his locker filled with photos of naked men and he is later beaten.
The main character (the serial killer) gropes a victim's breasts and uses a marker to draw dashed surgical-style lines around them with a marker. He later cuts them off (the actual mutilation occurs off-screen but the viewer is witness to everything right before it happens). The viewer see that he then takes one of the breasts and puts in on the hood of a police car. Later, you see that he is using the other breast as a wallet. The rape of a female victim's corps is strongly implied. A corpse can be seen in the background of some scenes throughout: it is laying prone and naked from the waist down. There is a lot of dried blood on and around the corpse's bottom and inner thighs/groin area and not elsewhere on the body. More generally, most of the murders are committed by the main protagonist on women in vulnerable positions.
Chapter 22: brief mention of men having sex with children in an attempt to cure their STD.
The main character is unable to escape the advances of her boss, who ends up raping her.
Throughout the book, there are references to women and girls being raped by soldiers or oil workers. In the chapter entitled "Yaya," a character learns that her husband was sexually assaulted by an uncle when he was a child. When he told trusted adults about the incident, they minimized his pain and expressed worry about ruining the uncle's life since he was an influential figure in their village. Towards the end of the book, shamans complete a ritual where they insert semen into the vagina of one of the main female characters while she is unconscious, without her knowledge or consent.
S1E11: a character seeking legal help reveals that her husband is holding two girls hostage in their basement (about 9 minutes into the episode). She non-graphically describes her past with this man as a 16-year-old runaway looking for protection, and mentions abuse (implied sexual abuse) that she did not want to happen to the two girls. Their rape is discussed around the 24:00 minute mark. S1E13: a character angrily discusses being sexually abused by her uncle as a child. S1E14: a teenage boy is mentioned having been sexually abused by a priest, causing him to committ suicide. S2E5: a character shows another a video on a laptop of a young girl sitting on a bed being told by her father they are going to “play a game.” The shot focuses on one character’s crying face as you hear the man tell the girl to take her clothes off and crying/yelling can be heard. S2E6: mentions of gang rape and a character who had been sexually abused by her father as a child. S2E14: A character reveals that she was raped long ago by another character. In season 4, a councilman is accused of rape. This forms an integral part of the plot and is referenced throughout.
This movie is entirely about sexual assault, from the perspective of a 16 year old female character.
A character develops a romantic attraction to her cousin, and they carry out a romantic relationship together. A woman is beaten by men who intend to rape her but successfully flees her captors.
A main character continuously tricks women to sleep with him, which is used for comedy.
An adult male character says to the protagonist, a young girl at this point, that he "needs a girl." She does not exactly understand what he means, but she lies and says she is younger than she is anyway. As the protagonist becomes a teenager, men pay her a lot of unwanted attention, in large part because she is the one Chinese person in a white settlement. Her friend's fiancé is particularly harassing. She tells her friend that this fiancé forced kisses on her and made sexual comments to her, but her friend does not believe her. The book ends with the protagonist's sibling having tricked her into being a sex worker to pay off the sibling's debts. Also worthy of note: the protagonist is a victim of domestic violence at the hands of her father.
A woman is attacked by two men but they are chased off. The manager of a girl band withholds the girls' money with the intent to pressure them into sexual acts. A woman jokingly tries to seduce a male duck, making him very uncomfortable. The same duck is stripped by police against his will.
The Howling (Movie)
A character is receiving calls from a serial killer of a sexual nature. She is part of a sting operation to find him, and he lures her to an adult video store where he forces her to watch a video of a woman being raped (which is fully visible on-screen) and indicates that it is what he is going to do to her, but he is shot by the police (09:15-11:33). A man blocks a woman's way to solicit her for prostitution (03:15-03:37).
A man threatens to sexually assault someone and unzips his pants: he is killed before he can do anything.
Hud (Movie)
Throughout the movie, the protagonist gets increasingly inappropriate with his maid. At some point, he comes about behind a woman and nuzzles her neck as she is washing dishes. She tells him that she does not like sudden passes: ge does not apologize, but he backs off. About 01:30:00, he attempts to rape her while he is very drunk. He kicks down the door to her room and forcibly kisses her: the attempt is thwarted when his teenage nephew intervenes (and says that he did it because he was drunk). The woman (leaving town) encounters him later and tells him that they would have had sex sooner or later if he had not tried to rape her: he responds by saying that she will always be 'the one that got away'.
The film's plot revolves around extreme and non-consensual acts with sexual overtones.
The protagonist is said to have been raped by his father as a child (nothing is shown on screen). The protagonist brutally rapes a woman with a barbed wire.
A woman is coerced to be a man's sex slave. She is both sexually assaulted and later raped while she is in a coma.
In addition to what appears to be a scene of attempted rape by labor camp guards, the labor camp houses comfort women (sex slaves).
A character brags about harming a woman, with the harm that is heavily implied (and later in the movie, confirmed to be) raping said woman.
The entire premise of the movie is that an experiment backfires, resulting in a group of monsters that goes on a rampant rape spree.
Humans (TV Show)
The topic of sexual assault is dealt with in the show, and sexual assault is consistently presented in a very negative light. However, there are scenes which some viewers may find disturbing. This happens in many episodes but it is usually clear when something of this nature might be about to happen. Child sexual abuse is only ever mentioned, but one of the characters is very affected by the fact that this happened to her. The show also features forced sex work. The lines regarding this are often blurred, as the show is about robots (who exactly resemble humans) which have gained consciousness and experience feelings in the same way that humans do. However, human people are unaware that the robots are conscious. This results in scenes which could be interpreted as rape, which are felt to be rape by the female robots targeted, but which the human men involved do not interpret as such.
The antagonist of the story is gang-raped on-screen as part of the "good" ending.
Humongous (Movie)
A woman is raped at a cocktail party, and the life of the son she has as a result (a murderous monster) is the main subject of the film.
Humpday (Movie)
A woman starts having sex with a man whilst he is asleep. He is shown to enjoy it at first but then says that he is 'uncomfortable'. This is not presented as violent in any way.
Hunger (2008) (Movie)
Prison inmates are violently handled, undressed and their cavities are searched by the guards against their will. These scenes are not sexual in nature but are very intense. A brief scene of someone masturbating to a photo while someone else in the room is asleep.
Multiple instances and scenarios of sexual violence occur in this book. A man tells multiple people that their sexual relationship with him will end on his terms, not theirs. A man is revealed to have been sexually assaulting his daughter between the ages of 15-17. She becomes pregnant and dies by suicide. There are many occasions on which men imply that they will sexually assault a woman or a girl. A man tricks multiple teenagers into thinking they will be killed if they do not submit to him sexually assaulting them.
This book contains detailed descriptions of the author's rape by a group of boys during her early teenage years. She also addresses, at length, the effect which this incident has had on her since it happened.
A man is falsely accused of abusing children. This is central to the plot. A brother exposes his little sister to pornography, and this action causes various issues (emotional incest).
Hunt to Kill (Movie)
A teenage girl is almost raped in front of her father. Later, she is also beaten up offscreen.
Hunted (Movie)
The main character is hunted by two men who intend to rape her: there are many tense scenes of attempted rape. The two antagonists are rapists and discuss what they plan to do to the protagonist and what they have done to other women. An antagonist watches videos of women he has kidnapped before, it is heavily implied these women were raped.
Chapter 2: two women discuss how they were assaulted by one of the woman's uncle when they were teenagers, it having been prolonged abuse against his niece Chapter 17 and 22: there are non graphic mentions of rape as part of flashbacks/listed atrocities. A man is briefly concerned that a woman may try to rape him but nothing happens.
Hunter Hunter (Movie)
In the first 30 minutes, a man discovers a group of dead bodies in the woods, they are women, and it is implied they have been raped. In the final 15 minutes of the film, a woman is attacked by a man. He attempts to rape her, but she is able to fight him off. She then runs to check on her daughter, and although the camera does not show her body, it implies something horrific happened to her and she is dead. The woman then brutally tortures the man who attacked her and her daughter.
This entire book is about the main characters time during the sex trade. It contains very graphic full descriptions of rape, torture, and rape with inanimate objects. Though the first book is more of a CNC (consensual non-consent) story as most dark romance books are, this one is completely different and horrifically violent.
In a cutscene, the antagonist (uncle) probes the main character off-screen to see if she is fertile.
After men captured women, one of the men takes one of the women to the bedroom at gunpoint. He tells her to give him a show and says he has wanted her since she was in high school. Another man kicks him out and forces her to begin stripping. She is able to fight him off and get away temporarily. He rips the shirt off of one of the other women and tells her to get on her knees before he is stopped.
The film's plot revolves around a man's attempt to retrieve his 'wife,' who he kept as his subordinate, treating her as property, before she was taken away by another man (who claims that he wants her to teach him to read - they later fall in love). A sex worker is assaulted and tortured (primarily off-screen, although much of her nude body is visible) with a cigar and cigar cutter.
The main character flees an abusive relationship (before the book starts, but the abuse is discussed). Later in the book, she gets knocked out by a man smashing a vase into her head after she refused his advances.
Husbands (Movie)
There is a very long scene of coercion and attempted sexual assault in which the man is repeatedly joking about how closed off the woman is being.
Hydra (Movie)
One of the convicts on the island is a known rapist and there is brief discussion of when he was arrested and charged in the past. While on the island, he pins a woman against a tree with the intention of raping her but is stopped by another man.
Hypnotic (Movie)
This film discusses Sigmund Freud's case study about a teenage girl who is sexually assaulted by her father's friend, of which Freud interprets as repressed lust. The reading of the case study is intercut with various other famous cases of sexual assault.
I Am (2010) (Movie)
The third sequence of this anthology is about a man whose step-father molested him as a child.
The story line is a vigilante dealing justice to those who ran the trafficking ring. The two main investigators are both women who emote over the case but are also focussed and capable investigators. Given that it involves children, tere are some scenes which are particularly disturbing such as views of the cells where the girls were held. On the whole, the material is handled with sensitivity and care.
Near the beginning of the film, a fourteen-year-old is kidnapped and rapped off-screen as a part of a marriage story. It is revealed that she was raped every day of her abduction. It shows the perpetrator climb on her as she pleads before it cuts away. The man tries to rape her again, but she talks her way out of it. Worthy note: the film is based on the real-world kidnapping of Elizabeth Smart.
I Am Lisa (Movie)
A rape takes place off-screen (without sound) about 20 minutes into the movie.
This movie is about a girl's attempt to survive and cope with being groomed. 15 minutes into the film, the grooming escalates to on-screen physical and sexual abuse: the sex is on screen, and is shot from the perspective of the teen.
I, Claudius (TV Show)
The (male) author devotes a whole chapter in the second half of the book to gang rape of the main character. The chapter is very detailed, describing the sensations and thoughts of the teenager as she is assaulted by a group of men. Worthy of note is the emphasis which the author places on the darkness of the rapists' hands in comparison to the white skin of the main character.
It iss revealed that the main female character was raped in the past and it went on for several hours. As a result, she developed claustrophobia and a fear of the colour yellow (since her rapist wore a yellow jumpsuit). At one point, the antagonist torments her by making her relive those memories.
A character remembers how he coerced a previous girlfriend into having sex with other men in front of him for his entertainment, and then broke up with her, calling her a slag for doing it. Pedophilia is mentioned in a few places, specifically how the gene matching could be abused to match pedophiles with children.
S1E2: a mother briefly mentions childhood sexual abuse from her step father (13:30-13:40).
This is a biographical two-part television mini series about a boy who was kidnapped and sexually abused for seven years before escaping.
The movie contains heavy allusion to child sexual abuse and it is revelead (on-screen) that one of the main character regularly raped his wife.
The I-Land (TV Show)
S1E1: a female character is wrestled to the ground and the attacker pins her down and only retreats when threatened with a knife (18:45-19:10). Other characters later doubt that the attempt took place as the attacker ridicules the victim's claim in front of everyone (25:00-26:15).
I Love Dick (TV Show)
The premise of this show is that the protagonist was raped while high on recreational drugs. Because she does not remember what happened due to her inebriated state and because of dissociating, the bulk of the show is her piecing together what happened and navigating the trauma that ensued. Near the end of S1E1 (from 28:55), she gets a flashback of her rape, but does not at first realize what it is. The flashback is repeated at various intervals throughout the show to illustrate that it is an intrusive thought. Early on in S1E2, a brief flashback of the rape is shown. Throughout the episode, the protagonist questions her male friend (who was present on the night that she blacked out) about what happened. He is very evasive and seems to be dishonest. She then visits his mistress, who claims that she does not remember what happened and mentions that she may have been spiked (17:00-21:08). When the main protagonist suggests that her lover may have been involved, she becomes angry and shouts in denial. The main protagonist leaves and calls a rideshare to the police station to report what she remembers of the previous night to the sexual assault specialists. The officers question her sympathetically and she undergoes a medical examination (22:08-27:48). In S1E3, the protagonist and her friend go to a club while they are both very high. The latter ends up having sex with two men who tricked her into believing that they did not know each other. When she realizes it, she appears troubled (24:27-27:25). In S1E4, the protagonist has a flashback of her rape while having sex with a colleague (19:00-20:07): she acts as though everything is fine. After that, the man removes the condom without her knowledge or consent (21:51-23:00). Meanwhile, after having consensual sex with a man, a male character is physically forced on the bed, restrained and thrusted against from behind, despite his protestations. He is shown visibly distressed afterwards (from 27:52). In S1E5, the protagonist learns that there are social media forums where people learn to take off condoms without their partner's consent in the middle of sex and make excuses for it if they are caught (3:41-4:50). Then we see flashbacks of this happening to her. She later asks a police officer if this act counts as rape, and the officer agrees that it does (24:57-28:55). Towards the end of the episode, the protagonist publicly accuses her colleague of having raped her, describing the tactic he used. Her previous partner finds out and victim blames her by saying that she should have watched her drink better to avoid being drugged and raped (18:57-21:32). Meanwhile, the protagonist's friend goes to the police station to report an his own assault. The police officer belittles him for not knowing his assailant's real name, asks if any penetration really happened, and then ultimately dismisses the case since the encounter started as consensual (26:19-27:07). In S1E6, there is a scene focusing on a support group for people who have been sexually assaulted. Participants describe experiences with sexual harassment and rape. The protagonist states that she wants to learn how not to be raped, implying that she internalized the victim blaming from her ex (04:36-07:55). Later, a flashback scene features two teens engaged in what starts as consensual sex. At some point, the boy takes a photo of the girl on his phone without her consent. When she catches him, she appears upset at first but then goes along with it when he says that he will pay her. When the boy is not looking, the girl destroys his phone (12:11-17:24). Later on, she cuts herself with a knife, and when a teacher notices her bleeding and appearing distraught, she says that her partner raped her at knifepoint. Other students find out that this is not true, and they tell the headmaster before the boy can be arrested (17:42-26:34). Later on, her stepfather references how her father supposedly raped her and her mother. The girl says that she lied about the rape at the insistence of her mother, who wanted sole custody (27:17-29:11). Towards the beginning of S1E7, the protagonist reads a personal essay aloud, in which she wonders if she has the right to be affected by her experience with sexual assault when so many women have it worse (3:30-.5:00). The protagonist's best friend asks the male friend that the protagonist interrogated in S1E2 not to come to a party because his presence might trigger the protagonist. The male friend argues that the best friend encouraged him to leave the protagonist by herself, potentially facilitating the rape (9:52-12:53). Later on, the protagonist's gay friend says reminisces about how he lost his virginity as a child when two adult men invited him to have sex with them in their car. He does not seem to realize how alarming this sounds until he sees the distressed look on his friend's face (14:25-15:14). The protagonist's friend claims that Black people, apart from the protagonist, do not get raped (19:00-19:14). The protagonist locks her gay friend and another man in a room together, thinking that she is facilitating a hookup, but not knowing that her gay friend had been sexually assaulted and is still uncomfortable with sex as a result (22:35-27:47). There is discussion of rape in the context of colonization (23:00-25:00). Once freed from the room where he was locked with the man, he tells the protagonist's best friend about his bad experience reporting his sexual assault to the police (28:00-29:05). S1E8 opens with the rape and sexual assault support group (00:56-3:04). The gay friend decides that, because he was traumatized by his sexual assault, he will pursue women instead of men. He goes out on a date with a white woman who clearly fetishizes Black men. She initiates kissing and sex with him, despite his visible discomfort. While he is having sex with her, he keeps having flashbacks to his own sexual assault, in part because the same song is playing and because he is pinning her down in the way that he was pinned down (15:28-16:28, 16:55-17:58). The protagonist hears from the police that they are closing her case because they could not find the rapist. She appears to dissociate upon hearing this (5:25-10:22).
I Onde Dager (Movie)
The rape scene is played for comedic value, and is perpetrated by a predatory gay man. There are also threaten rape throughout several scenes in exchange for money.
The protagonist of this movie is a serial rapist/serial killer. There are thus several scenes of brutal violence towards women, who are also verbally and sexually assaulted during long and graphic scenes. A man attempts to rape a young girl, removing her clothes and exposing some of her body. He appears to sexually assault her off-screen but is interrupted. A man rapes a woman, briefly revealing some of her body. Later, he is shown raping her on-screen. A man undresses and rapes a woman as she resists him: in the film, she appears to begin to enjoy the intercourse as it is happening. This scene only exists in the Korean cut of the film.
I See You (Movie)
The subplot of this movie is the hunt for a pedophilic serial killer. There are no graphic scenes, but there is a brief interview with a former victim and shots of the crime scene.
A woman is said to have been molested as a child. A woman rubs her feet against another woman's leg under a table. The other woman looks uncomfortable and gets up and leaves. A woman talks about how men have historically 'raped and pillaged' in order to gain supremacy over women.
The film's central plot revolves around a woman seeking revenge against the men who violently raped her. A woman is raped by a number of men: these scenes are prolonged and graphic. The film contains three relatively long and very graphic rape scenes in total. The woman seduces one of the men who previously raped her before killing him.
The film's central plot revolves around a woman seeking revenge against the men who violently raped her. A woman is raped by a group of men: this scene is prolonged and graphic. A man is formed to perform fellatio on a gun and his own castrated penis. Another man is raped.
A woman writes a book about her rape and becomes a counselor for rape victims. A man rapes a woman, then another woman attempts to rape the woman. A woman finds out she was the result of a rape.
A woman is kidnapped, raped, and tortured then takes revenge on her abusers.
There are many instances of sexual violence portrayed throughout this film, with flashback to the rape of the main character from the first film in the installment (which opens this sequel). Rapists are always male assaulting cis women and the movie contains several scenes of sexual violence against men and the mutilation of male genitals. Some of the film takes place in a group therapy setting, which is not a safe place and ridiculed by the film. There are frequent visits by the cops, a male member of the group frequently loses his temper, yells, throws chairs and storms out and the therapy leader touches the protagonist (hug and pet her face) when she does not consent. Additionally, the protagonist's private therapist emphasizes that forgiveness is the only way to heal. A teenager in the group therapy tells about her step-father continuously assaulting her. It is later revealed that she still lives at home with him and that her mother does nothing to protect her. The man is killed by the main character when she uses a sledgehammer to insert a metal pole into his anus, the scene is shown in graphic detail and blood splashes on her face. A male character in the group therapy tells about his daughter killing herself as a result of being raped by her trainer. The main character tracks him down and attempts to kill him but fails and is only saved from him attempting to rape her by a police detective who shows up at the last minute. This negates the series' guiding light, which is that the protagonist will get revenge instead of the broken judicial system. The protagonist and her friend follow an old, drunk man back to his house from the bar and pull his pants down and scare him after he made a victim blaming comment: he subsequently pisses himself and they laugh and run away. A group of men harass the main character throughout the film. She is also forced to perform oral sex on her friend's killer (her abusive ex boyfriend): she cuts his penis off and kills him.
I Stand Alone (Movie)
The film features implied sex between a father and his mentally vulnerable daughter.
The entire movie centres around the aftermath of the sexual assault of the main character. It is discussed frequently throughout the film. While the sexual assault is not shown on screen in full, we do see what happens directly before and after the assault. There is also a quick shot that shows the protagonist’s face during the assault. Worthy o note: while there is no child sexual abuse in the film, the protagonist, who works as a nanny to a child, does escape the site of her assault with said child under the implied fear that her assailant may also attack his child. This implication may be distressful to some viewers.
The female protagonist pushes the male protagonist against a wall saying she is playing a 'naughty joke' on him. She attempts to kiss him which he seems to want to reciprocate, but she backs out last second telling him its a joke (51:30-54:10). Then the male protagonist becomes angry, grabs her, and pushes her on a bed. She asks what he is doing and tells him to stop. When he does not, she becomes more desperate and starts crying believing she is about to be assaulted. He stops, seeming to realize what heis doing, not getting any more than holding her down. The scene ends with her crying on the bed as he runs from the room.
IBoy (Movie)
A few pages in, there is a gang rape scene.
There are multiple violent, graphic rape scenes throughout the film.
The two main characters were raped by their father as young children. This is described in detail numerous times through flashbacks and is a key plot point. One of the characters gets so high she basically immobilized and the man she is with initiates sex. She consented but she was not in the proper mental or physical state to. One of the characters desires to have a romantic/sexual relationship with one of her teachers. He then flirts with her back and even invites her to his house. It is implied that he wants to take things further but feels it would be wrong and he stops before anything can happen between them.
During a flashback sequences (in which everything is very blurred), several men undress a woman they kidnapped and take her away, presumably to rape her. All of it happens in front of a bonfire at night, so all characters are only silhouettes.
A woman repeatedly flirts with an uninterested married man. A woman and man try to force another man into a threesome, after he says “no” multiple times. She urges the man to physically grab the other man and expose his genitals to him. It is played for laughs and not as something serious. The second man hides in the bathroom while the other man and woman have sex in the bedroom and he is forced to hear it against his will. There is a kidnapping scene of a man throwing a woman into a van and though it is not sexual, it could still be triggering.
Prior to the events of the book, when the protagonist was eight years old, her father left her alone with one of his friends, who tried to touch her inappropriately. This prompted the protagonist to leave the house. At the time, her mother chastised her for running away because the protagonist was too traumatized to explain what happened. She also knew that her father would brush off responsibility for the incident. The memories of this event resurface when, as an adult, the protagonist is at a party and sees the man who tried to touch her. She is deeply distressed upon seeing him and decides to leave the event. Later on, she tells her mother the whole story of what happened, and her mother apologizes for blaming her. The protagonist finds out that a previous girlfriend of her love interest made false rape allegations against him. It is clear in context that these accusations are actually fake, and he is not simply claiming that they are. There is passing mention of men catcalling the protagonist while she is out running.
Il Boemo (Movie)
A husband assaults his wife and then rapes her: she was already afraid of him, but after the rape, she shows signs of depression and kills herself.
The rape scene is long and explicit.
This is a true crime book examining the crimes of the so-called Golden State Killer/East Area Rapist with a view to discerning the identity of the perpetrator, which was still unknown at the time of writing. As such, the details of these crimes (many of them sexual in nature) are discussed throughout the book.
Ils Etaient Dix (TV Show)
This series contains sexual violence, which is an addition from the book it is adapted from. S1E1: an attempted rape scene on-screen is followed by a heavily implied off-screen rape (15:30-17:00). The victim is shown being dragged off-screen by her hair while screaming. The aftermath of the rape is also shown (35:30-38:00 + 46:00-48:00): the victim tells the rapist's mother what happened. The mother downplays it and asks the woman not to report her son, and then murders the victim by electrocution in order to silence her. The mother is later murdered in punishment for this event, but there is no indication or sign that the actual rapist ever faces any consequences. A man unsuccessfully hitting on a woman sarcastically says: "I'm not going to rape you, jeez." S1E2: an ex-policewoman has flashbacks to a rape case in which the rapist was described as a “lovely young man” and the victim as “an unstable junkie.” The victim is shown on-screen accusing him and trying to hit him. The policewoman threw the case out of court: the rapist later attacked another woman, and this time, murdered her. In a flashback, a young boy's trousers are pulled off him by bullies, to humiliate him in front of his crush. S1E3: a woman deep in panic and extremely upset grabs and starts kissing a man; they have sex, which is not shown on-screen at the time. However, a short clip shown later in the series makes it clear that the sex was filmed without their knowledge or consent. S1E4: a woman taunting another woman says “what’s up with you, were you raped as a kid or something, was it your daddy?” S1E5: an ageing male celebrity cheats on his wife with young fangirls. No sex scenes are shown onscreen, but a scene where he is blackmailed over the phone reveals that two of the girls were underage teenagers.
The author discusses how her mother was emotionally and sexually abusive towards her, gaslight her, and manipulated her into developing an eating disorder. The mother consistently undermined the author's boundaries about her body and preferences, even going as far as to wipe the author, shower with her, and shave her legs, well after the author was capable of doing these things on her own. In the final chapter of the book, the author specifically points out how her mother would give her breast and vaginal exams, despite how uncomfortable it made the author feel. The author's manager is also described as having been manipulative toward the author and other clients. The author describes being coerced into having her first kiss be on camera with a co-star. The discusses having dated two men in their 30s when she was 18 years old. The author discusses having been raped by a man who initiated sex with her when she was too drunk to know what was going on. Part of the book also references the Dan Schneider sexual misconduct scandal at Nickelodeon.
The author describes being raped at a party.
A male character implies that he had sex with a female dead body. A male character threatens to rape another male character. A male character ties up and caresses a female character, then bends her over a car and leans over her. A male character makes sexually violent comments on others’ social media pictures- A character claims an older man had child pornography. -Cameras are installed in hotel rooms to watch guests, it is implied that a man is filmed while he begins to masturbate.
The main character confesses to her rival that she is in love with her. The rival rejects the confession, but the main character continues to stalk the rival even going as far as wanting o become the rival's maid. There are two incestuous scenes; one has to do with a brother and a sister planning a revolt so they can be in love; the other is when the rival's sister transfers to the school and the rival tells the main character that she would rather be with her sister than her: the rival plays in into that just so that the main character can start actually doing something to earn her rival's love and affection. The rival and her distant relative refer to each other as "sister" but they are not that closely related. The first instance of incest is portrayed in a strongly negative way by the show. One character likens it to homosexuality but this is also thoroughly denounced.
S1E4: a female character victim of sexual assault is quickly saved before anything other then her shirt being opened happens. S1E5: a female character is threatened with sexual assault, but is saved. S1E5+6: implied sexual assault/rape.
Immaculate (Movie)
A woman is impregnated without her consent: it is implied that a priest conducted research on her and other women. Iit is never shown nor described as to what happened in detail.
The film centres around the experience of an immigrant woman who has moved to the USA. She is forced into sex work against her will and subjected to a number of violent abuses. It is also revealed that her father attempted to rape her as a child. SPOILERS: At the end of the film, she falls in love with the man who forced her into sex work against her will.
The film contains an extremely graphic rape scene (49:30-51:00).
The protagonist's daughter tells the reporter that she was raped by a relative after her mom died.
Impromptu (Movie)
The protagonist's ex-lover shows up unannounced where she is staying, sneaks into her room, and grabs her in his arms - but nothing else happens (24:19). A man grabs a woman and bites her on the neck, touching her breasts, at first against her will - she pulls back to say no, but then kisses him herself, and they have consensual sex (45:04). A man drunkenly bursts into the protagonist's room and wrestles her onto her couch, but she successfully pushes him off (46:48).
Impulse (TV Show)
The 16-year-old protagonist discovers her ability to teleport when she is in a truck with a teenage boy, who tries to rape her. She has a seizure and teleports away from the situation, inadvertently injuring him and leaving him paraplegic. The consequences and emotional fallout of this event are referenced and dealt with throughout the show.
Inbred (Movie)
Incendies (Movie)
A woman is seen dressing herself after having been raped. [SPOILERS] A mother, imprisoned as a political prisoner, is raped by a prison guard who she later learns is her long-lost son. She becomes pregnant and gives birth as a result of this The two resultant children then search for their father and brother throughout the film, eventually learning that they are the same man.
At two separate points in the film, rape is implied off-screen. Two fully clothed girls are lifted up by a man, who then proceeds to smell their vaginas. In another scene, the same man is shown putting his hand inside one of the girl's underwear as she cries, but it is very brief.
The main character is sexually assaulted by her husband in a flashback scene toward the end of the movie.
The book is the author's biography, focused on her time as a slave in South Carolina, as well as her escape and what came after. Jacobs describes how her owner and other slaveholders would harass, assault, and rape the female slaves around the plantations. Her owner repeatedly harasses her and tries to force her into having sex with him, both personally and by threatening to punish Jacobs' family. In addition to this, her owner's wife reacts by punishing Jacobs for this perceived transgression. Jacobs is ultimately protected from her owner's advances by the fact that he fears her grandmother, a former slave who is universally respected even by the white people in the community.
Violent sexual assault is a foundational part of the film. The damage done to the victims’ bodies is also later described in great detail.
Indian Horse (Movie)
Even if nothing is depicted on screen, it is revealed that the lead character was sexually molested.
Indika (Video Game)
Towards the end of the game, the female character is imprisoned and tries to reach an agreement with the jailer to be released. he quickly makes her understand what he wants and she breaks down crying. The rape is not visible on screen, but when it happens she finds herself in conversation with the devil. the scene is disturbing and suggests that she is responsible and that she is committing a sin.
Industry (TV Show)
S1E1: a wealthy client who is inebriated non-consensually grabs a young new employee. S1E2: incest joke. S1E5: a woman is pressured into a lap dance by her co worker. S2E2: a father mentions that he knew his daughter would end up with a man who was 19 at the time. A woman thinks it is her job to sleep with clients. This episode features a white guy engaging in race play without asking the consent of his black partner. S2E4 includes a creepy uncle incest joke. A main character's dad is a serial sexual assaulter. S2E5 mentions sexual harrassment. S2E7: the woman who sexually assaulted a main character in season 1, does it again to another character. Her friend at work that she tells, tries to get her not to report it. S2E8: a main character accuses her father of grooming. S3E1: flashbacks to a sexual assault on screen. It also talks about a photograph being published without consent and photographers peeping into someone's window. S3E2: a 15 year old girl tries very hard to have sex with a boy in his twenties. He keeps pushing her away and is horrified. S3E6: a woman talks to her dad about him and his friends being inappropriate. S3E7: past assaults are mentioned. S3E8: it is implied that a father raped his daughter (as a child).
Forced-prostitution: the victim does not physically protest but it is a nonconsensual situation.
A father the main character is babysitting for sends her lascivious texts and a graphic nude photo of himself. There are slight hints that the main character’s father might be abusing her. The main character’s mother implies that she is trying to seduce her father away and take her mother’s place in the family. The main character’s best friend is “in love with her” and has stolen a dress belonging to the main character and uses it to masturbate and sleep with. The main character’s oldest sibling was born by incest: her grandfather raping her mother. Her mother murdered the baby as an infant to “correct God’s abomination.”
Inheritance (Movie)
A woman is drugged and raped in a flashback. She is seen being thrown on a bed but the rape itself is not shown on-screen.
An attempted rape occurs at 1:17:34-1:23:32.
Initiation (Movie)
This film heavily revolves around a fraternity date raping and assaulting women. A woman is shown being drugged and is presumably raped off-screen (flashbacks suggest it when she realizes). Rape and sexual assault is discussed, and women are frequently sexually harassed by the fraternity.
The details of a woman's rape and murder are discussed in great detail.
Inland Empire (Movie)
A woman is talking to a man about how she gets angry. She mentions having gauged a man's eyes out when he tried to rape her when she was 15 (1:24:25-1:25:50). This is a scene where the attempted rape is discussed (no graphical scenes).
Sexual assault occurs several times throughout this film, including characters being forced to undress against their will and an on-screen rape.
The main character has an incestuous relationship with her stepdad as a child, who molests her. She is later raped on screen, albeit in a dark room where the act is hardly visible, and impregnated. It is also implied that while she works as a prostitute, that she is raped by a client after her madam locks her in a room with them.
Inseminoid (Movie)
A woman is raped by an alien monster, and becomes pregnant from the attack.
Insiang (Movie)
A major part of the plot involves the title character being date raped after being choked into unconsciousness.
Inside Job (TV Show)
S1E3: there are mentions of roofies as they pertain to Supreme Court Judges and sexual harassment. S1E4: a man is sexually assaulted off-screen by a woman after repeatedly telling her 'no' (15:43-16:04). It is casually shrugged off as a minor plot point at best, but the victim gets angry about it. No one in the show acknowledges that what happened was sexual assault. S1E7: a flashback sequence shows a woman getting incredibly drunk before sleeping with a stranger (00:40-01:10).
Inside Man (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: the opening scene of the first episode is one of sexual harrassment; a man on the tube stands uncomfortably close to a young woman and berates her and others who intervene. He is portrayed unsympathetically and faces law enforcement at the end of the scene. Later, a side character present only in this episode, who is a high-profile politician, is revealed to have gotten away with historical rapes. The rapes themselves are named as having happened, but never described in detail or shown onscreen. Worthy of note: the series plot revolves around the fact that child pornography is on a USB drive. None of the child abuse is ever shown onscreen, only people's horrified reactions when they look at the contents. The paedophile who has put the pornography onto the drive is treated somewhat sympathetically, being referred to repeatedly as a "troubled man" and framed as needing protection (rather than punishment) because of his mental health issues and suicidal ideation. He is never held responsible, but does eventually kill himself. For most of the series, a woman is held prisoner in a cellar by a man. There is no sexual motivation for this and she is never sexually assaulted.
Inside No. 9 (TV Show)
An anthology series - some episodes may contain no content relating to sexual violence. Relies heavily on plot twists, some of which may make instances of sexual violence less easy to predict. 'Sardines' - off-screen child sexual assault 'The Understudy' - character engages in some potentially uncomfortable flirting, is framed for sexual harassment. 'Devil of Christmas' - some interplay between sex and violence. 'Riddle of the Sphinx' - a character is paralyzed, another character gropes her and suggests rape. 'Zanzibar' - some sexual activity occurs in conjunction with mistaken identities/hypnosis, although this is mostly played comedically and doesn't involve intercourse. 'Bernie Clifton's Dressing Room' - brief mention of Yewtree, an investigation into sexual assault. 'To Have And To Hold' - plot twist involves a sex slave. 'Death Be Not Proud' - incest between mother and adult son (mentally impaired). 'Mr. King' - the main character is accused of sexual harassement on a student, and the headmaster takes a picture of his penis.
Insomnia (Movie)
A detective briefly discusses one of his former cases having to do with a child who was sexually abused and then killed (there is no visual depiction). A sexual relationship between a high school girl and a middle-aged man is strongly implied and discussed. Domestic violence is frequently discussed and briefly shown.
Instinct (Movie)
Insurrection (Movie)
Within the first few chapters of the book the main character finds her best friend raped and dead on her bed. Whilst she was able to hear the assault taking place, she arrived too late in order to save her friend.
Intergalactic (TV Show)
S1E1: around 22 minutes, a man makes an inappropriate comment on how a female colleague lost weight. S1E2: a woman hides drugs inside of her and two men performed surgery on her to extract the drugs (19:20 and 24:03): she screams in pain and is tied to the table. A character mentions that the people (likely the army) of the regime steal and rape the other peoples of the world (31:20). S1E3: a character mentions that her mother was raped by guards of the regime (42:30). S1E4: there are distressing scenes of a man wanting to extract a woman's ovaries without her consent to use them for an experiment. She is tied to a medical bed, in distress, screaming, and her former clothes have been removed off-screen and replaced by a gown. The man touches her cheek. He cannot perform due to being interrupted. A character says that she was drugged by her father as a child so she could be abused by his friends (39 minutes in).
The lead villain is known for attacking women, often in his employment. At the very end of the film, he rapes and strangles to death the lead female character.
The sexual assault of a girl "barely double digits" is discussed- An older male character has a predilection for child sexual abuse, which is discussed or shown at several points in the film. Men storm into a bar and grab a woman who is sitting there. It is alluded to that they have done this before and have sexually assaulted her on that occasion. Screaming and crying can be heard from off scene. There is a conversation between the adult survivor of child sexual abuse and the man who assaulted her. Worthy of note: Near the beginning of the film, some gangsters threaten to put a woman to work as a prostitute if her husband does not pay them what he owes. Her husband beats her badly in a scene shortly thereafter.
In this series, vampires compulse people to have sex with them. Several people are made into vampire without their consent. S1E1: a man has anal sex a woman without her consent. S1E3: a protagonist watches people have sex without their consent. S1E5: the protagonist's 14-year-old daughter (turned into a vampire at 14 but at least 10 years older) is violently sexually assaulted by an older boy (20s). Most of the assault occurs after a fade to black, but she is still violently physically assaulted on screen and what happens is clear. It is mentioned that an uncle used to watch a little girl pee. It is discussed that a vampire in a 14 year old body (but who is older) only attracts young boys. S1E6: the young woman's rape is discussed again (with her), with veiled threats of it happening again. S2E3 contains more details about the previous sexual assault. S2E6 shows an attempted rape on screen.
A major plot point is that the protagonist and another character turn a five-year-old girl into a vampire. The protagonist's internal monologue indicates that she became a woman (psychologically) in that instant. The character grows mentally but always appears to be five years old. The protagonist has a sexual relationship with this character, but it is unclear when this started.
Into the Dark (TV Show)
S1E1: sexual assault is mentioned. S1E3: a woman's stalker comes to her new house, where he pins her to the wall and trheatens her while unbuckling his pants. She pretends to be willing to have sex with him so she can lure him to another room where she can attack him. S1E5: a woman is tricked into having sex with a man who she thinks is someone else S1E6: rape/sexual assault repeatedly mentioned. The male main character is revelead to have raped many women in the course of his life. He is then force by a coven of witches to be sexually assaulted, caged, and forced to wear women's clothes as he is antagonized by the coven. S1E7: sexual assault mentioned, unsolicited sexual pictures, necrophilia mentioned, hidden cameras above hotel beds. S1E10: rape on-screen (brief and non-graphic) and attempted rape. S1E11: rape mentioned. S1E12: sexual assault mentioned. S2E2: a teenage daughter and both her parents are changed into pilgrim clothes off-screen, against their will. S2E3: rape/sexual assault is mentioned and there is sexual harassment on-screen. S2E4: non-consensual kiss. S2E9: sexual harassment.
A woman is raped on-screen; her struggle with her attacker, as well as her subsequent injuries and trauma, are seen.
Introverted Boss (TV Show)
The boss, a secondary character, uses his power to rape his secretary: she commits suicide soon after. She did not consent, but was coerced. Yet, the narrative does not make that clear. The secondary character is softened and has his redemption at the end, and everything seems like just a mistake.
The Intruder (Movie)
A man grabs a woman and forces her to the floor while tearing at her clothes, as she tells him to stop (01:01:00-01:01:30). The scene stops at that point. Later, the same woman, in a distressed state tells a group of people that the man "forced" her, and that he has "put something inside" her (01:12:45-01:14:00).
Intruders (Movie)
The movie is centered around family secrets. Child sexual abuse is alluded to and discussed at multiple points throughout the film, most notably: Around 6:40, when a brother encourages his sister to forgive their father. Around the 1:07-1:08 mark, when a woman recounts her father’s child sexual abuse. For the rest of the scene, there is some dialogue about “fixing” other pedophiles. At the 1:16-1:17 mark, an intruder chokes a woman on the bed, while alluding to raping her. He calls himself daddy and makes other disturbing remarks, trying to provoke memories of her sexual abuse. It is unclear if his intention is to rape her, as he is interrupted, though his motivation seems to be about inflicting fear during her murder. The scene is upsetting. There is also an earlier scene where a woman urinates during a panic attack. One of the intruders is tasked with cleaning her up. He attempts to remove her soiled clothes and force her into clean ones. He is also interrupted.
Inuyashiki (TV Show)
S1E4: a man holds down another man and tells him to perform a blowjob on him. He briefly struggles and is then forced down to his waist. A woman is seen nude after being drugged: a man threatens to rape her, but is stopped.
It is mentioned that a patient was admitted to the asylum because his parents had molested him as a child, and that he killed them.
Issue n° 110: the protagonist is physically assaulted and raped by a woman that he was, until then, familiar with. She tells him to man up and coerces him to come back multiple times since "It" may take more than one session. The distress this causes him becomes a major plot point. She becomes pregnant by him and the protagonist eventually meets the offspring and realizes who the mother is.
In a few instances, the protagonist is cornered by men with bad intentions. She manages to escape. The protagonist is forced to prostitution as a way to survive starvation. Her experience is described in detail.
An abusively relationship is a center piece of the plot. At multiple points, the female protagonist is physically assaulted by an unseen antagonist. At 18:00, the protagonist explains that she took birth control to avoid getting pregnant when her partner assaulted her: it is strongly implied that she was frequently sexually assaulted by him. She then becomes pregnant and does not know how, implying that she was sexually assaulted.
IO (2019) (Movie)
A man is kissed forcibly without consent, and it is implied that he was later coerced into sex by a woman saying "we have to" after repeatedly kissing him.
Irma Vep (2022) (TV Show)
S1E5: an actor is shown on camera being chloroformed and felt up while she is passed out. Additionnally, the ethics of portraying a rape scene are discussed (also in S1E6).
In the book, the main character is influenced by another person using a magical artifact. The rape scene is vague enough but the scenes leading up and prior and disturbingly visual. The main character has no control of their actions and then the rape is discussed in detail, with main character still present, to a variety of friends and acquaintances moments after it happened. The main character is traumatized but the author uses that as a way to deepen the relationship between the main character and her love interest.
Iron Monkey (Movie)
The Irregulars (TV Show)
S1E4: three men rape a drunk woman in a bar.We see them going to a bed room and close the door. The rape is inferred because the woman gets syphillis from this encounter, the bar owner (who is paid to keep quiet) portrays her as a whore, and this encounter gives the woman the reason to kill all those men in a gruesome manner.
The graphic rape of protagonist by stranger is central plot point. The film focuses on the events after the rape of a woman in reverse-chronological order. A man says he slept with his daughter. There is also a attempted rape scene.
Isabel (TV Show)
S1E3: a rape occurs on-screen (08:00).
One character attempts to have another rape a woman. Another female character is also implied to be a sex slave.
This book takes place in Korea during World War II and a subsequent autocratic government. Rapes committed by Japanese colonizers and then by Korean soldiers and police officers are widespread and routinely mentioned. There is mention of Korean police officers forcing a man to rape his daughter in law at gunpoint. A group of soldiers cut off the breasts of a mentally disabled woman in front of her village before killing her. The protagonist’s best friend ends up in an arranged marriage to a physically abusive man.
The Isle (Movie)
Rape is an integral part of the narrative: the cause of the supernatural events in the story are due to a spirit taking revenge for her rape and accidental murder. The violent rape occurs on screen between 1:19:00 and 1:21:07, and discussions about it continue until 1:22:20.
A man and a woman have sex beginning consensually, but quickly turning negative. The woman repeatedly asks the man to slow down and to stop, but he ignores her and continues against her consent until completion. Afterwards, the woman is clearly traumatized by the event.
Ispansi! (Movie)
The descriptions of the film indicate that a woman is the main character of this story, however, the story is narrated and told from the point of view of a man. In one scene, he spies on the woman while she bathes and without her consent. In a later scene, while she is in mourning, he sexually assaults her and she, through tears, says she would like him to kill her when he is "done", implying that death would be better than having to live with the experience of this rape. He stops the assault and tells her she is already dead. A few scenes later the man says "I can't wait anymore" and initiates intimacy again with the woman. This time she reciprocates. Then they "fall in love" and get married. In summary, this movie suggests that stalking and violently assaulting a woman is a lead-up to a romance. The sexual predator is the narrator and hero of the story.
Ivalu (Short) (Movie)
A girl is molested by her father; the lead-up to the act and some related interactions are shown through the eyes of her sister, though the actual act is not shown.
This book contains regular references to abuse in a previous relationship and a detailed rape scene.
IZombie (TV Show)
S1E3: the main character is sexually harassed by someone slapping her rear at a party (flashback). S1E2: the main character tries to seduce her ex fiancé and another man in a police interrogation; later the same man follows her at an art gallery to tries to corner in the basement and attempts to rape her. An artist is revealed to have been murdered over the grooming of a teenager: it is not investigated and only the murderer has an issue with it. S2E4: flashback of woman looking in a mirror and getting groped from behind by her boss wanting 'service' for money. S2E11: sexual harassment from the main character to her boss by spanking him when he bends over a desk. S3E5: the main character sexually harasses an artist in an interrogation room. There are some more sexual harassment scenes speckled throughout the series other than these particular scenes. A woman is implied to have tampered with her birth control: her partner cries with the implications of rape by deception.
Jabberwocky (Movie)
A soldier harrasses and then grabs the genitals of a man who is dressed as a nun. Later a man is dragging a woman off, and looks like he is going to rape her (but no rape happens as she gets free).
Jack (Movie)
An adult woman makes out with a ten year old boy (1:23:49-1:24:01). He tries to get away and she kisses him again (1:24:12-1:24:16).
Jack & Diane (Movie)
There is sexual assault as a plot point, with a drunk girl being assaulted on-camera in a frat house.
Jack Frost (Movie)
A woman is raped to death by a snowman: it is played for laughs.
A man learns that he was sexually abused by a babysitter as a kid. Nothing is shown, just talked about.
Jackass 2.5 (Movie)
A man has a non-consensual prostate exam.
The Jacket (Movie)
This comedy portrays a fictionary matriarch kingdom where men are veiled and subjected to women's will. There are multiple sexual harassements, sexual assaults and rapes (off an on-screen) of men throughout, all played for laughs. The protagonist (a man) is groped and harassed several times, raped on-screen by a woman, and a group of women assault him and attempt to rape him before another man intervenes (who himself explains that he was regularly raped by these women). Near the end of the movie, there is also a scene in which he forces a woman to kiss him at gunpoint, but she eventually agrees to have sex with him. Forced marriage is an underlying theme of the film.
Jailbird Rock (Movie)
The female lead is almost sexually assaulted in the showers by another inmate but someone intervenes before it can fully take place.
Rape is mentioned as a common occurrence in the War on Terror. The protagonist is coerced to promise to marry a man and consummate that marriage, despite the fact that she doesn't want to. She ends up not having to consummate the marriage because their wedding is interrupted. Terrorists threaten to marry the protagonist's daughter, who is 15, to an adult man. This does not end up happening. A character's sexually harassing uncle is mentioned in passing.
Jamestown (TV Show)
A character is raped in the first episode, and it is a key plot point throughout the rest of the series.
Jamon Jamon (Movie)
The female lead is stalked and sexually harassed by a man paid to seduce her. He slaps her bottom without her consent, follows her, and forcefully kisses her in a public bathroom (where no one reacts to the assault). She eventually falls in love with him, and when her boyfriends discovers it, he attempts to rape her.
Jane the Virgin (TV Show)
A woman has sex with a man while impersonating her twin sister. It is never acknowledged as rape. The titular character has a consensual relationship with a college professor where she is a grad student. He is not her advisor at the time, and it is not against the school rules. It is later revealed to be a pattern of his, and even though all the sex appears to be consensual, there is a arc about how the power dynamic influenced decisions on having sex with him. At one point, a main character dates a woman just for her money. He actively chooses to lie and keep having sex with her even when she asks. People frequently hide their identity or motives when seducing people Two characters find out they are cousins right before a screen test to see what their romantic chemistry is. They try and kiss and it is awkward: the TV show producer says she would rather watch her parents kiss. During the story line with the professor, the protagonist tries to warn a current student, and the student thinks she is hitting on her. She trips and accidentally grabs the girls breasts. A main character says "cousins are sexy in Florida" after the failed screen test. Seasons 2 and 3: The protagonist's friends pay a stripper to surprise her in her office but instead he humps her in front of her class and she is clearly upset. A male character is kidnapped by his stalker and she tries to convince him to have sex: she forces herself on him even though he clearly does not want to. A man sues a woman for sexual harassment in retaliation when she broke up with him even though their relations were consensual. S4E17: incest joke.
Japan Sinks 2020 (TV Show)
The series contain two quite graphic attempted rape scenes: S1E3: a young adult woman is threatened by a man who takes his belt off and bears a stun-gun. She ends up beating him up with another woman. S1E5: a 14 year old girl fights off a potential rapist after he tried to come on to her.
Java Heat (Movie)
The film contains heavily implied pedophilia. A scene shows a man bathing a woman against her will.
Crimes of rape are mentioned fairly frequently throughout by the police officer. Rape is mentioned as if it is a sexual desire (for the victim) and not a crime.
The topic of this documentary series is the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein and related investigations. The sexual crimes committed by Epstein against minors are a central theme and are discussed frequently across all episodes, including some detailed descriptions of survivors' experiences.
Jellyfish (Movie)
The film contains a brief on-screen rape scene of a young girl.
The Jerk (Movie)
Jessica Jones (TV Show)
Rape, sexual assault and abusive relationship dynamics are central to the plot of season 1. The antagonist has the ability to control minds and employs this ability to coerce numerous women into abusive sexual relationships. One of these relationships results in an aborted pregnancy. The effects of this are shown through the protagonist, whose mind was controlled by the antagonist for eight months. Her character suffers from depression, PTSD and alcoholism as a result of this sexual and psychological abuse. In the season finale, the antagonist threatens to repeatedly rape the closest friend of the antagonist. An incestuous relationship between a brother and sister is hinted at but never made explicitly clear. In season 2, the protagonist continues to deal with PTSD, depression and alcoholism resulting from past events when she was mind-controlled and forced to enter into a sexual relationship with a man, who is now out of the picture. The fact that she was raped is mentioned several times, and is generally handled sensitively. S2E2: the protagonist's sister is a survivor of sexual assault. She was repeatedly sexually assaulted by an older man when she was a child/teenager. Their mother is aware of this, and in the present-day, even says that she trusts her daughter with him more than she would her daughter with the protagonist (around 45:33-46:00). On-screen, she tries to blackmail him for information and the topic of her past sexual assault is brought up. He essentially says that it wasn't rape and that he was the one being used. It is possible that he is still engaged in sexual abuse with underage girls. A friend of hers hears the conversation and confronts the man, who once again blames her and says it wasn't his fault. Conversations happen between approximately the 36:50-39:03 and 42:32-43:05 marks. S2E4: the protagonist says that she was raped, referencing past events that have already been discussed on the show. The protagonist and her sister once again confront the man who raped her sister when she was a child. The topic of this past sexual assault is brought up. S2E6: two characters have sex while one is under the influence of an unknown drug. S2E7: there is a flashback in which the protagonist finds her sister about to engage in a sexual act with a man who gave her drugs, and puts a stop to it (the sister is high during this encounter). S2E11: the protagonist repeatedly experiences hallucinations featuring the man who repeatedly raped her in the past, including: one where he briefly touches her while she is naked in the shower and one where they both reference the fact that he raped her (but the rapist makes it sound like they had consenting sex). S3E2: a guy drugs a woman he is on a date with, with the intent of raping her (23:00-26:18). She tries to resist, but she is unable to. Fortunately, a vigilante shows up and knocks the aggressor out. The vigilante then talks to the victim, who is not in her right mind and is scared, mentioning that the aggressor has done this before but got off on a technicality. The vigilante calls the cops and and the aggressor is arrested. S3E4: a pedophile has a room where he makes child pornography. The main protagonist locks him in that same room and calls the cops (11:35-12:30). He is later locked up. S3E9: a man with the power to sense the darkness in others, talks about the time he sensed it in his dad (27:30-29:15). He found out that his dad was sexually abusing his sister for years. He confronts his dad about it, which resulted in his dad being arrested. His mother overdosed on pills the same day and his sister blamed him, saying “it wasn’t his truth to tell.”
Jet Boy (Movie)
The 14 year old main character is a prostitute. One of his clients beats him with a belt off screen and he is scarred. His perception of sex and love is warped, which is shown throughout the moive, specifically with the man acting as his father figure throughout the film. On one occasion the boy begins to take off his clothes and get into the man's bed. Later in the moive the two are sleeping in the same bed and the boy touches the man in his sleep again assuming he wants to have sex. When the man wakes up and pushes him away he says, "you can fuck me if you want." The boy also reveles that his mother used to "sell him" and in a different scene he says that his mom used to have him watch while she had sex. He said "it turned her on and her boyfriends too." He also says that some of his mother's boyfriends used to molest him. In one of the final scenes the boy prostitutes himself again although once he tells the man, "i don't go all the way," the man begins aggressively kissing him. It is unclear how far his sexual assault went as the scene cuts to black and the next we see of the boy is him hiding in the bathroom.
The Jetty (TV Show)
There are various sexual relationships between adults and underage girls. On-screen moments seem to be mostly consensual despite the age. One of the relationships is portrayed as a normal thing. Worthy of note: In the last episode, a girl has on-screen sex with a man, because her friend asked her to. She does not seem to enjoy it and asks him to stop, which he does after she asks a couple of times.
The Jezebels (Movie)
Jigokuraku (TV Show)
Some characters are implied to have raped a young girl as part of their sexual practices towards each other.
The titular character tells his "psychiatrist" about being sexually abused by a 12 year old girl when he was a child (about 6 year old): the girl forced him to touch her genitals at multiple instances despite him asking her to stop. Upon discovering this at the time, his older sister blamed and physically punished the boy for this event. This is all illustrated through non-graphic flashbacks scenes.
Jinx, Mingwa (Book)
The main character is established to be a survivor of past sexual abuse. The first sexual encounter between the main two characters is violent, consistent asking to slow or stop is ignored, with triggering aggressive dialogue, and fully shown in the comic.
About 30 minutes in, there are jokes about the Catholic Church and their reputation for child sexual abuse, but nothing is shown or described in detail.
Part 1 "Phantom Blood" and Part II "Battle Tendency": a woman is forcefully kissed, against her will. In another scene, a character peeks through a keyhole to watch a character bathe without her permission or knowledge. In the first episode, there is a mention of crime involving the sexual assault of children. In episode 12, there is a scene where multiple women with baskets of food are groped and have their skirts lifted during a 'cavity search.' Part 3 "Stardust Crusaders": a young woman is almost raped by an orangutan, but she is saved. A character's sister is murdered, and a bystander claims that she was also raped. It is later implied that her attacker raped numerous women before her, as he claims that he had many girls who 'loved and admired' him, her being just one of them. In one scene, two men's bodies become magnetised, causing them to become caught in sexually suggestive poses. This is played for laughs, and they are fully clothed. One of the men's magnetization pulls up the skirts of two women. The man is upset by this, too. The two men later go into the women's bathroom to chase the Stand user, and accidentally open all the occupied stalls. A character is transformed into a child but retains the body of an adult man. He is bathed by an adult woman and is shown hugging her (clothed) breasts and clearly enjoying the experience. An antagonist forces lip contact with a woman (E2). One of the main characters has a backstory involving the rape and murder of his little sister (E5). Part 4 "Diamond is Unbreakable": a serial killer is said to have raped, mutilated and murdered young boys. At one point, a flashback of one of the boy's corpses is shown. It is implied that a teenage boy transforms himself into other people in order to have sex with copies of his crush; he explains that he only does this because he does not have the 'courage' to force himself on her. A man and a young boy are shown in a bath together; at first glance, this is a normal scene because they are father and son. However, the scene takes on a disturbing tone when it becomes apparent that the older man is actually a serial killer posing as the boy's father. Part 5 "Golden Wind": in episode 8, a graphic flashback scene shows one character stopping what appears to be a rape attempt. We see an intoxicated woman being beaten with her clothes torn: the assailant tells her not to resist. In episode 12, a flashback includes a professor who attempted to groom a young boy, with implications that he had sexually assaulted him before. The teenage boy is approached by this professor, who grabs his shoulders and offers to help with a test in exchange for sexual favours. In episode 17, a man harasses a woman who is alone on a train. His Stand forces itself onto the woman. The character's arms are shown and sounds are heard throughout. This narrative is continued throughout the episode as the woman becomes pregnant with the child of her attacker. In episode 34, all the protagonists switch bodies, and one of them keeps trying to scratch his testicles (i.e. his vagina now), and it angers the woman whose body he is in, who forces him to stop. In episode 36, an implied rapist swapped bodies with the cop who was arresting him, and uses it to harass a woman. Part 6 "Stone Ocean": two characters who do not know that they are siblings end up in a relationship and do kiss on-screen. However, nothing else sexual happens between them and their relationship ends not long after (episode 31). In the very beginning of the first episode, a female prisoner mentions that another prisoner is arrested due to sexual assault. Later, a female inmate is beaten by two men in an armored truck, looking for money. They start focusing on her breasts and how they will need to examine them, but are stopped before. It is a very uncomfortable and drawn out scene. In episode 6, a man rubs the leg of an unconscious woman. In episode 30, a villain searches an 11-year-old boy. Although not sexual at all, he moves the boy in slightly suggestive positions and stops immediately before undoing his belt. The scene of the villain's hands nearing the boy's belt is very close-up and may be upsetting. In episode 31, a man tries to forcefully kiss a 14-year-old girl and hold her as if she was about to be raped: he is unsuccessful. The male character is beaten as the female character is beaten, threatened, and told to give out kisses to the men holding her.
In Part 7, a rape scene involves a 14-year-old. She is disguised as her abuser's wife. However, even after it is revealed who she is, the man continues to rape her. In Part 8, a young man tries to rape his friend after her ability to distinguish faces has been lost.
Joker (Movie)
Three men are seen on the subway catcalling a woman and throwing food at her, as a result of which she is visibly uncomfortable. She later flees the scene and the three men are murdered. A man follows a woman from her apartment to her place of work. Although she is seemingly unfazed by this, the situation may be uncomfortable for some. The man later walks into the woman’s apartment and kisses her without invitation or provocation. Again, she is seemingly reciprocative. It is later revealed that all of their interactions were delusions in the man’s head, which occur whilst he walks her into her apartment and she is visibly frightened. A man puts his hands on a child’s face in order to make him smile. The scene is tense and uncomfortable. A man kisses a woman on live television. She is visibly stunned and is later jokingly asks “you ok, doc?” A character is revealed to have been abused by his step-dad.
The protagonist unconsensually kisses his lawyer several times throughout the movie. A love interest of the protagonist seduces him though he is presented as having a very loose grip on reality and later says that he impregnated her. It is mentioned in court proceedings that the protagonist was sexually assaulted as a seven year old. Prison guards are seen pushing the protagonist to the floor and removing his clothing, it then cuts to a scene of him being dragged to his cell in only his underwear in a state of shock and convulsions.
Joker Game (TV Show)
Jolt (Movie)
The entire plot of the movie if that the main character has sex with a man who is lying about his identity, so that he can trick her into falling for him. Worthy of note: the main character gets catcalled and is repeatedly touched on the leg by creepy men.
Jonas (Movie)
A character says that he was sexually assaulted as a child. It is revealed that this was a lie.
Jonathan Creek (TV Show)
S1E4: this episode implies that a teenage girl may have had a relationship or violent encounter with a much older rock star, but it turns out that this has not happened. S2E12 (Christmas special): a female character is murdered in a particularly gruesome way that involves gynaecological injury. A male character openly talks about deceiving a younger woman in an attempt to get her to sleep with him, because he fetishises her virginity, and hints that he is planning to put something in her drink (ie, may rape her). None of the other characters take any issue with this and it is treated as normal conversation between men. S3E1: a male character visits two prostitutes. S3E4: a woman is groomed and sexually assaulted by her much older uncle for many years starting when she was a teenager. We see him beating her onscreen while she describes their romantic and sexual relationship. She then tricks a man with amnesia into believing that he is her husband and they have been in love for many years and they have a sexual and romantic relationship based on her taking advantage of his amnesia. S4E6: this episode revolves around footage of a teenage girl's face as she winces in pain and breathes heavily. For most of the episode, viewers are led to believe that this is on-screen footage of her being raped by her uncle. It later turns out not to be a video of sexual violence, but that she was stabbed. Whether or not she was ever sexually abused by her uncle remains unclear. S5(Christmas special): in a film within the episode, multiple women are strapped to a wooden table, where it is implied that they are tortured and raped, though this is not shown onscreen. In the same film within the episode, another woman is shown screaming on a bed struggling to escape from beneath a man who is clearly about to rape her (although both are fully clothed and the rape is not shown onscreen, writing onscreen specifies that she will be a victim of his "lechery"). All of these depictions are heavily sexualised and clearly intended to be "titillating." In the context of the episode, these women are actresses in a tasteless film, rather than genuine victims of rape and torture.
The main characters are police detective consultants, and the story unfolds over two main cases and multiple secondary cases. No details of sexual assaults are described, but it is a running theme. One secondary case involves a short scene interviewing a pedophile while he is in jail for his crimes. One of the main cases involves a woman shooting a man who she falsely believes has been stalking her and attempting to extort her. The other main case involves hunting down a man who stalks, rapes, and kills young women.
Josep (Movie)
About 21 minutes into the movie, a female prisoner is raped by camp guards. We briefly see her being cornered and we mostly hear her muffled struggling. This is briefly refered to through a drawing near the end of the film (01:02:00). A couple of minutes later, a female singer is cat-called by members of the audience, and another woman grabs the bottom of the titular character (a married man).
It is heavily implied that a female character was being married/sold off to older men by her mother: nothing explicit is shown.
Joy (2018) (Movie)
In the third story, one of the women is invited back to another woman's house, who then allows her husband to rape her. We see the man approach the sleeping woman, rip of the bedsheets and get on top of her as she struggles. The woman returns to her own house and tells her family what happened but they do not believe her and kick her out. She later becomes pregnant through the assault, and her attacker and his wife take the baby boy to raise as theirs, whilst she returns to their house to become the 'Fourth Wife'.
Joy of Sex (Movie)
This show contains very graphic, violent and disturbing on-screen, off-screen, and implied sexual assault, rape and child sexual abuse. It is entirely founded on the first two episodes, in which the main character is set up to be raped (while being threatened with a knife). It is also revealed that she was raped by her father as a kid and that her mother blamed her for 'seducing' him: she gives birth to a child. In S1E1, an on-screen rape takes place between 25:30 and 25:39. In S1E2, an on-screen rape takes place between 00:25 and 3:00.
Judgment (Video Game)
There is an unskippable scene in the background of one of the very first lookout scenes where clear workplace sexual harassment is taking place. The player character cannot interact much besides bringing attention to it in his mind. It is mentioned pretty early, and brought back up later in the game that the player character's father helped acquit a man accused of raping and murdering a 15-year old girl (It is never confirmed if the man did it or not, but it is confirmed that the crime did take place). There is another unavoidable scene around a quarter into the game where the player needs to overhear a character discussing setting up and filming the gang rape of a young woman as blackmail for her father. Although the player beats them up, it is unknown if they do not go through with it, as the player is stopped from calling the cops. 3 out of 4 of the romantic relationships contains stalkers, perverts, or implied sex trafficking/prostitution. The player character is portrayed as a white knight who valiantly rushes in and beats the thugs who captured them, he is 35 and the girls are 19, 20, 27, and 29. There are skippable interconnected side stories which involve a group by the name of 'Twisted Trio': a man who steals woman's underwear, a man who gropes women, a man who films couples having sex, and a man who exposes himself to women. They all get arrested. There are other optional stories involving sexual harassment (a few ultimately turning out to be set-ups). There is also an unavoidable scene near the end where one of the main female characters sets herself up to be sexually harassed and assaulted by a man known for those things for the sake of blackmail (it was being filmed). In poor taste, the player character and his partner question if she was actually secretly into the whole thing.
A man is taken captive and forcibly undressed: men grab his penis painfully while he is tied up. Later, the man is fondled while just asking for food and water. The man later rapes a woman graphically on-screen.
A high school student has an affair with her teacher. An elementary school student is taken in photos against her will. S1E8: the main character is strongly implied to be raped while in a catatonic state.
The author describes a time when an adult man offered to pay to look at her breasts when she was a ten-year-old. Later, she and her sister confide to their mother that two of their father's adult cousins had touched them inappropriately. The author became pregnant at 17 when her boyfriend pressed her up against a wall while she was trying to leave his apartment, lifted her skirt, and initiated sex with her. The author specifically states that she felt that he didn't force himself on her. However, since she didn't really even know what sex was at the time, and since he didn't discuss what he was doing to her and blocked her exit as she was trying to leave, others may feel differently. When she is seeking acting lessons, a person who is interviewing her stares at her breasts and then tries to force a kiss on her. The author discusses her friendship with Bill Cosby, and how he never touched her, but not necessarily in a way that dismisses the women who have spoken out against him.
The protagonist is an intersex teenage boy. The premise is that he begins menstruating after years of presenting as and being accepted as a boy. A bunch of boys surround him after school one day and demand that he show them his genitals, but he gets away. A person the protagonist considered a friend touched his chest to see if he had breasts. Later, after the protagonist's mom cajoles him into presenting as female, a boy tries to force a kiss on her.
Just Cause (Movie)
Sexual violence against a child (who was murdered off-screen before the movie begins) is mentioned several times by lawyer, coroner, police, etc. Nothing is shown on-screen. Later, a criminal character verbally implies he intends to sexually assault a mother and daughter, but does not.
Just Charlie (Movie)
A girl left alone with two strange men at a party is trapped by one of them against a wall while he forcefully touched her under her dress. Worthy of note: this same girl is then beaten to the ground by a group of three men.
This whole documentary is about a man who molested and raped his daughters as children. There is frank and explicit discussions of these assaults from the survivors as well as discussions of continued incest in the family.
This is a memoir of a lawyer whose career has focused on reversing death sentences, particularly in cases of false accusations, incarceration of children, and incarceration of the mentally ill. The author highlights several cases that he worked on throughout his career. Throughout the book, the author references instances where his clients were falsely accused of rape, instances where his clients were raped or sexually assaulted in jail by either fellow inmates or by prison staff; and instances where his clients were victims of rape, sexual assault, child sexual abuse, and incest in their formative years before being arrested.
A character admits to the brutal assault and rape of a young woman.
Justified (TV Show)
Over the 6 seasons of the show, most instances for the above tags are mentions of criminal charges, stories from the past, or jokes. When on screen assaults happen, they are typically over quickly and not excessively violent. S1E2: a lawman jokes about another one getting raped. Two non first cousins are sleeping together. S1E4: while attempting to cross the border into Mexico ,a male guide threatens a woman with rape after they cannot pay his increased fee. S1E5: this episode mentions child rape and murder. S1E7: a man mentions "playing with" a woman's children when he is done with her. S1E10: someone makes a joke about their uncle molesting them. S1E11: statutory rape is mentioned. S2E1+2: a male character has past statutory rape charges. He harasses a 14 year old girl and ends up kidnapping her but she is rescued before she is assaulted. These events are discussed in E2. S2E2: an inmate who got pregnant by a guard is featured. S2E6: a male bank robber sexually harasses a woman during the robbery, making suggestive comments and running a hand up her leg. S2E8: rape is mentioned. S3E3+6+10+11: we see a man tied up and gagged wearing only boxers. It is not explicitly clear what happens to them but it is seen during unsettling scenes. S3E10: a man talks about how his father forced him into sex work when he was a child. S3E11: this episode mentions sex with a minor. S4E1: this episode features an underage teen trying to have sex with a full grown man and flashing a full grown man. S4E2-3: a child calls federal marshalls "perverts". S4E3: a man ties a woman to a bed and gets on top of her, straddling her. It is unclear if he just wants to her hurt or rape her. S4E4: this episode features a teen offering oral sex to a grown man. S4E6: this episode mentions rape of a minor. S4E7: there is an attempted assault while at a party where a man grabs a woman and tries to pull her from the room. Her boyfriend comes in before anything further can happen. S5E2: a male cop threatens and gropes a female witness. S5E4: a male guard at a woman's prison refuses to allow her to leave her cell. He tells her that she needs to strip and bend over the bed, but another guard comes in and takes the prisoner out before anything further happens. S5E7+8: prison rape is mentioned. S5E7+10: a male guard at a woman's prison has sex with a prisoner as payment for helping/allowing them to smuggle drugs into the prison. You can hear it happening in the background, but the assault is not seen. In E10 this is mentioned as something that multiple women were forced to do. S6E4: a prison rape joke is made. S6E5: another joke about prison rape is made.
Juvenile Justice (TV Show)
There are many implications of minors being involved in prostitution. There is an attempted rape on a minor, relatively early in the series. S1E8: a group-rape starts to be mentioned at the end of the episode. S1E9: this episode revolves around the rape started in S1E8. There are graphic descriptions of it, partly on screen.
K-11 (Movie)
K-12 (2019) (Movie)
There are two musical numbers about: a) men/boys sexually harassing girls; b) a high school student being sexually preyed on by an adult. Worthy of note: the main character is played by an actress who also directed and written the film, and who has sexual assault allegations against her.
Kaboom (Movie)
The following stories in the anthology involve sexual violence: "The Black Stain": individual rape and gang rape of an ethnically oppressed enslaved woman. "Spider the Artist": physically abusive marital relationship. "The Winds of Harmattan": a woman is physically restrained and raped by her husband. "Biafra": passing mention of rape under a military government regimes.
Kadaver (Movie)
About 22 minutes into the movie, two actors engage in very rough sex while doing a scene and a group of people watch them. It is implied that it is really consensual because they are only acting. It is shown again around 01:08:00.
KaDeWe (TV Show)
The rape scene was in a dream that the main character had about raping his sister. Apparently he did not want to do it but it just happened in his very vivid dream. There are also graphic sex scenes that involve the main character who is a young teenage boy and an older woman who he assumes is him mother.
Kaiba (TV Show)
This series takes place in a setting where people can transfer their consciousness between two different bodies using a memory chip, even if the former body dies, and there is an illicit but popular trade involving the theft and altering of memories. People selling their bodies for money while keeping their memories intact is a common recurrence throughout the show, and draws parallels between sex work for survival and objectification. S1E1: the protagonist, an adolescent boy, must transfer his body to a decoy body to evade detection, while a woman tasked with protecting him holds onto his original body. S1E2: the woman is revealed to have made a copy of her memory chip, and uses the protagonist's original body to have sex with herself. A minor antagonist illegally travels with women as stowaways on spaceships. It is revealed that he runs a human trafficking scheme, manipulating women into believing he is a loving partner so he can harvest their memory chips and bodies. S13: an adolescent girl sells her body to a rich purchaser in hopes of supporting her family. She plans to have her memory chip sent back home, but her memory chip is destroyed with her body intact. Two workers who are transporting her body to the purchaser briefly discuss why someone would want to own the body of an adolescent girl, and conclude that it is a rich man with pedophilic fantasies. Later, the protagonist (an adolescent boy) has his memory chip transferred to the girl's body out of necessity. An adult police officer falls in love with the girl (not knowing the boy is in her body), and the boy is not comfortable with any of the officer's advances, but agrees to stick with him so he can safely travel to other places. This dynamic is a prominent part of the show for most of the series, with the officer often fantasizing about romantic and sometimes sexual scenarios. It is mostly played for humor, but the officer is later reprimanded for his abuse of power, and his final moments with the girl's body are shown in a sympathetic light. S1E6: the protagonist meets the deuteragonist, who is a girl stuck in the body of a male robot with bombs for hands. The deuteragonist has to ask for help urinating due to not having hands; both parties are uncomfortable with this, but agree to it out of necessity. Later, the deuteragonist tries to kiss the protagonist in his sleep, but she stops herself, as she wonders if she is feeling the emotions of the body and not herself. S1E10: brief mention of a councilor abusing his power to collect the bodies of young children, using them for his own pleasure. He is ordered to be executed as punishment.
This book takes place in a fictionalized ancient India. The protagonist is someone who we might call asexual today, but obviously that terminology is not used. She is forced into an arranged marriage and is very uncomfortable with sex. There are allusions to her basically being forced to have sex so her husband can produce heirs. She dissociates when this happens. In one scene, a child says that women are supposed to only show themselves to their husbands and that women who participate in public life are whores. He repeats this from an adult who said it. Throughout, there are mentions of intimate partner abuse, but the protagonist does not experience this herself.
Kajarya (Movie)
At roughly the 19-minute mark, a main male character rapes a drugged woman who he has beaten. She is not shown in the scene.
Kakegurui (TV Show)
S1E4: the main character is strangled and threatened with rape. She is eventually rescued and nothing happens.
Kalifornia (Movie)
This film is about a couple working on an illustrated book about famous serials killers, while unknowingly carrying a serial killer (the antagonist) and his girlfriend with them. Early in the film, it is mentioned on two occasions that a female serial killer was raped by her father as a child. Throughout the film, the antagonist acts increasingly threatening towards one of the female characters. When they stop in a motel, he watches her getting dressed until she notices, and then sneaks into her room, pretending to help her with her luggage. Nothing further happens. The antagonist's girlfriend explains on two occasions that his boyfriend is abusive, stating among other things that he whips her "when [she is] bad". She then reveals that she feels safe with him because she was raped by three boys, who beat her and sent her to the hospital for four months when she was 13. During a bar scene, a man grabbs a waitress, who rebuffs him. The main male character, fascinated with serial killers, plays a real audio tape of a woman who was kidnapped by one: we hear her crying, begging for her life, screaming, and then presumably being killed. He listens to this despite his girlfriend being distressed by the behaviour of the antagonist (a serial killer himself). The maim male character's girlfriend then takes photographs of the other couple having sex without their knowledge. When the antagonist notices it, he gets aroused and ignores his girlfriend saying that he is hurting her. At a gas station, the antagonist violently grabs the main character's girlfriend when she discovers that he is indeed a killer. After that, the antagonist takes them all as hostages and ends up killing his own girlfriend and taking the other woman as his "new girlfriend". He brings her to a secluded place to rape her: he fondles her breasts and bottoms while she stays petrified. She then stabs him but he pins her down on a bed and handcuffs her before raping her off-screen. She is shown the morning after, traumatized.
Kamisama Kiss (TV Show)
The main romantic relationship takes place when the main female character is 17 and the main male character is over 600 years old. The girl forces a kiss on him to in turn make the man her attendent/servant. They get married later in the series and have children. The main female character makes transphobic comments towards a gay man in the series by use of Japanese transphobic slurs. The main female character is kidnapped by one of the other male characters later in the first season.
Kanamemo (TV Show)
One college-aged young woman is a pedophile who frequently harasses, gropes, leers at, and fantasizes about middle-school and younger aged girls, primarily those who are her coworkers. Despite being played for laughs and usually resulting in physical punishment for the character, it comes off as creepy.
Kandisha (Movie)
The opening scene of the movie is a very graphic rape scene.
Karla (Movie)
There are multiple instances of on-screen rape.
Karma (TV Show)
KARMA: the Dark World (Video Game)
While the game does not outright say that the character "Rachel Weis" was once being sex trafficked by her parents, it is quite obviously told through her memories and letters found surrounding her life. It is unskippable, since in order to access her memories further, the player needs to "help" her parents keep her home to "feed" their business. None of the helping is real, only symbolism in her head to prevent the protagonist from venturing further.
Katla (TV Show)
S1E3: in the end of the episode, there is an ambiguous scene where it seems like a caretaking husband might sexually take advantage of his bedridden wife, but in the end only imagines it and does not actually do so. Parts of his imagination is shown on screen.
The Keep (Movie)
A female character is grabbed by two soldiers, has her underwear removed and is then raped by one soldier while the other one holds her. The rape is interrupted by a supernatural presence.
The entire premise of this series is sexual abuse.
The Keepers (TV Show)
The sexual abuse of children is the central topic of every episode. A woman talks about how her uncle sexually abused her as a child. Women talk in detail about how they were raped as teenagers.
This movie is about two soldiers attacking three women in order to rape them. There are thus multiple scenes where the latter are in dangerous situations, with the constant threat of being raped. The film opens with a woman running out of a carriage after having been raped (her clothes torn and a soldier zipping up his pants coming after her): she, and another female witness, are killed. A young woman is raped on a bed at gunpoint until he is killed by another woman. The scene is graphic and the young woman is visibly very distressed afterwards. A slave woman recounts rape at her master's hands when she was a child, as well as subsequent pregnancies.
Kemono Jihen (TV Show)
S1E7+8: the mother of a character is shackled onto a table, being raped by a monster. It is implied that she was systematically raped by different monsters as an experiment. S1E10-11: the twin brother of a character is implied to have grown up being repeatedly raped by the women in their village, with whom he shares a father.
Ken Park (Movie)
Khauf (TV Show)
Kick-Ass 2 (Movie)
The villain prepares to rape a secondary female character but fails to get an erection.
Kickboxer (Movie)
A rape is implied after a woman's shirt is ripped open by two men. She is later seen crying.
The movie starts with a woman running away, she is captured and brought back to a room that is filled with other girls, and she is then killed for running away. The discussion implies that she and the others have been forced into sex work. Later an underage girl was singled out and kidnapped by the same man from the beginning of the movie. Off screen she is forced to undergo a medical check to confirm she is a virgin and arrangements are made to sell her but then she and the other girls are rescued.
A man kidnaps a woman in order to hurt her husband. He pins her down and rips open her dress as she screams and in the next scene her husband is given pictures that aren't clearly seen on screen but are implied to be after her assault. A woman continues to kiss a man after he tells her that he doesn't want to sleep with her.
A teenage girl is beaten and captured by her uncle who tells her brother that he intends to traffick her. She is later found in a brothel having been trafficked. She is clearly distressed. The uncle talks about raping her and that he didn't due to them being related, but another man he knows did. She is rescued.
Near the end of the movie, we find out that a man kidnapped, raped, and impregnated a child.
Kidding (TV Show)
S1E3: the episode starts by showing a woman having sex and clearly not enjoying it. She later explains that she was prostituting herself to get drug. S1E5: two children discuss what happened to a kid who got kidnapped and molested. At this very moment, the grandfather of one of them drives-by and calls his grandson in. He gets into the car while the other kid, unknowing of who the adult is, panicks and calls for help. The scene is played for laughs. S1E9: a woman (a main female character) forces a man to have sex with her. We hear him repeatedly saying 'no' off-screen during the act. S2E6: the brother of the man raped in S1E9 denounces the rapist in front of a crowd and chases her while yelling that she raped his brother. After that, another man says that he also would like to be raped. This is all played for laughs.
Kids (1995) (Movie)
Follows a group of teens who fixate on performing sexual acts on virgins and pre-teen girls. In one of the final scenes of the movie, a boy rapes an unconscious girl on-screen.
Kidulthood (Movie)
Most of the sex scenes in the movie are consensual but frequently involve adult men and teenage girls. Multiple sexual acts are performed under pressure.
Kika (Movie)
Rape, voyeurism and sexual abuse are main themes of the movie, and are often discussed. A scene shows a very violent rape scene at knife point, ambiguously played for laughs. A lesbian character has been forced to be her brother's way of 'blowing off steam' throughout her life.
Kikujiro (Movie)
A child is abducted by a pedophile and is almost forced to take off his underwear, but one of the main character saves him.
A man attempts to rape the protagonist while she is in a coma, but is killed before that. However, it is implied that she has been raped many times before. A Japanese teenage girl asks a Japanese man if he wants to have sex with her. In the anime segment of O-Ren Ishii's parents' deaths, it is said that boss Matsumoto is a paedophile.
A man makes a joke about having sex with a pre-teen. There is a mention of a time in the past where a high school girl and her boyfriend intentionally put the football coach in a compromising situation and took photos of it as a means to blackmail him. It is mentioned that a man was molested by his parents when he was a boy. Later he states that the therapists he saw after also molested him.
Kill La Kill (TV Show)
A character is briefly groped by her mother. It is implied that there is further sexual abuse. A student is sexually harassed by a teacher and it is played off as humorous.
Kill List (Movie)
There is a video - not seen by the audience - where someone is screaming. It is not explicitly clear if there is a sexual element to the torture the person is experiencing. In the next scene, the person who keeps the video is called a pervert though again it is unclear if the video has a sexual abuse element or if he is sexually gratified from the violence.
Kill Teaser (Movie)
There are two sexual assault scenes: one very strongly implied (the beginning is shown), the second on screen (very graphically). First, the assaulted person is manipulated into believing it was her fault: she thus ends up going back to the man and being assaulted a second time.
This documentary follows the journey of the father of a 13-year-old girl who was violently gang-raped as he seeks justice for his daughter.
One of the protagonists is stalked, groomed, and sexually abused by an adult who has been blackmailing him into a relationship since he was 12. The same character later feels pressured into kissing someone else. There is also a brief scene where the older man grabs hold of the younger in an attempt to rape him. A different character has sex with a stranger. Later in the movie. It is not clear if he is an enthusiastic participant or if he feels forced. It should be noted that at the end of the movie, the survivor kills his abuser, but he is not extended sympathy or understanding from the other characters. The movie attempts to portray the killing as a tragedy between lovers in a crime of passion. The survivor is betrayed by his best friend, who chooses to believe the relationship was consenting and that the crime was not in self defense. He does not help his friend write his defense, leading to his friend being sent to prison. This is treated like the right thing to do.
On the way back to a woman's house, thugs try to rape her, but the protagonist overpowers the men and she remains safe.
A college student is hit on by her professor who tries to kiss her. When she attempts to leave his office, she finds the door locked. The professor tells her "this is what you want. Maybe you like things a little bit rougher" while caressing her and pulling her jacket off. He grabs her roughly and pins her arms, forcing her against a will. She begs him to stop while he starts kissing her arms and shoulder. She kicks him in the genitals. He calls her crazy and unlocks the door to his office. As she tries to leave he grabs her face, roughly telling not to tell anyone. Threatening "one word and you're finished. Your writing career will go down the fucking drain" before he lets her leave.
Killer Joe (Movie)
The titular character assaults a woman and forces her to simulate oral sex on a chicken drumstick.
S1E3: a group of people (including a detective) watch a tape which shows a rape happening (at the 42:00-44:00 minute mark). Season 3 is focused on rape and prostitution (most of the girls are underage). S3E2: a character is captured. The camera cuts away but it is heavily implied that she is raped by her captor (about 37 minutes in). S3E3: police find multiple home pornography videos of underage girls. Rape is never explicitly shown, but some of the videos include girls crying and a man (of-screen) asking if they are virgins. Clips of these videos are shown throughout the season. S3E4: an underage male is forced to have sex with his parole officer. The actual rape is not shown. S4E3+4: a sexual relationship between a high-schooler and an adult is discussed. Episode 4 also includes a high-schooler implying that his mother forced him to be sexual with her. S4E5: later in the episode, a hazing ritual is shown where boys are forced to masturbate to photos of their mothers while other boys watch.
Killing Eve (TV Show)
In the first season of the show, it is mentioned one of the main female character had a sexual relationship with her French teacher when she was a teenager. S2E7: one if the main characters starts to have sex with their younger coworker while they are asleep and making him an unconsenting part of a 'threesome'. S3E4: one of the main characters watches as the other main character has sex with her husband without the partners knowing or consent. The character that acts as this voyeur brings it up later by saying something like 'you need to close your curtains'.
Stalking is an ongoing theme throughout this title. The book contains frequent major acts of violence as well as allusions to childhood sexual abuse committed by a parent against their child. There is a scene where a someone is raped by their uncle and another one where someone is raped by their mom. It is in very graphic detail.
Kimi (Movie)
The main plotline centers around a person who hears a recording of a woman being murdered: on the recording, the woman accuses a man of raping her. It is later revealed that the main character had previously been assaulted and suffered anxiety from the event.
SPOILERS: The plot of the film revolves around a woman with amnesia, haunted by the spirits of unknown children as well as that of her father who committed suicide. It is revealed her true father was a serial killer who abducted and killed several children. Sexual violence is implied. At 01:24:00, the protagonist goes to the serial killer's house in search of her abducted baby. She finds a tied up child that is wounded, implying she may have already suffered abuse.
The premise of the book is that the protagonist keeps being sent back in time to save the life of her ancestor, who was a slaveholder. In her journeys to the past, she realizes that, in order to protect her own existence in the future, she has to ensure that her slaveholder ancestor rapes her enslaved ancestor so that the latter will bear a child. This does end up happening, and the enslaved ancestor commits suicide after giving birth. Towards the end of the book, the slaveholder ancestor attempts to rape the protagonist. She fights him off and kills him. Towards the beginning of the book, a slave patroller tries to rape the protagonist, but she escapes.
The premise of the book is that the protagonist keeps being sent back in time to save the life of her ancestor, who was a slaveholder. In her journeys to the past, she realizes that, in order to protect her own existence in the future, she has to ensure that her slaveholder ancestor rapes her enslaved ancestor so that the latter will bear a child. This does end up happening, and the enslaved ancestor commits suicide after giving birth. Towards the end of the book, the slaveholder ancestor attempts to rape the protagonist. She fights him off and kills him.
A character visits her ex-husband for a drink and he drugs her and we see the sexual assault of her lifeless body on screen (01:40:00-02:45:00). She is subsequently punished by the cult that she is in for “having sex”.
King Arthur (Movie)
A warrior is stopped from raping a woman.
King of the Hill (TV Show)
S2E14: a flashback scene shows a teenaged boy being forcibly kissed against his will by a teenaged girl. His wife finds out about the incident and views it as cheating rather than sexual assault. S3E16: a man is raped by a dolphin and is paid by the establishment where it happened to prevent him from reporting it. A woman working at the same establishment is sexually harassed by male patrons. S4E23: a character is manipulated by their doctor into creating sexual fetish material under the guise of creating empowerment videos. The videos are posted to an internet porn site without their consent.
There are discussions in this book regarding a character being raped by the former king. It follows the same thread as the other books and does not go into detail about it. There are discussions of another character being forced to marry as a 9 year old, but she escapes before it can take place and there is no assault that happens.
A man enters a woman’s sleeping quarters. She holds a knife to his throat and tells him to go. Once released, he reminds her of his position as a soldier. The rape is off-screen, though she has substantial bruising on her hands, as well as some facial injuries, in the following scene. The scene (starting at 50:50) is handled sensitively, with an abrupt cut before further physical contact between the woman and her abuser.
There is a flashback showing a man breaking into a woman's apartment and raping her. A woman recognizes a man who sexually abused her when she was a child. There is no assault shown, but there is a flashback to him walking her into a closet and it is discussed later in the movie. The same man takes another child and begins to unbuckle his belt but he is stopped before anything further happens.
The protagonist and her siblings are cyborgs with a similar role to Disney princesses in Disneyland. The protagonist often observes men staring at her inappropriately, or hears them make inappropriate comments about her appearance. In one instance, the protagonist has a dream about one of her sisters' sexual assault experiences. We later find out that the cyborgs are offered as sexual partners to powerful men. The cyborgs then have their memories erased.
Kingdom of Valor (TV Show)
S1E10: one character is taken in a cave and implied to be raped. Another character arrives in the cave and he screams and begs for help while his captors laugh and mock him (saying "his dignity is gone" and "I guess he's less of a man now". It is played off like a joke. After that, his skin sports a torn cloak and multiple bloods spots. He becomes suicidal and talks about killing himself several times. His captors then discuss them doing it again. When confronted about this, the series creator, says that the series was very funny.
This book has substantially less reference to and portrayals of rape in it than the previous two books and has no on page rape. Chapter 2: the man torturing one of the protagonists alludes to his desire to rape that protagonist in the past - but there is no explicit mention of that in this chapter. Chapter 16: this chapter reveals the protagonist's sexual abuse as a child from a family member. This reveal is not done in a way considerate or respectful of his trauma and his right to divulging information regarding his abuse given that it’s his abuser doing the revealing solely to upset and throw off the other protagonist. The above mentioned material is also present in chapter 17.
All mentions of rape/sexual assault are past events mentioned in passing, without vivid descriptions. A princess is rescued from an attempted rape and she later has (consensual) sex with one of her rescuers. It is mentioned that a character’s mother was sold to a brothel as a child, and implied that the was the product of a rape (the mother immediately murdered the father).
A male spy has sex with a woman with the intention of inserting a tracking device into her vagina which she does not know about and does not consent to. We see a full screen close up of him putting the tracking device into her without her consent, and then we see it travelling inside her vagina as it rapes her. Then we get a scene of a group of people at computers talking about the tracking device inside her.
In two occasions the main couple has intercourse when one of them is intoxicated. A secondary character drugs and attempts to assault one of the mains on both of these occasions before the intercourses.
A man touches a woman and she tells him to stop. He persists and starts to take off her cardigan, but she stabs him before he can do anything more.
Kiss in the Dark (TV Show)
A man is in a sexual relationship with his teenaged nephew, who thinks his uncle is his biological father.
Kiss Me Again (TV Show)
The Kitchen (Movie)
A man tries to rape one of the female main characters, but is shot dead by a third party before he can do so.
Kite (1998) (Movie)
A school girl has been groomed and trained to become an assassin by a corrupt detective after her parents were brutally killed. Said detetcive raped her for the first time when she was a very young teen and at some point they entered a sexual relationship. He rapes another girl at one point as well. In the uncensored version, the on-screen rapes all feature underage girls and are very graphic with full frontal nudity (one girl has tape across her mouth and is crying and audably making noise).
A protagonist is violently raped by a much older boy when he is a child. The scene is not graphic, but it is unambiguous, and the incident is heavily discussed for the rest of the narrative.
A young boy is raped by an adult man.
The Knick (Movie)
S1E1: because of an urgent situation, a nurse has to inject cocaine into the protagonist (a male doctor)'s penis while he is in distress. S1E2: a female character (a nun) is revealed to perform illegal abortions. One male character shames her for it in the next episode. S1E3: the episode starts with a woman explaining how she contracted syphilis because of her cheating husband, how she lost her nose from it and has to live with it as a social stigma. A main (married) character is revealed to entertain a relationship with a prostitute: we see them together in bed. S1E4: one of the recurring characters, who is a pimp, has two new prostitutes to show their naked body to him, and then forces them to have sex with two of his employees. S1E6: in the opening sequence, the protagonist hires two prostitutes to test medical material and procedures on their reproductive system. They appear naked and not distressed. A woman says that a woman she has just helped abort was raped by her boss. In the last scene, a man enters the room of his (adult) daughter-in-law while she is getting undressed, makes creepy comments to her (suggesting that he is expecting sexual favors from her in the future) and kisses her on the cheek: she is left visibly shocked. S1E7: in the last scene, a nurse engages an intimate relationship with her boss (the protagonist) by inviting him home. S1E9: a man asks a main female character to put her foot in his mouth during a sexual act, in exchange of drugs for her drug-addict lover. It is implied that she accepted to do it off-screen. This is referred to again in S2E9. S1E10: a woman getting an abortion (off-screen) is slut-shamed by the man driving her to the operating room. A pimp enters a room where a client is having sex with a prostitute: one of his henchmen punches his penis. A recurring theme of season 2 is the adoption by one character (a doctor) of eugenics theories: he thus performs vasectomy on dozens of young children deemed "idiots" without their approval. S2E2: a doctor accepts to freely examine prostitutes for obvious unprofessional (i.e. sexual) reasons. S2E3: a man hits on a female colleague despite her clear disinterest. A preacher beats up his adult daughter after she publicly confessed her sins: he ends up spanking her. S2E6: women (some of whom are financially obliged to prostitute themselves) discuss the fact that men, despite agreeing to 'pull out' during sex, do not and impregnate them. One man implies that he is prostituting two Siamese women he is exploiting in a freak show. They later confirm it, visibly distressed. They are then saved by the protagonist. S2E7: the father-in-law figure from S1E6, who had people spy on his daughter-in-law, enters in her room and act threateningly towards her while touching her shoulders. She is paralyzed by fear and then tells her husband that she wants to leave the house (since they are momentarily obliged to live in the father-in-law's house). However, she learns that it is not possible. The women from the previous episode discuss how to protect themselves from men: the discussion is about contraception, but another character enters the room and mentions how they could also physically fight men off. S2E8: a recurring male character tries to kiss a recurring female character after they spent an evening together and expressed their appreciation for each other. She rebuffs him and leaves. This is referred to in the next episode, since they live together as roommates. S2E10: despite the rebuttal from S2E8, the man asks the woman to marry him. She refuses. He later confesses to someone else that he set her up (making her loose everything in her life) in order to be with her. She eventually agrees to marry him.
Knock Knock (Movie)
Two women gain entry to a man's home by telling him that they are stranded and need help. The two women claim to be fifteen years old for the majority of the movie, although this is later revealed to be a falsehood. The film centres around their abuse of him following this. Explicit and arguably gratuitous rape scenes, extended sexual harassment throughout. In one scene, the man is forced into having intercourse with one of the women through the use of blackmail. Although he seems to enthusiastically cooperate with her sexual demands, it is clear that he did not freely choose to have intercourse with her. During a sexual encounter, one of the main female characters reveals that her own father sexually abused her as a child and repeatedly refers to the main male character as her "Daddy," becoming extremely upset and violent as she recalls her trauma.
This book is the memoir of Chanel Miller, the woman who was raped by Brock Turner. The book discusses details of the investigation of the rape, her memories surrounding it, court cases, and how the experience affected her psychologically. The author describes in detail the times she has been catcalled and sexually harassed before her assault. Throughout, she references news stories such as rape allegations against Bill Cosby, the #MeToo movement, Donald Trump’s statements on sexual assault/allegations against him, Anita Hill’s allegations against Clarence Thomas, and Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations that Brett Kavanaugh attempted to rape her. Quotations expressing rape apologism and victim blaming are frequent leveraged against the author and other survivors are frequent throughout the book.
Kodomo No Jikan (TV Show)
A nine-year-old girl sexually harasses and pursues a sexual relationship with her adult teacher. The adult teacher accidentally gets into suggestive situations with children, such as noticing a young girl's large bust. The mother of the girl was involved in a romantic relationship with her own cousin. Two children have sex with each other, not knowing what sex is. The female child of this pair becomes pregnant.
Koi Kaze (TV Show)
The serie is the story of how a 15-year-old and her 28-year-old brother fall in love with each other. There is off-screen sex.
Kokkoku (TV Show)
A woman is retained by a trio in a forest as their dog licks her private parts. A large man forcefully slow dances with an unconsious woman while her pants are dropped, and her underwear partially up. A man s shot on his private parts. An old man touches the buttocks (only covered in underwear) of an unconscious woman. Multiple torture methods used are sexual of nature.
Kpax (Movie)
S1E3: multiple characters have sex while under a demonic influence. The lack of consent is strongly implied and it is treated as horrific in-narrative.
Krysar (Movie)
A woman is harassed by a man who is infatuated with her and who keeps showing up at her house with jewelry to impress her. She continually rejects his advances, and he keeps, literally coming up to her in an aggressive fashion. Later, this same woman is gang raped and murdered by a group of drunk men off-screen, including the guy who harassed her earlier.
This is a roleplaying game rulebook which contains various detailed examples of onscreen and offscreen rape.
Kung Fu (TV Show)
Season 1: a main character is sexually assaulted by her boss and extorted into signing an NDA for money. Later, another character is going to work for this boss. She decides to step forward. The subject is handled well, with lots of nuance: everyone believes the victim and is very supportive. S2E6: the rape from season 1 is mentioned. In another episode, fraternity brothers roofy women, have sex with them, and then use the tapes as blackmail. A whistleblower is doped which results in his death.
Kurage Hime (TV Show)
After a sexual assault, a character retreats to be alone and the movie portrays her reaction respectfully. The sexual violence in the village is treated in character as a norm; the movie does not make a joke out of it or treat it gratuitously.
The L Word (TV Show)
There are on-screen sexual assaults/rapes in multiple episodes of this show, though some of the actresses involved and the show's creator have denied that they are rapes/assaults. That said, they may be triggering to some viewers. S1E8: a woman sexually assaults a man by forcing him to have intercourse despite the fact that he says no multiple times, expressing that he would rather use a strap-on because he identifies as lesbian. S1E14: a woman rapes her girlfriend after she found out she had been cheating on her with another woman (51:52-53:29). In season 2, an overarching theme is a man videotaping a couple's sexual encounters without their consent. Child abuse is also strongly implied. S2E1: a woman gets woken up with sex. S4E11: a trans character is coerced into receiving oral sex after he expresses his discomfort multiple times.
La Bamba (Movie)
Two little boys climb a water tower to watch a woman shower. A man tries to pressure his girlfriend to smoke weed to “put action” in their love life. She gets upset and hides in her bedroom to cry and try to sleep. He slams on the door and breaks into her room to rape her. After he is done raping her, she cries and asks if that’ i all he wants her for. She then tells him she is pregnant and he leaves her. The same man crashes at his brother’s house and gets in bed to sleep. He tells his brother turn around and face him because he says he is so messed up he might mistake his butt for his girlfriends implying that he is so drunk he would rape him. The same man mentions to his brother that he “almost has to rape her” to have sex. His brother changes the subject. The same man tries to pressure his brother who is 16 years old to have sex with prostitutes. The same man gets aggressive with his girlfriend at a party while she is holding their baby because she will not dance with him while he is drunk. He intends on beating her, but other men step in to stop him from hitting her. The same man drunkenly tries to break in and see his daughter and claims he wants to his wife. His wife says he just wants a “love slave”. Out of aggression, he throws a bottle at a window and breaks it. Worthy of note: A woman mentions that she is tired of men hitting her.
This film contains very violent rape scenes: there are flashbacks throughout and the protagonist has intense PTSD.
La Ciociara (Movie)
In one of the first scene of the movie, the main female protagonist is raped by the best friend of her late husband after he locked her in his basement. After that, when she explains 'regretting' the sexual relationship, he jokingly slaps her bottom. At multiple occasions throughout the film, the woman is later catcalled, groped, or put in threatening position by men. Near the end of the movie (taking place in World War II Italy), the main protagonist and her teenage daughter are beaten and raped by a group of soldiers. They are shown afterwards badly hurt and shocked, and the crime is dismissed by the superiors of the soldiers. After that, an adult man takes them both abord his truck, and explains that his girlfriend is 15 years old. It is implied that he then tried to seduce the daughter off-screen.
Domestic abuse perpetrated against women by men is a major theme through the entire movie. While a lot of the focus is on one character’s personal vendetta regarding domestic abuse, it is still abundant through the entire film. About halfway through the movie there is a scene with a young woman who has been beaten and sexually assaulted. The woman is tied to a bed, and the imagery of her bruised face and arms tied to the bed frame are very graphic. She is saved: no nudity is shown. Before and after this scene, the assault of the young woman is discussed and the word “rape” is specifically used.
Throughout the film, a man tries to "seduce" a woman with techniques such as getting her drunk, kidnapping her, etc. At one point he tries to make her jealous by flirting with another woman, whose behind he touches without her consent. However, this woman is seduced by him and later forces him to have sex with her by locking him in her room: this scene is very short, off-screen, and played for laughs.
This movie has a couple of "orgy" moments which are not graphic. The participants are on acid so they are mostly just giggling and rolling around. There is a female character who does not want to participate in the orgy but she is being coerced: the film does not show what ends up happening, as the scene cuts. There is also an attempted rape which involves ripping of clothing.
A man states that his nanny 'always rapes him'. A woman climbs on top of a man when he is clearly unwilling and humps him. A woman is made to show off her naked body to a man, even though she keeps refusing.
Note: the story revolves around prehistoric humans who do not possess modern language or culture, making boundaries and sexual consent muddled and uncertain. A male neanderthal sneakily follows a small group of females, then begins having sex with one as she is bent over to drink water. The female seems surprised, but does not appear to be in distress. The other females do not react. A man tries to initiate sex with a woman, who pushes him away. A different male then grabs her and has sex with her as she seems to scream and protest. The scene is not long, but is graphic. The woman does not appear traumatized afterward, but it does not seem like she wanted the contact either. The same man and woman begin having sex again, this time seemingly consensually. The woman protests at first, but only because she wants to change positions. A man is captured by another tribe, who then make him have sex with several of the tribe's women. The man does not seem distressed or bothered by this, and the women are clearly interested.
It is implied that one character was molested as a child by her priest. This same person also discusses having an incestuous relationship with her dad. She is also catcalled at one point. A guy tries to forcibly plant kisses and embraces onto two other guys despite them pushing him away.
Towards the beginning of the movie, a woman is sexually harassed by men verbally. It becomes physical and they threaten to rape a man as well, restraining him. A woman with a gun stops them before it goes further.
La Mif (Movie)
There is a sex scene early on between a 14 year old boy and 17 year old girl. The girl is charged by the police for rape for this act, though it is discussed throughout the film if this act can be considered consensual. A teenage girl mentions that she had sex with a 29 year old man. A young girl talks about how she was raped by her father. It' i later revealed that she was lying about this.
La Nina (TV Show)
Though the rape happens before the series' events, there are multiple flashbacks that detail it. Though they are non-graphic, they are potentially distressing to watch and the discussion of the rape is a major overarching plot throughout the show, as they try to arrest the man who violated the character.
This film is based on the true story of a serial rapist who sexually assaulted over 90 women between the 1980s and the 2000s. The rape scenes are numerous and all of them are extremely graphic (deliberately shot in a horror/gore-esque vein) and instances of oral rape are explicit and show the genitals of the perpetrator. The overall atmosphere of the film is opressive and the sound design is anxiety inducing. On top of all that, there are numerous instances of victim-blame. At the end of the film, they show (graphically) the very first attack of the rapist in the 1980s, and we later find out that the said victim is underage. Altough the crudeness of the film was intentional, in order to show the horrors of sexual violence and even though the graphic scenes were discussed by the director with actual victims (they agreed on the explicitness of the scenes), it was not without controversy. The target of this film is not victims of sexual abuse but people who need to reflect on it.
La Notte (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, a man visiting a patient in a hospital is grabbed by a sick woman, who is clearly not in her right mind. She takes him in her room, kisses him and gets naked on her bed. He joins her until they are interrupted by nurses. He later confesses to his wife that this encounter was unpleasant. In the final scene of the movie, the man's wife tells him that she does not love him anymore. After she reads him a letter a love letter he wrote years earlier, he kisses her and initiates sex despite her protests.
This film follows a surgeon attempting to recreate his late wife by forcefully performing sexual reassignment surgery on a victim. About 30-40 minutes into the movie, an intruder enters into a house, rips off a woman's clothes and then carries her to a bed to rape her. A woman is asked by a man if she is high: she lists a number of medications she is taking and the man responds that he is also high. She is stumbling and clearly under the influence. He begins to grope and kiss her, at times she reciprocates but is confused and unsure of what is happening. He rapes her and she is frozen in fear: she screams 'no' and bites his hand hard. He slaps her across the face, leaving her unconscious (55:00-01:00:00). Later (shown earlier in the film) her father finds her unconscious, when she wakes she is confused and thinks he raped her.
La Strada (Movie)
The movie is about a street performer who buys a young woman to be his wife and assistant. He constantly beats her throughout the film, and the first scenes implied (off-screen) that he also forces her to have sex with him (the woman also mentions it later).
A woman learns that the man she is dating is her half-brother. The man does not know and persists on seeing her romantically and sexually until she is forced to reveal their relationship. Both parties are disgusted by their romance with one another, but still pursues the relationship to the point of having sexual intercourse. The last remainder of the show reveals that they do not share a father at all, so they get together officially. A lead character is raped on screen. It is implied at least one, if not all of the main characters were conceived via sexual assault of their mothers.
In the second part of the movie, the protagonists (a group of young men) sexually assaults a young girl on-screen, in the middle of a crowd. They grope her and take down her underpants. They rape her off-screen. Their crime is mentioned several times in the rest of the movie. A young man stalks the female protagonist and follows her from her job to her home while trying to make her stop to talk to him. He finally goes away when she tells him to but the next day, her boyfriend blames her for the stalker's behaviour. Later in the movie, the same stalk scene repeats, but the girl deliberately takes another route. When she is alone with her stalker, she grabs his hand and puts it in her underpants: he flees. She later apologizes for doing so.
A woman is crying in agony and telling others that the person who was having sex with her wanted to play "Doctor" and someone mentions blood.
In occupied France, the main protagonist uses his position in the German police to force himself into a relationship with a Jewish girl. Towards the end of the movie, he assaults her (on-screen) and rapes her (off-screen). After that, he saves her from the Nazis and she is obliged to live with him for a time, until he is arrested. Before all that, is it hinted that this man (17 years old) is sleeping with an adult woman.
A secondary female protagonist strongly implies that a male antagonist formerly pressed her into sex, in such a way that she feels she did something to “deserve” being assaulted. A male antagonist kidnaps a 17-yr-old debutante. He does not physically harm her, but explicitly intends to force her into marriage.
A woman is attacked by three men, and it is implied that they will attempt to rape her, though she is quickly rescued. Worthy of note: In an intimate moment between a man and a woman, the man hits the woman. It is implied that a man is blackmailing a woman into remaining married to him.
In one of the first scenes of the movie, the female protagonist (who is 14 year old) is sexually harassed by a drunk adult man, who then follows her home and rapes her (off-screen). After that, she begins working as a prostitute. Later, the same character (a singer) is forced to collect banknotes from male clients between her legs, in a degrading scene.
There is a rape scene in the first act of the film, meant to set the stage for the protagonist's ultimate revenge.
A woman forces another woman to perform oral sex on her. The entire encounter is shown, focusing on the rapist. The victim is clearly upset and traumatized by what happened, and it is implied this has occurred before. A young woman shows up on an adult man's doorstep and he answers naked. It is implied he rapes her. An adult woman has sex with a 19-year-old boy who has been drinking, but he is seemingly sober enough to give consent and does not regret his actions afterwards. A man rapes a woman. The entire encounter is shown, focusing on the victim. The scene is short and not very graphic but is abrupt and disturbing. It is implied this has occurred before.
A woman has a psychedelic vision which includes men raping women. Later, another woman has a similar vision of demons penetrating her with phallic weapons in a scene obviously meant to be reminiscent of a gang rape. These visions are over the top and gratuitous and seemingly meant to be humorous. An adult woman seduces a teenage boy. They do not have sex, but she wears revealing clothing and he exposes himself to her. A woman inspects another woman's hymen without her consent. A woman attempts to sexually assault another woman by penetrating her with a sharp phallic object, but is stopped.
Lake Mungo (Movie)
A teenage character is raped by her neighbors on-screen (about 55 minutes into the movie).
Lambs of God (TV Show)
Rape is mentioned and a character is implied to have been raped throughout the series. A women begins masturbating a man without his consent. The man is restrained. She is unaware this is a sexual act. In the final episode a women has a flash back of her rape. An adult man is shown in a POV shot implied to be raping her when she was a teen. Genitalia isn’t shown but scene could be quite disturbing to some viewers.
L'Amica Geniale (TV Show)
Lammbock (Movie)
One of the protagonists unwittingly sleeps with and accidentally impregnates his sister while she is asleep, assuming she is someone else. The film does not portray it as rape but as an accidental incest scene.
The movie is about serbian rape camps set up for Kosovo muslims during the war in the early 1990's.
A young girl is abused by a man.
The film follows two children (a sister about 12 years old and her younger brother) who journey from Greece to Germany by themselves. Halfway through the movie, the girl is raped (off-screen) by a truck driver when the boy is asleep. We see the man catching her up as she is trying to flee and bringing her to the back of his truck. After that, we see her touching blood between her legs. After that, she develops an interest for a young adult man who accompany them for a while. Nothing happens between them.
Landscapers (TV Show)
S1E2: a victim of sexual child abuse recounts the events of the abuse and is relatively disturbed and emotional about it (38:24-41:14). The abuse itself is not shown on-screen.
Lang Tong (Movie)
In the first 20 minutes of the movie, one of the main characters sexually assaults a woman.
Lang Ya Bang (TV Show)
Years before the story, a secondary female character was drugged and forced into marrying a borderline abusive man. They are shown interacting in the present as a married couple with a complex relationship, though she ultimately achieves separation from him. A female main character is drugged the same way and narrowly escapes a similar forced marriage.
Las Vegas (TV Show)
Over the course of five seasons various incidents occur. Male characters are often victim to unwanted kissing, groping, and often portrayed as constantly horny. Male security often is caught watching the women through security cameras, although never in the rooms, they do zoom in on breasts often. One of the female leads has a story line about being sexually abused by her father, including learning her father remarried and had two more daughters who are very young but come to the female lead for help because they're terrified of testifying against their father. The father later is released and found not guilty. A female peer pressures a male into sex several times by threatening his job. A male pressures a woman into sleeping with him, threatening to stop being friends with her, he later becomes borderline obsessed with her. A female lead is kidnapped and almost raped but manages to shove the man out of the airplane he is holding her hostage on, killing him. She never does recieve help for it. Another female lead is kidnapped and it is heavily implied the men are going to rape her, she is rescued beforehand. A female accuses a male lead of groping her and forcing her to participate in Oral while intoxicated. He denies this accusation, everyone choosing to side with him, the woman later drops the allegation in exchange for his help on something. It's never specified if he did or did not do it. A woman accuses another of being trans to try and seduce a man that they both want. A female lead implies that she was sexually abused or raped in the past but never specifies. A female "comedic" character often talks about sex, her talk is often graphic but in broken english, her character is also asian and partakes in racist sterotypical things, including "Tight but in a good way" talk A female lead is portrayed as an escort in a specific episode, she meets a male client who does not want to have sex. She respects his wishes, however, he begs her to lie to his father as his father has been pressuring him to lose his virginity. The female lead who admits to her father sexually abusing her is pressured by friends to drink, party, and participate in sexual acts despite being uncomfortable, her friends call her a "buzzkill" and leave her alone.
In this rather lighthearted film, the killer abruptly decides to rape a woman while he is on the job.
The author describes her experience of being in an abusive relationship, which involved rape. Worthy of note: the author of this book was accused of child sexual abuse and molestation.
The Last Duel (Movie)
The film contains two long rape scenes from both the rapist and the victim’s perspective: the rape is the central theme of the movie, and thus referred to throughout. The survivor is blamed and shamed by almost all characters (including her step-mother who reveals that she was also raped but never complained). She is publicly told that she got pregnant because she enjoyed the act. Meanwhile, several characters explains that the rapist regularly rapes women, and that it is normal that he gets away with it. Earlier, the rapist is shown chasing a woman during an orgy: she repeatedly screams 'no' but it is implied that all of it takes place in a "playful" context. However, the scene foreshadows the central rape scene of the film, where the rapist "chases" the woman who screams 'no' multiple times. In the last part of the film, when the woman reveals to her husband that she was raped, he forces her to have sex with him so the rapist would not be "the last man that knew her'.
A teenaged girl is believed to have been impregnated by her father.
This book is clearly written and marketed as YA, but the sexual assault content is pretty severe for that genre. The adult male chief of police gropes and leers at the teenage female lead. He is revealed to have sexual abused a number of other underage girls before. In the last third of the book, there is an extended scene in which the policeman prepares to rape the teen lead. He does not touch her, but he coerces her by threatening to torture her friend, makes many lewd comments, and undresses in front of her with the intention of bathing together. She is able to incapacitate him and escape.
The entire film revolves around two girls being raped and killed then one of the girl’s parents taking revenge. It is also mentioned on a radio broadcast that one of the guys who rape the girls is a child molester.
Two girls are kidnapped and sexually assaulted in a car: one of them is then raped in a forest (28:00-43:00).
A rape is described in great detail in the beginning of the book.
The Last Kingdom (TV Show)
S1E1: 22:58 - 24:10 women can be heard screaming in a camp. 23:15 - a woman is tied up on the floor and being beaten by a man on top of her surrounded by jeering onlookers, she is screaming. 31:49 - a young girl (Thyra) has her clothes ripped off by an older boy (Sven). 33:35 - the assault on the young girl is mentioned as her father tries to get justice. 51:32 - a woman (Thyra) is kidnapped as the rest of her family is burned, a man (Sven) askes her “do you know what I will do to this body, this mouth? I will do all i have dreamt of and more.” He tells her that he has killed her father and her brother as he grabs her breast and strokes her lips. 55:03 - a woman (Thyra) is led away from her home in her nightdress with a rope ‘lead’ around her neck. S1E2: 27:30 - a man (Storri) is tied naked to a horse with a branch anally inserted at 28:00, the horse starts galloping and the man (Storri) repeatedly cries out in pain as he is taken away. S1E4: 06:00 - a girl (Mildrith) of about 16 is made to marry a man (Uhtred) she does not know as she cries at the altar. S1E6: 35:00 - two men (Skorpa and Uhtred) discuss the ‘sharing’ of an unconsenting woman (Iseult) “Do we split her too? I’ll have the tits you have the arse”. 37:30 - a woman (Iseult) is dragged away with an axe to her throat with strong connotations that the men are going to rape her - she is let go. S1E7: 17:51 - a woman (Hild) can be heard screaming as she tries to fight off her rapists. 18:00 - on screen rape of a woman (Hild) by two men - she is saved by another woman (Iseult) at 18:40 and stabs her attackers. 19:25 - women can be heard screaming as they are attacked by Danes. 22:32 - a man (Leofric) and a woman (Hild) talk of how she was being “humped against her will”. S2E1: 29:30 - 30:10 a man (Slave trader) makes sexually aggressive comments about a woman (Hild). 31:00 - a man (Sven) touches a woman’s (Hild’s) face and tells her to “take off [her] skirts”. 40:47 - a woman (Thyra) is shown to have been imprisoned by her attacker (Sven), locked up in a cellar for many years. The man (Sven) tells her that if she does not keep quiet “he will have men hump” her. S2E4: 47:40 - a man (Kjartan) takes pleasure in describing the gang rape of a woman (Thyra) to her brother (Ragnar). S2E6: 16:07 - on screen rape of woman (Aethelflaed) by her husband (Aethelred). 25:00 - two men (Sigfried and Eric) make sexually agressive comments towards and joke about raping another man’s (Athelred’s) wife (Aethelflaed). 42:18 - a man (Aethelred) harasses and assaults his wife (Aethelflaed). S2E7: 05:01 - a woman (Aethelflaed) is taken captive and forced to ride on the same horse as her captor (Erik) with his arms around her. At some point, someone attempts to sexually assault her. 22:15 - a group of men non-consensually watch a woman bathe.
The entire movie is based on kidnapping and rape. Three women are kidnapped by a man who rapes them all at different times. The rape scenes are not gratuitous but also not handled very sensitively. Neutral on the handling, quick shots that show it is happening but nothing extreme and it usually cuts to another scene before it gets graphic. Most of the scenes are pre/post rape, not many during. Characters talk about how they are handling it, one of which being a therapist who mentions that she feels like she should have better insight on this but is struggling and a mess. One of the characters is a lesbian whose mother disowned her for being a lesbian. Each of the characters respond differently to the situation, one handling it by dissociating, one by crying during, and the other by fighting. The kidnapper is portrayed as violent and cruel, beating the women if they fought back too much or make too much noise. SPOILERS: It turns out to be two men who were pretending to be the same man, so there are two rapists. Overall a good movie that shows the survivors of a horrific situation, the women manage to escape.
The film revolves around a female character who is a victim of human trafficking (she is coerced into sex work). Sexual assault/rape, trauma/PTSD and victim-blaming are featured throughout, both literally and metaphorically: this includes a recurrent flashback scene showing the character being killed by her pimp standing on her with a knife. Early in the movie, two men (a taxi driver and later a man in a bar) subsequently make inappropriate comments to the female protagonist: she is visibly distressed, but nothing further happens. Another recurring male character also makes inappropriate comments to her despite her visible uncomfort.
A stepfather has sex with his teenage stepdaughter. An older woman does the same to a teenage boy. A teenage boy with a mental disability is forced into sex with a prostitute by a bunch of other boys. Women are groped on a couple of occasions. There is catcalling in one instance. It is mentioned that a little girl might have been molested, but is never confirmed.
One character becomes pregnant through stranger rape. An adult male character takes a 16-year-old boy to a strip club so the latter can experience a lap dance.
Near the beginning of the movie a woman meets with the male protagonist and he initiates sex. She seems very uncomfortable throughout the entire encounter, not to mention she is underaged, and is actually seen crying after the fact. Despite this, she continues to have a consensual relationship with him throughout the movie.
In the last ten minutes, the film shows a scene of violent rape role play, containing transphobic language.
Last Sentinel (Movie)
One of the male characters attempts to rape the female protagonist (01:19:00): she manages to fight him off.
The main protagonist is motivated by what happened in his childhood as a teen (which has an extreme vivid description of rape in the second half of the book. And is mentioned through the full book in passing, with one scene being extremely emotional and details the aftermath the protagonist felt.). He is tasked with protecting a child until said child becomes and adult to save him from marriage to an adult man who only wants to marry the child because of his appearance.
Note: the actress involved in this rape scene (Maria Schneider) was not informed of it beforehand as it was not in the original script with which she was provided. Schneider has since spoken about the humiliation she felt as a result of filming the scene. The director of the film (Bernado Bertolucci) is quoted as having wanted her reaction to the scene to be one of genuine upset and humiliation.
A mutilated girl is raped and killed.
The Last of Us (Video Game)
An adult man holds a teenage girl captive, threatening to kill her when she rejects his advances.
There is a mention of a 13 year old character being promised to an elder in the cult he is in: he runs away before this can happen. In the final sequence of the game, one of the main female character is captured by a group of men. Nothing is shown on-screen but it is implied that she was enslaved for months (along with other men and women), and it is thus highly likely that she was sexually abused. We only see her afterwards, badly wounded and apparently traumatized. At several occasions, the two female characters are pinned down by armed enemies.
S1E2: in the final scene of the episode, a woman is kissed on the lips by a “zombie” who wants to infect her with a mouth-transmitted infection. S1E4: the male protagonist says that people would do "way more than rob us" to the female protagonist while explaining why she should be afraid of them. S1E5: a rape by officers is mentioned. S1E8: a majority of the episode features the main female character (14 year old) being held captive by a violent man (a religious leader and former elementary school teacher). It is implied that he has been assaulting and raping several underaged girls. He tries to convince her be his wife and sensually grabs her hand. About 50 minutes into the episode, he attempts to groom her. When she rejects his advances and tries to escape, he holds her down, and when she fights back, he responds that “the fighting is the part [he] enjoy[s] the most", before attempting to pull her pants down. There is no nudity in this scene and she emerges unharmed. S2E4: a man is chained up naked and tortured, but not sexually abused. S2E7: in a firefight, a teenager is captured by adults on the opposing side, stripped down to his underwear, and dragged away.
Lastman (TV Show)
Rape and sexual harassment occur throughout the series, but particularly in episode 21.
L'Atalante (Movie)
A newlywed tries to have sex with his wife just minutes after the ceremony, out in the open. She rebuffs him and he only stops after being disturbed by cats.
Latex Dungeon (Video Game)
This game primarily focuses on themes of rape, "defeat", sexual "brainwashing", and the main character being repeatedly raped and attacked by monsters on screen. There is little to no consensual sex in this game.
Lavender (Movie)
It is implied that a man is going to or has been inappropriately involved with a female child.
Law & Order (TV Show)
The main focus of the show is a team of detectives who investigate sex crimes; all forms of sexual assault are discussed extensively, and sometimes shown onscreen, though actual rapes are rarely shown in vivid detail. S6E2: a perp sexually harasses a detective. S9E15: a main character is sexually assaulted while undercover. The scene is quite graphic. She experiences flashbacks to the attempted rape for the rest of the season, and the event is occasionally mentioned or alluded to in later seasons. S15E1: the same woman from S9E15 is kidnapped and tortured for several days by a serial killer. He forces her to watch him rape other women, including an underage girl (none of which are shown on-screen) and attempts to rape her, but she manages to escape. S15E19: the man from S15E01 manages to once again kidnap the same woman from that episode. He sexually assaults and attempts to rape her, and threatens to instead rape a young girl if she does not comply. This event along with the one from S15E1 are both discussed heavily throughout Season 15, and are mentioned or discussed occasionally in later seasons.
Law School (TV Show)
A main plot is about a character suffering domestic violence from her boyfriend. She gets recorded without her consent while having sexual intercourse: this is mentioned for a couple of episodes (the sexual scene is not shown). The domestic violence is not explicit, but the abuser steps on her feet and grabs her with violent intentions.
Lawless (Movie)
The film contains an off screen gang rape.
The main protagonist is beaten by Turkish soldiers and it is implied that he is also raped off-screen.
The film is about a women's asylum in 19th Paris, where several of the women there have been assaulted (which is mentioned in the film). Also mentioned and shown are Charcot's "medical performances" where he triggers the traumatised women into a state of "hysteria" in front of an audience of male doctors. The on-screen rape scene towards the end of the film (1:49:05-1:50:47) is violent and graphic.
Le Beau Serge (Movie)
The two main characters (male adults) maintain a romantic relationship with a teenager, who is later raped by her father off-screen.
Le Bossu (Movie)
In a scene, three men see a naked girl bathing in the river: they violently harass her and other women to have sex. The women eventually are saved by the girl's father. Later in the movie, a boy and a girl, both crossdressed, are invited to a fancy diner. The boy is forcibly dragged into a room by a man to have sex. As the man realizes that he has been fooled, he hits him brutally. The boy gets saved by the girl. Worthy of note : as the girl realizes that the man she has been living with is not her father, she starts to have feeling for him. He refuses her love. He eventually gives in to this love.
Le Calendrier (Movie)
A paraplegic woman is being given a ride home by a creepy guy. She falls asleep in the passenger seat. When she wakes up, she finds the guy with his hands down her pants and enjoying the fact that she was not responding. When she confronts him and tells him she cant feel anything which is why she did not respond, he asks if she can "feel with her mouth" and attempts to force her into giving him a blowjob. She fights back and when she finally can sit up she slaps him and he throws her out of the vehicle onto the street.
This movie depicts a real-life relationship between a 14 year old girl and a famous writer in his 50s that took place in 1980s France.
A business owner is a philanderer of women. He has affairs with multiple women he employs and acts as though he can touch the women he employ's whenever he wants. At one point, it is implied that he rapes one of his employees.
In the second scene of the movie, a man who appears to be a pedophile approaches two young girls in a public park and gives them pictures while telling them not to show it to adults (impliying that it is pornographic material). It is then revealed that it was in fact photographs of historical monuments. About 30 minutes into the movie, a scene involves a young man being in a romantic relationship with his aunt (since he was a child). She seems uncomfortable with his advances and he eventually forces her to undress. When she refuses to show herself, he tries to kill her but then stops. After that, a sadomasochist couple surprises a group of people they invited in their room unknowingly with a spanking scene.
Relevant scenes occur between 57:13-57:38.
A drunk man violently grabs and lifts a woman as she tries to bring him back home. Enraged, he also beats her savagely before raping her. Worthy of note: at the end of the film, the man and woman reconcile as though no violence had occurred between them.
A woman is kidnapped by a man: another man suddenly rips off her clothes (exposing her breast) and grabs her breast. She is later found strangled to death, naked on a bed (it can thus be concluded that she was raped). This film is about the criminal activities of a mafia family, which includes procuring: female prostitutes are shown several times walking towards or with male clients. Worthy of note: the movie opens with a scene of traditional circumcision.
The film begins with the rape on-screen of the main female protagonist. She ends up killing her assailant. During the rest of the movie, a man who investigates the murder harasses her. At several occasions, she is forced to get drunk and abused by several men trying to make her confess.
The League (TV Show)
S1E1: a girlfriend and boyfriend engage in sex. The girlfriend repeatedly behaves in ways causing her boyfriend to say “not okay” and “stop”. S1E4: two main characters discuss how one of them has been “trade raped” (meaning an unfair trade in Fantasy football). The “joke” is that they are getting massages and the masseuses believe that he really means rape.
One of the male leads mentions his father raping women, more specifically, his girlfriend, who he then paid to leave. He continues texting her despite knowing what happened and telling her he's sorry and wants her back. The same male main lead has sex with a woman who he then thinks is being trafficked, she is not, but this tricks him into signing a contract in exchange for her freedom if he participates in a sex club. The female lead gets upset about this, however, the two still end up with the other male lead in the end. The first male lead is recorded preforming sexual acts and the tapes are sent to his father. The female lead references past events that are related or heavily implied that this is not the first time she and the second male lead have tricked someone into signing a contract in exchange for them working at the sex club. Female lead is kidnapped, returned safely, although its heavily implied the two men who kidnapped her plan to assault her.
Leatherface (Movie)
A teenage boy continually harasses women, particularly a female nurse he kidnapped, throughout the film.
One character heavily implies that the titular antagonist should "play" with their female victim and alludes to the fact that his daughter is a product of the rape of a previous victim. A man makes sexual advances on a woman at a gas station and continues on even after the woman is clearly uncomfortable. The same man watches the same woman in the gas station bathroom without her consent. A man kisses the decapitated head of a woman's corpse.
Leave (Movie)
There is a brief scene of attempted rape by the main character’s cousin: she is thrown on a table and grabbed non consensually, but gets away and ends up killing her attacker from fighting back.
Chapter 15: marital rape is strongly implied as the reason a character must leave their marriage.
Early in the movie, a man harasses a woman in a creepy way in a bar, gets into her space and makes lewd comments about her. The female lead character is gang raped in an hotel room. A female character recounts sexual assault verbally.
This documentary goes in depth about child sexual abuse accusations against Michael Jackson.
The Ledge (Movie)
After a group of climbers have been drinking at the campfire, a woman goes into the woods to go to the bathroom. One of the men follows her and grabs her, trying to open her jeans. She tries to push him off but he knocks her over and pins her down. He tries again to get her clothes off when the other men in the group run over and stop him. She runs off and they chase her, where the same man hits her and knocks her over a cliff edge.
Lee (Movie)
The main character overhears a French women fighting off an American soldier attempting to rape her. We briefly see the soldier pushing the woman against a wall. The protagonist intervenes and threatens the soldier with a knife and he backs off. After this, she gets drunk and returns to her hotel room, and begins to tell her colleague about 'bad things that happen to women' and that a bad thing happened to her. Later, she is photographing the recently liberated Aushwitz and comes across a group of women sharing loaves of bread. Among them is a young girl who she quickly realizes is a victim of male violence. She attempts to show the girl she is a woman by revealing her long hair but the girl is terrified and backs away from her. Eventually the girl relaxes slightly and goes back to eating the bread. The protagonist takes her picture and refers to the girl later as a rape victim. Towards the end of the film, she reveals she was sexually assaulted as a child and that her mother told her 'never to tell anyone' so she did not.
Within the first 20 minutes of the film, the main character is drugged and then ganged rape while being unconscious. She then dies from the drugs while being raped.
The Leftovers (TV Show)
S2E3: on-screen rape. S2E6: this episode shows a violent rape of a male character by a female character onscreen. It is discussed further in S2E9 and the male and female become romantically involved.
Legacy (2023) (TV Show)
The main character's mother is shown to be raped by her boss at work, and her husband later in time, with the scenes being alternated to show the trauma repeating itself. She eventually fights off her husband, however. She is shown to get a safe abortion after the first incident.
Legend (Movie)
In one scene, a drunk man pushes a woman around and forces her to the floor; the scene ends.
A middle aged man attempts to "repay" a teenage girl for a damaged scooter over time in exchange for sex. When she refuses he attempts to force himself on her, and briefly gropes her.
The protagonist finds out that her ancestor, who was a slave woman, was raped by her slavemaster and bore his child.
Legion (TV Show)
S1E3: a rape joke is made. S1E5: a main character implies that her first time having sex was a rape by deception. This event is shown in S2E4. S2E4: scene of sexual assault. S2E7: someone repeatedly talks about being raped. S2E11: the protagonist turns antagonistic and psychicly drugs his girlfriend before having unconsenting sex with her. He is later called out for it and the girlfriend looks him in the eye as she forces him to understand that he has raped her (which takes him a while to understand). S3E1: the rape from S2E11 and previous rapes or assaults are mentioned. S3E4: the rape from season 1 is shown again. S3E6: roofies are mentioned. A rap battle contains several rape jokes. Worthy of note: Throughout season 1, the antagonist gropes and sexually assaults characters without their consent. Season 3 features a cult where the leader is referred as daddy. There i no rape shown, but everyone is constantly on drugs. There is also a magical pregnancy with a relationship where one person has way more power than the other.
A woman has a vision of another woman in the past being beaten, raped and killed.
Leprechaun 3 (Movie)
A man wishes sarcastically for a woman who does not like him to fall in love with him and it comes true. While under the spell the man takes the woman to a hotel room to engage in sex. Under the spell still the woman starts to undress but the coin is stolen by somebody else breaking the spell. The woman is confused on where she is at and how she got there. The man who is also her boss fires the woman for refusing sex. The leprechaun kills a woman by oversizing her breasts.
A woman is unconscious while a doctor kisses her body and takes her blankets off. He is stopped by another doctor before he can remove her bra. The doctor refers to him as a naughty boy. The leprechaun kidnaps a woman and coerces her into marrying him.
The film is about a French soldier falling in love with a Vietnamese prostitute during the colonial era. It contains several sex scenes between prostitutes and clients. The main protagonist attempts to rape his love-interest who tells him to go away. There is also a scene where a soldier interrupts a rape by shooting the perpetrator. During a dream sequence, a man thinks he is in bed with a woman, but he is actually with a child.
There are many non-consensual sexual encounters throughout the whole movie, most notably the rape of a woman by five men.
Throughout the entire film, the main male protagonist manipulates women to have sex with them as a game. He sexually harasses them and even rapes one of them off-screen. However, his wife (and accomplice) encourages the victim to pursue her relationship with him. Another man is shown harassing women in a ski lift.
A character has sex with a man to get money for her daughter, who she believes is dying.
There are two rape scenes in two different episodes, as well as a back alley abortion scene in which the woman can be heard screaming for about a minute. Women are sexually objectified, including long shots of their breasts.
Discussions of past assaults, including those that happened to the women as children.
One of the main characters wakes up after a night of partying next to the bloody corpse of a naked woman in his bed: she was stabbed and he has a knife in his hand. He is immediately arrested and admits that he does not know if he is guilty or not. However, he is innocent. Later on, the same man recounts a story (mentioning in passing that he could have forced a woman to be his wife) about how he denounced a woman who had killed her violent husband after years of sexual and physical abuse (which started when she was 17). Short flashbacks of the abuses are shown (the man hitting her while being on top of her), as well as her punishment (being forcefully stripped and branded with burning iron before being hanged). During a party, the female antagonist takes advantage of a drunk man to seduce him and steal something from him when they are kissing. Worthy of note: a subplot involves the arranged marriage of an adult man and a presumably younger girl. The ceremony takes place in the final scenes of the film.
The heterosexual main character is forced to endure homosexual sexual assaults to pay off a drug debt.
The Lesson (Movie)
There is cat calling throughout the show and the main character is forced to be in a pageant for the company so she is not fired. Her employers ask her to have more sex appeal and show more skin, and another girl in the pageant says that her team paid her $10 to to do. The main character ends up leaving the pageant after this. S1E1: halfway through this episode, the main character is approached by her boss in a small room, who is upset that she has embarrassed him by leaving a pageant he forced her to be in for work. During this scene, she is flashing back to backing away from another man. S1E2: a female MC is sexual assaulted by a male higher-up (01:34-02:16). The event has a major impact on her life, and she arguably has PTSD (with flashbacks whenever she is in a similar situation, although these flashbacks are not graphic). The main character is raped by her teacher.
Chapter 4: detailed description of a violent rape. The victim reports the attack to the police and is dismissed by them, despite her physical injuries, with the suggestion that she must have done something to provoke the attack or is otherwise misrepresenting what happened. As a result of her assault, the woman is forced to suspend her PhD studies (her attacker was one of her professors). This is referred to in passing on occasion throughout the rest of the book. Throughout the book, men repeatedly make derogatory remarks demeaning and sexualising the protagonist. At one point, when the protagonist confesses that she never completed her PhD studies due to being sexually assaulted, the woman she is speaking to reveals that the same thing happened to her, also resulting in the suspension of her further studies. On a few occasions, it is mentioned that church-run boys' homes like the one the male protagonist grew up in are a breeding ground for paedophiles. On at least one occasion it is implied that the protagonist was subjected to one of these priest's advances, fending him off with physical force. Another priest characterises this incident as the perpetrator trying to show the boy affection. Later on in the book, a woman meets with her boss who attempts (unsuccessfully) to sexually assault her as retribution for her "bad behaviour." She deters him with a threat that causes him to have a heart attack.
A bandit rapes a woman.
Let Her Out (Movie)
This book takes place in 1917 in Harlem, and the romantic leads are a Black woman who owns a nightclub and an Indian man who is her employee. The power dynamic of their work relationship is not brought up as a serious problem. There is passing mention of the female romantic lead ensuring that bouncers know which men not to let in because they sexually harass her workers. She refers to her late husband as a pimp because he "insisted she wear as little as possible" and was very rough with her in a way she didn't always like but felt she had to accept. One of her clients grabs her waist without warning while she is walking past. She is at first angry at this, but soon feels the need to accept the unwanted touching because he is a powerful man. She reflects on a memory of being forced to perform oral sex. In another memory, she reflects on a situation where a man threw her on the bed "and started trying to get crazy" because he "thought because he was paying for it, he could do whatever he wanted." Someone else intervenes and pulls the man off of her.
One of the main plotlines of this movie is that the main character's mother was sexually assaulted by three men who broke into her home, which results in the birth of the main character. The assault itself is not shown, but there are flashback scenes where you can see the mother's feet, or shadows which explicitly imply what is going on. Worthy of note: there is one flashback scene from when the main character was young: she gets scared by her father touching her hips. He did not have bad intentions, but it still might be sensitive to some viewers. There is another scene where the main character lies to her past teacher about two men forcing her (the main character) into prostituting herself, or another scene where she convinces said teacher to remove her bra in a restaurant.
Lethally Blonde (TV Show)
Most episodes focused on people who ended up having a really bad life whether as playboy models or porn stars.
Chapter 2: discussion of sexual violence suffered by Esther Fairfax that her parents either facilitated or ignored. Specifically, her mother, Lotte Berk "dared her daughter to perform oral sex on men and convinced her to become a topless dancer in Paris." Her father Ernest made Esther sleep in the same bed with him while they were both naked and she was 12 years old. Chapter 3: runner Katherine Switzer was grabbed while running in the Boston Marathon by the marathon director, who was trying to remove her from the race. Years later, he grabbed her again, and, without warning, directed her to face cameras and kissed her on the cheek. Chapter 7: mention of Yogi K. Pattabhi Jois sexually abusing his students (page 214). Mention of Bikram Choudhury being accused by several women of "rape and sexual assault, as well as false imprisonment, discrimination, and sexual harassment, leading him to be called the 'Harvey Weinstein of Yoga.".
A husband discovers his wife cheating on him with his friend: he beats both of them off-screen. The woman is later seen with bruises on her face. After both more or less "reconciled", the husband suddenly kisses his wife, who seems very surprised and not consenting: he engages sex and they are heard moaning shortly after. Later on, after the wife committed suicide, an investigator accuses the husband of having killed her: he states that it is unclear if she was raped (impliying by him) beforehand.
Lexx (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode features a woman who was forced to marry a child husband and then transformed into a sex slave.
L'Humanité (Movie)
The film centers on the investigation about the rape and murder of a 11 years old girl. The opening sequences shows her bloody vulva in a close-up. SPOILER: the final sequence reveals that the rapist is one of the protagonist friends (a main side character). There is a scene in which the investigator grabs the head of a man in custody and gets very close to him to sniff him in an inappropriate way. In the final sequence, he even forcefully kisses the killer/rapist on the mouth. Worthy of note: early in the film, the protagonist watches a couple having sex. The woman notices him but says nothing and keeps on going.
Libertarias (Movie)
Lidia Poet (TV Show)
Various episodes contain sexual harassment, as the show is about a woman trying to become a lawyer. S1E1: a female lawyer gets cat-called by male prisoners. S1E6: the female protagonist poses as a prostitute and is harassed by a man. Season 2 episode 3 contains an attempted rape on screen. The woman signs up to get the man to attempt to rape her so police will be able to arrest him. S2E3: attempted rape on-screen. S2E4: rape is described.
Lie to Me (TV Show)
Lie With Me (Movie)
Liebes Kind (TV Show)
There are several graphic scenes depicting a woman held captive and the antagonist. The woman is shown being urinated on and being chained to a bed. Throughout the show it is implied he got her pregnant and has been planning to do so for awhile. There are children in the home when this takes place, but there is no graphic showing of him doing anything to the children or the children witnessing this first hand.
Lies We Tell (Movie)
Throughout the film the protagonist (a minor by the historical standards in the film) is harrassed sexually by her cousin (an adult). He at multiple points touches her waist without consent in a way that is portrayed as particularly egregious for the circumstances. He also verbally pursues her for marriage throughout despite her constant rejections. He rapes her around 50-60 minutes into the film. It is shown on screen. It lasts a few minutes. It is not gratuitous exactly but very realistic. It happens at night in her bed. She is woken by him entering her room. The scene ends showing her screams filling the house. The protagonist talks openly about the fact that she has been raped in following scenes. She becomes pregnant from the rape.
A zombie throws the main character to the ground and tries to rape him. He is able to get away. A maid leaves the house where she is employed because her employer walks around naked around her and tries to get her to have sex with him.
Life After Life (TV Show)
S1E2: rape on-screen about 20 minutes into the episode. The protagonist is also portrayed as being distraught afterwards.
Life and Beth (TV Show)
S2E9: this episode features a scene with a sexual assault of an unconscious teenager (16:30).
Life of Crime (Movie)
A rather graphic attempted rape scene is shown.
Pedophilia is a major subject of the film.
Immediately after the opening titles, a girl is raped by two men. Later, another scene shows a man being tortured by forcibly receiving an enema.
S1E4: the main character is drugged, tied to his bed, raped by a woman and left naked to be found the next day by his boss and one of his colleague. He is then repeatiely teased about it by different characters.
Life is Strange (Video Game)
A female character is drugged and taken advantage of. As a result of this, she attempts to end her own life. A teenage girl is confirmed to have a relationship with two adult men. A male character drugs a female character and takes a picture of her passed out. An adult male character drugs, kidnaps, ties up and psychologically tortures a teenage girl.
Life Unexpected (TV Show)
In season two, the main character has a relationship with her adult teacher. Also in the second season, it is revealed that the main character was sexually abused by her foster father as a child, and she has to recount the events in court.
Like Dogs (Movie)
The main character is implied to be raped whilst drugged on hallucinogens in about the middle of the movie, near the end her rapist admits to it out loud.
Lilja 4-Ever (Movie)
A 16-year-old enters prostitution after being abandoned by her mother. After discovering she is a prostitute, her male "friends" rape her and there is an on-screen struggle. She is later betrayed by someone she trusts and is sex-trafficked. She is raped on-screen during this time, though the shot is only of her face: nothing graphic is shown, but strongly implied. The overall message of the film condemns her abusers and shows the effects these assaults have on her. It is also based on a true story.
Limbo (2021) (Movie)
This film contains a lot of graphic violence against women, including sexual violence, with one on-screen rape (and many other implied).
There is a non-graphic flashback showing a female character when she was young, making a delivery. A man says he has payment elsewhere and takes her to his home where it is implied he abuses her. When she gets back, her mother notices and further abuses her with a fire poker. While at a dinner, a man tries to reach up the woman's skirt but she stops him. A manager blackmails the woman into performing a BDSM style beating on him and photographs her doing so: the scene itself is not shown, only discussed before and after. After getting married, the woman's husband rapes her after she tells him that she does not want to have sex at all and tries to get him to stop. The scene is short and non-graphic.
The plot of the movie is about the track of a sexual predator, whose crimes are shown on-screen throughout (violent and graphic scenes of violence towards women and on-screen rape). The rape of the mother's sexual predator is also mentioned several times.
Line of Duty (TV Show)
Descriptions of violence against women, sex trafficking and discussions of child sex abuse are constant throughout each season. There are also numerous relationships with clear power imbalances and coercion.
Lion (Movie)
Early in the film, the main character finds refuge with several other lost children in a train station. During the night, men come and begin to chase and capture some of them. The main character successfully escapes, but not before passing a policeman, who seems to know what is happening and yet does nothing. It is strongly implied that these children are most likely being sold into human trafficking. The main character eventually meets a woman who welcomes him into her home with seemingly helpful intentions, promising to help him find his family. However, she invites a man over the next day: he lies next to the main character on a bed and then proceeds to examine his body, feeling his arms and legs. He then tells the woman that the main character is "exactly what they're looking for", possibly implying that they mean to sell him into human trafficking. The main character, however, escapes after suspecting that the two adults have ill intentions. The main character is eventually placed into an orphanage. There, an older boy, who was seen in a distressed state earlier in the film, is woken up during the night and given to an adult man by some orphanage employees. They say that the man should "bring him back before morning". The boy tries to fight, shouting loudly, but the man stops him by placing his hands on the boy's face and implies that they have done this before. The main character, who has been adopted by an Australian couple, is introduced to his new brother, the couple's second adoption. Though the scenes are brief, the new child's behaviors are very similar to those of the boy at the orphanage. It can be assumed that this child had similar traumatic experiences to the boy from the orphanage.
Lipstick (Movie)
A female model is brutally raped. Later on, her 13-year-old sister is raped by the same man.
Liquid Sky (Movie)
A man drugs, chases, beats and rapes a woman. The same woman is also forced into sex by a former instructor. She then is coerced into oral sex by onlookers. Later, her girlfriend forces herself onto her while she is hold down by a group of people. The main character escape abusers by murdering them.
The on-screen rape is depicted to be 'oddly sensual'.
At a party, a boy takes a girl on drugs to a room and grabs her chest and puts her hands over his penis through his pants. He says something along the lines of ‘you can’t stop something you started.’ The scene is brief because she flees the room. A teenage boy’s penis is cut off with an axe. This scene is violent and gory.
The protagonist begins the story in an immigration center where she learns that many of the other asylum seekers have experienced sexual violence. Chapter 5: a refugee describes seeing her sister raped and tortured to death.
Little Birds (Movie)
An adult man sexually assaults and attempts to rape a main female character.
The circumstances of the onscreen sexual assault are extremely psychologically upsetting and imply a continuous nature.
One character is a paedophile who was imprisoned for exposing himself to a child. He is discussed throughout by the other characters (mostly suggesting to castrate him), and warning posters against him are omnipresent in the film. About 45 minutes into the movie, he goes to a swimming pool and scub dive while looking at the children bathing. The parents notice him, make the children leave the pool and the is escorted out by the police. About 01:03:00 into the film, the same character goes on a date with a women who explains her psychological problems to him and says that one psychiatric suggested that she may have been molested as a child. After dinner, they discuss in her car and without any prior notice, the man starts masturbating, leaving the woman petrified with fear. He additionnally threatens her not to call on him. In the final part of the movie, the peadophile character, who has been harassed by a side character (a cop suffering from PTSD) throughout, ends up cutting off his genitals with a kitchen knife (off-screen).
A major plot point is a woman has a rape fantasy that she asks her boyfriend to fulfill. As a result, he repeatedly attempts to rape her but she keeps thwarting him, either by realising it is him doing it or by seriously harming him. All of this is played for comedy's sake. There is a character who throughout goes around to his neighbour's houses to inform them that he is a registered sex offender
There are multiple rape scenes, which are played for laughs.
S7E17: a schoolgirl is raped and impregnated. S7E18: the same girl is almost raped again.
The main character is a victim of sexual violence and domestic assault at multiple points during the book. The accounts of these events are often vivid and have the potential to be upsetting.
Little Rot (Book)
While attending a sex party thrown by his friend Ahmed, Kalu finds out that a teenage girl is being ganged raped in one of the private rooms. He barges in and throws a man off of her. This man turns out to be a powerful pastor, who then puts out a hit on Kalu. Kalu confronts Ahmed about having a teenage girl at at this party. Ahmed at first lies and says it was an adult woman who looked like a teenager. He then caves and admits that the girl is 17, but ridicules Kalu for trying to save her when plenty of young girls and other innocent people are suffering in their city every day but are ignored. In the final climax of the book, the pastor decides to spare Kalu’s life, but he coerces him and Ahmed to rape the same girl he raped so they can no longer claim any moral high ground over him. Aima and their best friend have sex, and the best friend’s brother overhears them. When he encounters Aima alone, he shames her for enjoying sex with a woman and propositions her. Ahmed goes to a sex party thrown by someone else and has sex with a guy named Shawn. Shawn secretly records this encounter and threatens to expose Ahmed. Upon receiving this threat, Ahmed has rough sex with Shawn and then strangles him to death. There are two main sex worker characters in the book: Souraya and Ola. Ahmed once saved Souraya from a situation where she was locked in a room and raped repeatedly. Ola also experienced sexual violence when she was younger, but she does not expect to get any justice for them and barely thinks it’s worth it to help anyone else who’s suffering similarly. Throughout the book, there are several ostensibly consensual sex scenes that are very violent.
A woman is in an abusive relationship with a man who rapes her and sexually harasses her throughout the movie. She escapes from the relationship later in the film.
Chapter 5: the protagonist glimpses bruises (the result of sexual abuse) on her 10 year old neighbour. She questions her neighbour about these bruises in an ignorant and unempathetic manner that some people may find upsetting.
A woman is raped by a state official in the back of a limousine.
The book's whole story surrounds a teen girl who was abducted as a child and sexually assaulted for years by her kidnapper. Then, when she is too old for his tastes, he teaches her how to groom another little girl for them to kidnap together. It contains several graphic descriptions of rape told from the first-person perspective of the victim, and speculations of what the kidnapper will do to his next victim.
A man ties up another man and rapes him whilst holding a gun in his own mouth.
Lizzie (Movie)
The titular character's father is strongly implied to have sexually assaulted the family maid, He comes into her room and strokes her body, but we see no more than that. She is seen coping with the trauma for the rest of the film.
The killer kills women with a sexual lens, slashing them on their breasts or shoving a broken bottle up their legs. There is a scene where a woman who is seeking a consensual sexual experience gets assaulted in a bar by a man fingering her with his feet/toes. She asks to be let go to get up from the table and is restrained by another man. When a man corners another (almost) victim, she is asked by her boyfriend if she thought she was going to be raped.
Lobotomy Corporation (Video Game)
It is heavily implied in the game that a monster reproduces with the corpses of its victims. The act is shown on screen when said monster kills an employee, but the corpse is censored while it happens. There is a written log in the encyclopedia entry of the same monster that states it can breed, and there is a section where an employee witnesses the monster defiling a corpse. Afterwards, the corpse gives birth, and the offspring defiles another employee. Although half of the text in this section is censored, the player can put the pieces together, and it is disturbing to read.
Locke and Key (TV Show)
This show features magic allowing to puppeteer someone else. The victims literally have no control of their body and have to do things that are sexual in nature. In season 1, a supernatural being which is an adult but appears as a teenager, has sex with two teenagers under false pretenses. In S1E2 a woman begins intercourse with a random man she found in a club. She asks him to choke her and he does so but not to her liking. She flips him over and says "my turn" before choking him to death while he begs her to stop. S2E1: a supernatural being pretends to be someone's boyfriend. They kiss and have a romantic relationship while the main female character believes that she is kissing her boyfriend. A guy compliments a woman's behind and complains that he can't compliment a girl's bottom anymore. She pretends to be ok with it and forces him to kiss her while she bites his face off. S2E5+6: the girl dating the demon pretending to be her boyfriend finds out and blames herself for not knowing. S2E6: the same character has to pretend that she doe not know who he is, and every time he touches her, she has to pretend that she is ok. This is clearly traumatizing for her. S2E10: a teenage girl who has been possessed by a demon, threatens to 'expose' a teacher for sexual impropriety, which he did not to. It is revealed that the teenager who had been originally possessed by the demon was still conscious inside and so was being forced to do evil things including rape, with no control.
Locked Up (TV Show)
S2E2: on-screen rape (32:00-35:00). There are many occurrences of sexual harassment and sexual assault throughout the series.
The main protagonist (an incarcerated female teenager) is forced to strip in front of a number of cell mates, and goaded while it takes place. She is later struck with a baton and forced to strip again, and then gang raped by three male guards.
Lockout (Movie)
The antagonist of the film is a rapist and there are many graphic scenes.
Loev (Movie)
A man rapes his friend. The scene is portrayed is romantic after the fact but is clearly non-consensual.
The Loft (Movie)
There is rape aftermath discovered including the woman bruised, bleeding from the head, crying and accusing the man (55:45).
Lola (2024) (Movie)
Lolita (Movie)
Lolita (1962) (Movie)
Although often marketed as a romance, the movie is centred around a dangerously obsessed paedophile who imprisons his stepdaughter, blackmails her into giving him sexual favours and conspires to eliminate her mother, who he married in order to gain access to the aforementioned girl.
The central plot of this book revolves around a grown man's romantic and sexual obsession with a pre-teen girl. The same man seduces and then murders the girl's mother in order to get close to her, eventually kidnapping her and travelling around the country.
A character says she was "raped with kisses." The main character is a teenage boy who enters a sexual relationship with a woman in her 40's.
London Spy (TV Show)
The film contains sexual violence leading to murder in order to silence victims. Perpetrators draw straws to determine which one of them will take the blame for the group’s actions. In a later scene, a pimp attempts to rape a woman sold to a brothel. The woman bites off the tongue of the assailant, who dies of shock, to prevent the assault, and is later threatened with torture.
A man rapes a woman on-screen, and kills her in the process. A bandit threatens to kill a sex worker unless she has sex with the protagonist; the protagonist agrees to have sex with her.
Loner (Movie)
There is multiple mentions of a stepfather raping his stepdaughter.
Lonesome Dove (TV Show)
This movie contains multiple scenes of gang rape, sexual violence, and torture. The occurrence is a central theme in the show and is mentioned several times after.
A man forces a sex worker to undress, exposing her breasts, and fellate him at gunpoint (01:09:35-01:11:05). She is clearly terrified and he laughs sadistically.
A police officer uses his badge to coerce women into giving him sexual favours. This is not shown on screen. There is a scene showing a police officer receiving a blowjob from a prostitute. During this scene it is unclear whether the act is entirely consensual, though it is later revealed to be consensual. A police officer has a pattern of grooming teenage girls. This is a major plot point. All of the above was relevant to the plot, and was handled sensitively. No sexual violence is shown on screen.
There are several scenes with detailed graphic sexual and domestic violence including rape. One scene involving gun violence within the sexual assault.
Longmire (TV Show)
S1E10: a teenage boy is forced to rape a girl while being held at gunpoint by a group of teenage boys. The girl is then gang raped and the attackers are acquitted of the crime.
Besides depicting domestic violence, the movie ends in a notoriously brutal rape scene.
This game contains frequent non-consensual sex scenes, BDSM, sexual assault, and beastiality.
Two men are in a basement and tell a woman to take her clothes off. She reluctantly does, and then the movie cuts to the next scene. A young man is groped by an older man. The young man is fairly uncomfortable during this and leads the older man into a park where he stabs him to death.
In a dream sequence, the main character has her head forcibly lowered toward a priest's groin after which her head remains mostly off-screen.
Lore (Movie)
The main character is coerced and raped by her best friend's brother. She says repeatedly she wants to remain a virgin, but her rapist ignores her and continues to undress her/ molest her. When he continues and it becomes clear he will not stop, she says ok, but it reminds clear she does not want it. It does not depict penetration, but gives vivid detail about her mindset thought the trauma. She describes wanting to stop but not thinking she was allowed. Her rapist takes photos of her while he is assaulting her. She describes retreating into her mind to try and stay safe until he's finished.
Loro (Movie)
The first part of the film focuses on a man's escort agency and shows (young) women having sex with (elderly) male clients. A woman flirts with a man: he engages sex but she asks him to stop. He does not. The protagonist (70) tries to seduce a young escort woman (20): she rebuffs him because of their age gap.
Los Colonos (Movie)
Two men rape a woman (this occurs off-screen), and attempt to force another man to rape her. A man kisses another man and grabs his genitals without consent. A man rapes another man. This is on-screen and presented within the film as a kind of punishment, as the victim committed sexual assault himself. Worthy of note: a man kills a woman who was raped; this is presented as a kind of mercy-killing, as she is already dying.
The male antagonist (a young man) acts as a sexual predator towards a young woman in the first half of the movie. He surprises her when she is alone and tries to kiss her at first (between 17:00 and 19:00). He does it again later (about 34 minutes into the movie) and asks her for a kiss in exchange for money (since she is very poor). She agrees but he then tries to sexually assault her. She protests vocally (off-screen) and the rest of her family can her her next door: her brother stops a boy from intervening, since he considers it to be "normal". She manages to get away from him before he can rape her. About 47 minutes into the film, during a silent scene, a man presumably offers money to a boy in the street in exchange for sexual favours. Their encounter is stopped immediately when a cop shows up. Near the end of the film (01:11:00), an old blind man tries to take advantage of a young woman who has been helping him. She is ready for it and has a knife with her. She stops him when he becomes too touchy, but he then propose treats to her, presumably for sexual favours. Their encounter is stopped by another character.
A woman is kidnapped and has her legs cut off by the antagonists before being raped: the camera lingers on the rapist before he kills her.
A male character looks up under a female character’s top without her consent and comments that she is not wearing a bra (18:05-18:45). After knocking her unconscious, a male character exposes the bra/chest of a female character and attempts to rape her. She wakes up and another character knocks him out (54:10-56:32). This event is briefly mentioned/discussed by characters later on in the film.
The book contains a planned rape: the victim is forced to drink alcohol (until passing out) in order to be impregnated. The rape itself is not detailed, and consists of three sentences.
Chapter 8 contains a rape scene.
Lost Girl (TV Show)
S1E1: a character is drugged by a man and rescued by the protagonist before anything happens.
The book centers around three teen girls who were all groomed and then turned vampire by their common ex-boyfriend, who is over 100 yrs old. After turning each, he became emotionally abusive and then abandoned them for the next teen. They seek to stop him from turning a fourth girl (18 yo). He is explicitly identified as a stalker and serial killer. All four vampires (including their ex) theoretically remain at their teenage mental/emotional ages at turning. The main character was turned at 16 and is actually around 50. She becomes romantically an sexually involved with the antagonist’s would-be new victim, who is 18. She struggles with herself about the ethics, but her relationship with an 18 yo is overall portrayed favorably instead of as predatory. The protagonist feeds by seeking out and draining adult men who sexually harass teens. Several short scenes of attempted predation play out. Each time she is fully capable of dispatching her would-be assailant.
Lost Highway (Movie)
A woman is coerced into performing oral sex at gunpoint.
S1E3: mention of incest/child sexual abuse (14:00-14:45).
Lost River (Movie)
Several scenes are taking place in a club where women are mistreated as sexual objects.
In this documentary, Louis Theroux re-examines his media relationship with Jimmy Savile in light of the extensive allegations regarding the latter's grooming, sexual assault and rape of dozens of children and young women. At points, specific assaults are described in great detail, often by the victims.
The protagonist's parents, upon finding out that she is gay, take her by force back to her home country of Bangladesh in order to arrange a marriage for her. The marriage ends up not going through. The protagonist's grandmother shares diary entries about her own arranged marriage, which happened when the grandmother was a child and her husband was an adult.
Love &Pop (Movie)
Teenage characters practice compensated dating in order to raise money for a ring. Two scenes are particulary graphic: - one where a character is coerced and forced into practicing a handjob in a porn section of a video store; - one violent attempted rape. One voice message implies that a person is seeking someone before even the japanese age of consent.
The protagonist is an aromantic, asexual woman who feels alienated from her peers because she does not experience attraction. She agrees to enter a relationship with a man in hopes she'll eventually grow attracted to him; he invites her on a date with the intention of having sex with her but does not communicate this, and she is visibly traumatized with him attempting to force himself on her. However, she escapes safely and breaks up with him; bonus material at the end of the book shows that they later reconcile and her ex-boyfriend acknowledges what he did wrong. Later in the story, an alloromantic asexual man recounts a similar story to the protagonist, about his ex-girlfriend insisting on having sex with him. He initially consented, especially due to pressure from male peers about being sexually active, but he recounts the experience as being traumatic and uncomfortable. He was later shunned by his peers for mishandling the relationship and accused of using his ex-girlfriend for sex.
Love is Blind (TV Show)
S2E2: a woman recalls when she was sexually assaulted as a girl. S5E1: a man discusses unconsensual sex he had as a teenager.
Love By Chance (TV Show)
S1E14: a character is raped while he is passed out from drunkenness. The next morning the rapist tells him that he (the victim) was the aggressor and that he should "take responsibility" and be his boyfriend. He then initiates sex again without consent. Throughout the series leading up to this, the rapist has been spying on his victim. A side plot involves a character who is in love with his stepbrother. The said stepbrother is a rape survivor who discusses his rape and its affect on his mental health with a friend and then with his stepbrother. He is shown to have nightmares and to react poorly to being grabbed.
Love Child (TV Show)
S1E1: girls are cat-called. S1E4: awoman is cat-called. During this episode someone also reveals that she got pregnant as the result of a rape. She meets the perpetrator a few times during this episode and is clearly distressed during the meetings. S2E3: a man touches a girl inappropriately (14:30-15:00). S2E8: the rape mentioned in S1E4 is briefly mentioned again (38:00). S3E1+2+3: scenes of teenage girls living in a youth detention center. It is implied that the male director of the facility has sexually assaulted multiple girls living there (and gotten them pregnant). S4E3: a man touches a woman inappropriately. S4E6: a young woman describes in detail being assaulted by her stepfather (32:00-37:00). She was probably impregnated by him. It remains unclear how old she was when the violence started but it probably began as child abuse. After her confesssion other people comfort her. S4E9: a girl starts making out with a random guy. She seems to be getting uncomfortable with the situation and expresses wanting to stop. However, the guy continues with the kissing: she kicks him and leaves.
Love Crimes (Movie)
S1E1: multiple mentions of gang rape and one instance of sexual harassment. S1E2: a woman has sex with a man while controlling his perception of reality (she is well-meaning). S1E3: a nearly naked woman is chased through a city by a murderer. S1E8: sexual harassment and attempted rape. S4E2: this episode contains beastiality. A man stands on a bucket in preparation to have sexual intercourse with a cow. The same man is abducted by aliens, strapped down to a medical bed and sodomised by a machine by force.
The film surrounds the acts of three emotionally abused people and one of the main themes of the movie is taking pantyshot photos of unaware girls in public. Two characters are shown to be sexually abused as children by their fathers (one discusses it). A boy is shown stealing a girl's underwear. He is later coerced into sex work (making panty shot tapes and performing host's role during pervert's events) so he can see his love interest agains. The way in which their relationship plays out is full of plot twists and my be uncomfortable to some viewers. There are several scenes where the main character tries to forcefully hug/hold/pin down his love interest (who is soon going to be his step-sister) and confess his love to her, while she screams "stop it, pervert" The main character's dad is in a messy relationship and there are a couple of scenes where his girlfriend tries to kiss him against his will. After one of the incidents, the woman confesses to her daughter that "she raped him beautifully". At one point main character joins a religious cult and is repeatedly shamed and punished for having an erection.
Love-Hate (TV Show)
S3E1: a woman is raped towards the end of the episode. The assailant is shown making unwanted advances before quickly cutting to the assault; the act is shown briefly but graphically. S5E6: a woman is gang raped in prison. The scene is graphic.
The plot of the movie deals with a serial killer/rapist, who is mainly mentioned in the background. Some of his actions are shown on-screen briefly, but in most scenes it is difficult to tell what is going on. The killer is background and not relevant to the main character's life until towards the end of the film. The main character is a gay man in his early thirties who has a romantic relationship with a 17 year old co-worker. The main character is hesitant to have much of a relationship with the teenager and tells him at one point that he would be bad for him. A sexual relationship between the two is never shown on-screen but they do kiss and there is a scene where the main character asks the teenager to undress, but then leaves. There is a scene where two adults do drugs with a teenager and lie about what the drugs are. While they are all high one of the adults has sex with the teenager, who later reveals he cannot remember the incident and does not know which of the adults had sex with him. None of the characters treat the incident as an assault, including the teenager. There is a rape shown on-screen briefly. There are two separate attempted rapes on-screen, and those scenes are longer and both involve main characters. One of the main character's friends is a sex worker, and he owes her a favor. To repay her, he helps her with a client. The main character is visibly uncomfortable throughout the encounter, but later laughs about it with his friend. During the scene where they laugh about it, she implies that she was sexually abused by her father.
This book deals with child sexual abuse, disassociation during sex, as well as several other disturbing themes.
Throughout the series, frequent sexual abuses and harassments between teenagers are portrayed as jokes. One of the main characters gropes the other main characters' breasts as a "punishment" and calls it "washi washi". The characters (when groped) are visibly uncomfortable when it happens.
A man attempts to rape a woman and is chased off by a dog. She is deeply traumatized; the scene and aftermath are upsetting.
The romantic relationship between the 12-year-old protagonist and a 36-year-old priest features significantly throughout the book's plot. Although it is implied that the relationship never becomes outright sexual, the two secretly meet every night to eat, recite poetry and (literally) sleep together.
Love Stage!! (TV Show)
A main character of the book was married to a 52 year old man at the age of 11, so that is discussed throughout the book. There is also a description of a gang rape of a teenage girl and a description of an attempted sexual assault of a teenage girl by a person in a position of power over her.
Love Toy (Movie)
An older man repeatedly makes sexual advances towards an uninterested woman. A group of men attempt to rape a woman, but another man intervenes. Worthy of note: The entire plot of the movie involves the main character drugginge men. They are not completely able to consent to any sexual acts.
S1E2: a man and a woman are kissing on a bed and the latter changes her mind ans asks him to stop. He does not comply and continues to undress. When he takes off his pants, a snake jumps out and attacks the woman. The episode also contains a discussion of a slave master impregnating a slave who was the ancestor of the protagonist. S1E3: the protagonist and the female lead have sex in a way that does not appear consensual at first but that is framed as consensual later in the episode. He finds her alone in the bathroom and has sex with her without saying anything. Because there is no foreplay and she is not wet, she bleeds but blames it on her period. She is visibly distracted and troubled directly after that (27:35-29:25). S1E4: a white man, who was previously shown to be involved with a racist and sexist secret society, buys drinks for the female lead's sister (who is Black). In their conversation, she keeps saying that she will not have sex with him , but the next scene shows them having sex (29:16-31:21). They both appear to be enjoying it, but the combination of alcohol, racial power dynamics, and the fact that the white man probably has some ulterior motive implies that this is not a fully consensual experience (38:15-40:25). S1E5: a man repeatedly makes flirtatious comments towards a newly-hired female employee. This man is later seen harassing another woman, potentially with the implication of an attempted rape, in an alleyway. Later, a woman seduces this man before violently raping him with a foreign object - this incident is shown on-screen. Another man having a sexual relationship with a woman is revealed to be another woman using shape-shifting magic to hide her true identity. S1E6: a woman grows tentacle-like tails during a sexual encounter which penetrate her male companion.
The film's plot revolves around a teenage girl and her father kidnapping and torturing a teenage boy who the daughter has unrequited feelings for. The antagonist and her father lust after one another (incestual relationship): she tries to persuade him to consummate their relationship, but he clearly has misgivings. A teen girl engages in sex while heavily intoxicated to the point where she cannot consent: multiple adults witness this and do not intervene.
Lovelace (Movie)
The film's plot revolves around a woman who is coerced into sex work and subsequently a career in porn by her abusive husband, and is based on a true story. At several points, a woman is forced at gunpoint to sleep with men. A woman's clothes are ripped off of her and she is forced into a shower. A woman is left in a room with multiple men and begins to cry as they undress her. Rape is strongly implied, although not shown on-screen.
Loveless (2005) (TV Show)
Soubi, a young man in his twenties, keeps holding, hugging and kissing 14-year-old student Ritsuka against his will. It's implied that the two have romantic feelings for each other. A number of other characters have been raped in the past, some as children.
The main character is raped and murdered by a pedophile and deals with the aftermath from the safety of the afterlife.
The main character is raped and murdered by a pedophile and deals with the aftermath of this attack from the safety of the afterlife. Compared to the movie, the book's rape scene involving the protagonist is much more explicit.
Lovely Molly (Movie)
Child sex abuse is a major theme of this film. SPOILERS: Two sisters briefly discuss having been assaulted by their father, in general terms. A woman is shown being raped on-screen by an unseen entity. This scene is not sexualized or portrayed in a titillating manner.
Lovely Writer (TV Show)
The Lover (Movie)
A 15-year-old girl is in a relationship with an adult man and many sex scenes occur between them. This is statutory rape.
The movie is a "Christian" movie about a woman who is raped and impregnated, who not only decides to raise the child of her rapist, but forgive him for his act as well.
Lowlife (Movie)
Immigrant women are abducted and forced into sex slavery. Child sex abuse is alluded to in conversation.
Løvekvinnen (Movie)
A girl is sold to a circus. She is visited in the night by one of the bosses at the place and is molested. It is implied he does this to other children in the circus. In the next scene she is shown naked to an audience. All of this is made against her will.
Lucia (Movie)
This film in three episodes deals with colonialism and the patriarchy in Cuba. - In the first segment, a group of upper-class/petit bourgeois women gossip about the life of a homeless woman who is causing a scene, and how she became a grifter. 10 minutes into the film, it is said that she was a nun on a battlefield. The conversation then leads to talk of a brutalization of the nuns, which happens in a scene of multiple gang rape depictions. The homeless woman is further harassed by men about 30 minutes into the movie: one of them gropes her while a crowd dances around them to tease her. Later (about 40 minutes in), the love interest of the female protagonist becomes very insistent towards her: he fondles her, forcefully grabs and kisses her. She is in love with him but resists because she learned that he was married and father of a child. When he stops, she pursues him and they eventually reconcile. - The third segment is about a jealous and possessive husband who (literally) locks up his newlywed wife and forbids her to work outside. He brutally grabs and pushes her several times throughout and frequently gets in fight with other men because of his jealousy.
Lucia De B. (Movie)
A teenage girl is a forced prostitute by her mother. We see her getting raped by a man.
Lucifer (TV) (TV Show)
The main character keeps asking a woman to have sex with her even though she has repetitively refused. He stalks her and even breaks into her house. S1E10: a character turns down sex with a woman because she is too intoxicated. What's troubling is the implication is that he normally would sleep with her, but has suddenly had a change in character. S2E1: a guest character forces herself on and kisses the main character without his permission. She also tries to unbutton her shirt and show him her breasts: he actively tries to push her off. S2E4: a character discusses drugging the drinks of two young women with what the character thought was a "roofie" but accidentally poisonning them. S2E8: a guest character mentions a past rape that occurred years prior. No details are discussed. A yoga guru is said to have two sexual harassment cases against him. Later in the episode, a woman admits that said guru had sexually assaulted her previously. S2E18: the main character’s brother is knocked out. When he wakes up the main character and his friend asks him where he has hidden an object they are looking for. The main character jokingly asks “Ah, Keister it did you?” (meaning to hide it up one’s rectum) whereupon the friend states that she “already checked that” meaning she searched the unconscious characters rectum without consent (18:52-18:57). S3E6: a stripper comes to the office. A female character immediately protests, and tries to push him off. He grinds on her anyway. In season 5, a woman dates a man who is lying about his identity. He turns out to be a serial killer. A man takes upskirt photos of an unsuspecting woman (15:01). One of the female characters straddles a hotel clerk and forces her breasts in his face while he actively protests (10:35-11:31). A woman tries to kiss the titular character. She continues to push on despite his protests, until he has to push her off (21:00-22:00). SPOILERS: In this show, God creates the main female character for his son (the main male character): they have no free will to resist each other despite hating everything about each other. The woman has to talk herself into overlooking how the man's personality and interest bother her over and over. The man changes into an arguably better person because his father (God) knew best and gave him a woman to make that happen: he is thus conscious of everything and willingly decides to accept his father's gift of a sexual and romantic partner that has no say in being. In summary, God trafficks a human being to his son, setting her up in a life where her personality will become exactly what he wants and accept being made for a man as a gift: this is framed as a good thing in the story's narrative.
Luciferina (Movie)
In a gathering of friends, during a conversation about the protagonist's virginity, the abusive boyfriend of the protagonist's sister grabs his groin and makes a lewd remark towards her (17:20). The same man corners the protagonist in a closet and tells her not to poison her sister's mind against him (28:40). He then begins to molest her, but he is interrupted by the sound of people downstairs, so he makes one final threat and leaves. A character possessed by the devil attempts to rape the protagonist, but is fought off by the abusive boyfriend (1:14:00). The possessed man taunts the protagonist using sexually violent verbal and body language (1:30:00). The protagonist lures the possessed man to have ritual sex, but it is clear that she does not consent (1:44:00). The scene features sexual intercourse that is mostly rape. In a vision, the protagonist's sister reveals that their father has been abusing her.
The main character is drunk and it is implied that she is raped off screen and then onscreen by a different man. She goes to the bathroom and blood is shown to be dripping from between her legs. She is then later raped again and struggles/screams. She then dissassociates before being able to fight off the rapist this time successfully (40:40-43:00). There are very triggering conversations and victim shaming throughout the film. Overall it presents a complex central character who is weaving her way through the legacy of her assault during a time of increased stress in her life.
Lucky Star (TV Show)
In one episode, the main character and her friend group talk briefly about creepy boys stalking girls, and harassing them. This conversation carries on for about 30 seconds. The main character's father also displays a creepy attitude towards the main characters friends. He mentions a few times that his daughter and her friends (teenagers) look like those cute anime girls in his dating sim.
Throughout season 1, a father tries to prostitute his wife to older men so that they can hire their son. S1E8: the main character is raped by a prostitute hired by his father, who thinks that his voice will change if he has sex and becomes “a real man”.
The book's synopsis and author's note emphasize that sexual assault is the main topic of this book. In its appendices, this book includes websites and phone numbers for survivors of sexual assault. The author's note reads: "This book deals with issues of bullying, slut-shaming, sexual harassment, rape culture, and the aftermath of an off-page rape. I've done my best to depict these topics with care and sensitivity. If these are difficult subjects for you, please look after yourself, and know that your mental emotional well-being come first." The story opens with the protagonist distraught, leaving a party where she was just raped. Because she's autistic, it takes a while for her to put together that what happened to her was rape. We find out later that the rapist specifically targeted her because she is neurodivergent and selectively mute. The rapist spreads the news that he had sex with the protagonist at this party. The protagonist then begins receiving unwanted social media messages, verbal comments, and touching from boys who think she'll have sex with anyone. The protagonist joins with a group of other people who have been harmed by the rapist's behavior, and throughout the book, they collect stories of his victims. Later, the protagonist learns that her mother was sexually assaulted at a job. After her mother admits this, she makes a safe space for the protagonist to admit that she was raped as well. Before the events of the book, a character tried to intervene when the rapist drugged a girl to rape her. This character ended up blamed for the drugging and incarcerated for two years as a result. In the end, the protagonist and her friends succeed in exposing the rapist. The protagonist records him threatening to use his dad's social power as a judge to get her put in jail instead of him. With all the gathered evidence, he ends up being convicted as a sex offender and cut off from his family's finances and prestige.
Luke Cage (TV Show)
S1E7: it seems like a young girl was molested by her uncle. It does not go into any detail (37:21-38:30). It is confirmed that she was at least molested by her uncle. Her cousin goes on to say that she was seducing her uncle, which lead to her attacking her cousin and yelling that she did not want it (41:15-42:06). S1E9: a woman talks about the time her cousin was kidnapped and raped by multiple guys before being beaten and killed (21:10-21:35). S2E9: the woman who was sexually abused by her uncle, talks to her daughter about who her real father is (34:00-38:30). The sexual abuse was briefly talked about in S1E7, but it never said how far it went. It is confirmed that the woman was not just molested, but raped as a child by her uncle, and later gave birth to her daughter. She then talks to her daughter about trying to love her, but she cannot because all she sees is her uncle in her. S2E12: the daughter of the rape victim briefly mentions it while at her cousin’s grave (15:50-17:00). She talks about how she is the product of rape, incest, and murder. She then thanks her cousin for still loving her despite that, putting a flower on his grave. S2E13: the rape victim from the previous submissions talks to her daughter about what it is like to be raped (39:00-40:00). She mentions that when you are raped, you lose a part of yourself. She says this to explain why she cannot fully love her daughter. About two minutes after this, the rape victim tells her daughter that she does not see her uncle in her anymore.
The Lullaby (Movie)
Lumumba (Movie)
The rape of women by soldiers is mentioned several times. At some point, one woman is stopped at a roadblock and sees the corpse of a woman, presumably raped before she was killed. Soldiers tear off her clothes and presumably rape her off-screen after the scene cuts off.
A story told in the past concerns a doctor at the asylum sexually abusing the patients. He rapes and impregnates a 16 year old girl which leads to her killing him. A woman is captured by the patients. One of the men says that he is glad that she is here because they need "outside blood" to help keep them from inbreeding. She is approached by a patient and the scene fades to black but later when trying to escape she says she was raped. Another woman is captured as well. Most of her clothes are torn off and she is carried out of the room. There is a long segment following that where she' i heard crying and screaming in the background.
Lust, Caution (Movie)
A rape scene is particularly brutal.
M (1931) (Movie)
It is vaguely implied that the child serial killer also molests his victims.
M3GAN (Movie)
A bully character sits on top of the titular doll in a threatening posture: he hits her, calls her pretty, strokes her haid and starts taking her clothes off.
Ma (Movie)
An older woman grooms teenage boys and it comes across as very creepy. Her flirting is not taken seriously at first, and other teenagers laugh about her trying to hit on the boys. Her behavior becomes worse over time. In flashbacks, it is revealed that a woman was sexually assaulted as a teen. A boy she had a crush on left her a note asking her to meet him in a closet, and she was encouraged by another girl to perform oral sex on him. She did so, but afterwards, she discovered it was all a cruel prank; the boy who sent her the note and the girl who talked to her arranged for someone else to wait in the closet for her, tricking her into having perform oral sex a total stranger.
Ma Mere (Movie)
A character describes how, when he was a child, a mob of white men broke into his family home and raped his mother in front of him.
This film takes place in an orphanage. At some point, one character explains why each of the children is there. It is implied that one of them (a girl) was sexually abused by her father and that she is suffering from trauma. The father of another of the children killed his wife because he thought she was cheating on him.
Macabre (Movie)
Macbeth (Movie)
The titular protagonist sends solders to kill a family. During this scene, a woman is showed being held to the ground screaming as she is raped by soldiers (1:49-1:52).
Macross Plus (TV Show)
Mad Max (Movie)
The villains engage in a car chase with a young couple and run them off the road. The woman is raped and it is implied that the man is as well.
The premise of the film is that a group of women is trying to escape from sex slavery in a male-dominated society where women are used for reproductive and sexual purposes and treated as objects. Additionally: a woman from a far-off clan disrobes in despair, use of naked women as bait.
There is a scene where a woman is a assaulted by a man on-screen for a fairly long amount of time. The protagonist of the movie watches this happen and does nothing.
Mad Men (TV Show)
S2E3: a character forces himself onto a woman. This is quite complicated, however, as the forcefulness is something the woman ostensibly enjoys. S2E12: a man rapes another character. S3E4: when a character discusses moving to Manhatten with her mother, she tells her that 'you'll get raped. You know that.' S3E8: Pete Campbell forces himself on the neighbour's au pair - she doesn't want to sleep with him and says no but he blackmails her because he had saved her from getting in trouble. The assault starts on screen but most of it happens off screen. S4E2: a joke is made about the government 'raping our wives'. S4E8: a character is accused of 'walking around and trying to get raped.' S6E1: a character makes a joke to her husband about him raping a teenager while she holds her down to 'spice things up.' S6E8: a woman engages in sexual activity with a young boy (a minor) despite his unwillingness to participate. The show explores gender roles at great length. As a result, sexual harassment (often based in the workplace) is frequently depicted on-screen, much of which is physical.
Madame Claude (Movie)
This movie is a biopic of a female pimp (told from her point of view): there are thus many scenes of sexual relationships between prostitutes and their clients. Many of them are abusive (physical and psychological violence) and some even ends up in violent gang rape (off-screen). The women are shown being very distressed by these encounters and being physically and psychologically hurt afterwards, but their sufferings are disregarded by their pimp and other characters. One important subplot is about one of the two female protagonists having been sexually abused by her father (who appears several times in the film) when she was a child. This is discussed throughout, with the other protagonist explaining that she was also sexually abused by her uncle as a child, and several characters discouraging her from filing a complaint (because the rapist is a power figure). At some point, it is mentioned that a man kidnapped a young girl, beat her and raped her before leaving her in the woods.
One of the main female characters is held captive and repeatedly raped by a group of escaped criminals, an experience which leaves her profoundly traumatised, even after being rescued by her friends. The same group of escaped criminals are known to be otherwise sexually violent and there are several points in the novel where other female characters feel at risk of being attacked by them. At one point, a group of male beings who are humanoid in appearance but follow different social norms surround the woman who was raped by these criminals and proposition her for sex in the way which is accepted within their culture. She reacts to this with fear and panic.
Made in Abyss (TV Show)
There are two scenes where characters check to see if a character is 'anatomically correct' without his consent, once implied (while he was deactivated) and once on-screen. A young girl is naked and strung up as a punishment, shown struggling and embarrassed, though the scene is played off lightheartedly. Later on the series, a child character and others imply to being sexually abused. S2E1: sexual assault is heavily implied in the first minutes. We see the child facing his abuser and closing his eyes before it cuts to the next scene.
Made in Heaven (TV Show)
The topic and depiction of sex are highly present in this show. There are many instances of consensual sex; however, the show also aims to highlight darker sex-related topics within the context of India, which may be deeply traumatic to viewers.
It is revealed that one of the adult female characters was raped as a 13 year old and that she had a child, who is still in her life, but raised by someone else. The aftermath follows the dynamics of this relationship and her outbursts of anger and sadness. The end of the movie has her breaking down and promising to seek therapy.
Towards the end of the movie, a woman describes the moments leading up to sexual assault when she was a child, implying that it was constant from that point on. Another woman replies to the first, informing her of her mother prostituting her in exchange for drugs Throughout the movie, characters are sexualized, despite being related in some shape or form.
Madeinusa (Movie)
Mafia Mama (Movie)
A man attempts to rape a woman, but when he struggles with undoing his belt, she fights him off. The attempted assault is brief and most of the scene is her fighting him.
A character is raped by her cousin at the beginning of the movie A priest grooms and sexually abuses a character in the middle of the movie Nuns force characters to take a communal shower and sexually comments and degrade their bodies.
Episode 1 starts with the main characters' bullies hiring two classmates to rape her. The main character's brother also physically abuses her and it is implied that some sexual abuse may be involved. A couple of characters are also either sexually assaulted or harassed throughout the series.
The Magicians (TV Show)
There are multiple instances throughout the series of characters having sex while one or more of them are concealing their identities (through possession, assuming a false identity, etc.). Lycanthropy (being a werewolf) is a sexually transmitted curse with dire consequences if it is not passed on. Werewolves are referred to broadly as rapists in the first season, although it is later made clear that this is a generalization. S1E1: the scene where a female character is recruited to a new magic school involves her sexual assault (her shirt is forcibly removed). S1E7: two characters have sex and enter a romantic relationship, but it is later revealed that one of them was possessed the entire time they knew each other. The other character seems very disturbed by this, because it meant the possessed character did not actually consent to anything. S1E9: scene of child sex abuse. S1E12: he main characters travel to a magical world and meet another student from their school who discusses how some of his classmates had sex with talking animals. It is mentioned on occasion throughout the series that cross-species relationships occasionally happen in this world and are technically not bestiality, as the animals/magical creatures are sapient and can give consent. Two main characters have sex while shapeshifted into foxes. S1E12+13: three characters are affected by alcohol and a spell that heightens emotion. A gay man falls down while his two best friends (male and female) put him to bed: he immediately passes out. The other two characters begin to have sex, and eventually wake him up to include him. The threesome progresses to full intercourse, and all three characters wake up naked. The gay man is blacked out throughout. None of the characters involved ever acknowledge that he was raped; he is blamed by other characters for the event. All characters are implied to have fragmented memory of the encounter, and all characters attempt to lay blame on each other (no one is considered to be fully responsible for their actions because of the effects of the spell). S1E13: graphic and potentially distressing on-screen rape of a female lead. She becomes pregnant as a result of this event, although she then terminates the pregnancy (these repercussions are dealt with into seasons 2 & 3). It is revealed that a key male character was a victim of child sexual abuse when he was younger. He is portrayed as being 'evil'. An overarching plot from the end of season 1 onwards involves a male character, who is primarily gay, having to enter an arranged marriage with a woman: some sexual encounters between them could be considered coercive. S2E1: two characters discuss the fact that they have both been raped, and one suggests that the other permanently remove all of her emotions to "feel better" like he did. S3E5+6: a 27 year old character is forced to marry a 15 year old boy. He makes several creepy advances towards her, but she avoids consummating the marriage by getting him blackout drunk and convincing him they did have sex. S3E3: pirates board the protagonists' vessel, and there is discussion of the possibility of sexual assault and PTSD occurring between the sentient boats. The (female) pirate king also flirts with a female character, which could be seen as somewhat threatening, given that they are demanding that their boat be allowed to rape the protagonists' boat or else they will kill the human crew: no assault occurs. There are references to a professor having had multiple affairs with adult students.
The entire show is a historical drama based on the real events of the Imperial Ottoman harem, where young girls and women were recruited or enslaved as servants and concubines for the Sultan. However, all of the concubines in the show are depicted as adult women. The main character, Hurrem, is a sex slave and war prize based on a real historical figure. She falls in love with the Sultan, who is essentially her slave master. Concubines of the Sultan are not permitted to deny him if they are ordered to his bedroom. However, all of the concubines are depicted as willfully and enthusiastically consenting, even though they are slaves. S1E16: there is a violent attempted rape scene of a concubine by a palace guard (1:03:03-1:04:57). After the concubine is rescued, victim blaming occurs, with another woman saying she should not have left the harem late at night.
Magnolia (Movie)
Maharaja (Movie)
All of the assaults (there are two) take place off screen but the characters discuss it. There is no noise made from the assaulter or victim during the events. It is the driving plot point of the movie which is revenge for this act against the main character's daughter.
Maid (TV Show)
This series is about a woman trying to free herself and her daughter from her abusive husband. The abuse covered is primarily verbal and emotional, but there are close calls where the protagonist's abuser throws things at her or breaks things around her. S1E6: a man mentions that a woman kept shoving her hand down his pants despite him saying no. S1E7: towards the end of the episode, the protagonist goes into shock after witnessing her mother have a mental health episode. The abuser takes the protagonist to his home, rather than to the place where she has been staying and initiates sex with her, even though she is visibly distraught. Although she kisses him first, and he asks her, "Do you want this?" and she says "Yes," she is very clearly not in a mental state to consent to sex.
The main character is forced into a marriage with a near-stranger because she resembles the girl that he raped years earlier. Worth noting: the rapist is treated as the victim in this arrangement, and characters state multiple times that he did not know what he was doing. This view is not challenged on screen.
Maid Sama! (TV Show)
Maiden Holmes (TV Show)
The film is an investigation about a young woman's murder (not shown on-screen). Prostitution is mentioned frequently in the first part. In the first scene of the movie, a woman (in her underwear) is shown being uncomfortable while a female tailor helps her get dressed. In one brief scene, a woman tries to kiss another woman, who rebuffs her. One male character is said to be violent towards women: it is said that his mother settled a judiciary case involving physical (i.e. sexual) abuse with money. A woman is tricked by a couple, who invites her to their apartment to force her to perform sexual acts for money with the woman while the man watches and masturbates. The titular character (a male captain) encourages her to go there to solve the murder, without knowing exactly what would happen to her. She is shown afterwards being traumatized. It is then revealed that the said couple regularly framed young women with the same method, including the victim of the murder (who is 20, i.e. minor in 1950s France). Worthy of note: it is said that the victim was not raped, but her bloody dress (from knife wounds) is shown several times in the first part of the movie.
This film contains a long attempted rape scene: the victim seems generally unbothered afterwards . There are two similar attacks during the rest of the movie, which involves revenge.
Majo No Tabitabi (TV Show)
S1E9: a little girl becomes a mad murderer because her father did "perverted things" to her. It is strongly suggested that a slave girl is raped.
In the first chapter, the author recalls playing a character in a play who had experienced incest. In the chapter about working in a bakery, the author says one of her workplaces closed suddenly when it was found that the boss was kissing a teen employee. The author apologizes in one chapter for writing the word "penis" on paper any time she was writing in a scene for the show 'Fresh Off the Boat', recognizing that others considered this to be a form of sexual harassment. The author describes her experience of being raped, and how she did not realize it was rape at the time because it was not violent, per se. One chapter focuses on the author's experience working with one 'Fresh Off the Boat' producer who manipulated, gaslit, and sexually harassed her.
S3E14: the protagonist's brother grabs a girl's chest non consensually. She then proceeds to beat him up, but the whole episode has a creepy vibe from him trying to deceive her to grab her boobs. S4E18: the protagonist invites a girl from his school over while his parents are out of town. His brother lets a bunch of grown men who make a meth lab in the garage into the house and they flirt with the high school girl. One man is seen making out with her and grabbing her butt behind his back. It is mentioned that they end up in bed together. Thea actress was 15 at the time of filming. S6E2: a man pretends the be an advert and sings 'read the newspaper to find out the local raper' early on in the episode. Worthy of mention: S5E11: an old woman keeps an old man drugged with mood lifter pills and tranquilizers in order to make him love her to marry him and take his money. After she gets caught, her family tells her she needs to call off the wedding and tell the man or they will call the police. Instead, she drugs her family and tries to marry him. Her family is too happy to stop her because of the mood lifting pills. She wastes the end of her pills on her family and the man comes out of his drugged state, realizes what happened, and leaves her.
Maleficent (Movie)
The scene where Maleficent wakes to find that her wings have been stolen has been confirmed by the writers to be an intentional allegory for rape and its aftermath. A man kisses a woman while she's unconscious in order to break a curse. He openly wonders whether or not she would be okay with this, but is shushed.
Malena (Movie)
The whole movie is about a beautiful woman who is sexually desired by all men and jealoused by all women. Throughout the movie, men act in a very innapropriate and vulgar way towards her (they mostly say inappropriate things without her hearing it). At some point, the rumors become real harassment against her Another important information is that through the movie, a young teenager stalks her through a small hole in a window. He watches her naked multiple times. The 'sexual relationship between teenager and adult' takes place in the boy's fantasy (in his fantasy also, he imagines pulling off her clothes as she sleeps). In another scene, an adult woman masturbates the teenage protagonist during a movie (00:59:50 - 01:01:04). Later, the teenager is brought to a brothel by his father and has sex with an adult prostitute (01:19:44 - 01:23:46). The titular charater's lawyer rapes her (00:58:08 - 00:59:15) Worthy of note : there is another scene in which she accepts to have sex with a man only because she has no money to pay the food he delivers her (01:13:11 - 01:14:02).
The entire book is based off of a woman who murders her step-father while he is raping her. She is seventeen when it happens and its described in great detail what he does before she manages to kill him. She does not tell anyone she was being raped at the time and instead remains quiet, later telling the readers how it started at age 13 and in great detail of when, who, how. Her mother ends up being the one who holds her down when the husband wants to "have sex" with her. She is later almost assaulted by a group of inmates but is saved. She is also drugged and it's heavily implied that she was raped but a kit comes back negative. She ends up finally telling someone in great detail about whar happened and why she killed her step-father before the book comes to an end.
A character plans to blackmail the protagonist. The protagonist likens this blackmail to rape. The protagonist's childhood friend writes a novel in which a middle school student rapes another student. It is revealed later that this is based on a real event, in which he held a girl down while one of his friends raped her.
Malignant (Movie)
A character's biological mother was sexually assaulted as a teenager and forced to carry the baby to term.
Mallrats (Movie)
A man unknowingly statutory rapes a teenager who he claimed was 36. We see the sex tape get played (no nudity, various sexual comments played for humor) and he ends up getting arrested for it. A male character slaps the backside of another male character unknowingly. There is also some prison rape jokes, especially a visual joke where the perpetrator gets raped in a jail cell (no nudity, just his facial reaction).
At the end of the book, we find out that an 11-year-old victim has been the victim of grooming and sexually assaulting at the hands of a family friend. The trauma of this sexual violence manifested in the 11-year-old having extreme physical symptoms: wetting the bed, losing her ability to walk, etc. When the girl tells her family what happened and they confront the family friend, he tries to gaslight them all, saying that the girl is a temptress and that he is innocent.
E2: a brief scene involves a man giving oral sex, and he is clearly struggling with it in the following scenes.
Man Bites Dog (Movie)
There is a graphic scene in which a film crew gang rapes a woman in front of her husband.
Man Down (TV Show)
One episode portrays (not realistically) the on-screen rape of a lamb by a dog. This is played for laughs and portrayed as funny.
A woman is carried and dropped on the floor, multiple men dive in to try to assault her: she is quickly rescued by the protagonist and returned to her family (12:29-13:22). A mn mentions his wife being killed and “violated” (20:06-20:12). A woman is grabbed and tossed around by multiple men until she is rescued by the protagonist (37:30-38:00). A man tries to assault a woman, she pushes him away (01:04:38-01:04:53). Men lament not being able to rape a woman and talk about two previous women whom they raped (01:12:38-01:13:22). The protagonist tells men they raped and killed his fiancée (01:15:24-01:15:30).
Mana (2014) (Movie)
Mandy (Movie)
A cult leader attempts to rape a woman who he later murders. It is implied that other cultists are being sexually abused.
This is an exploitation film which contains an on-screen rape as well as on-screen "ritual" group sex performed on one woman which does not seem entirely consensual either.
Manhunter (Movie)
A man lusts after women that he later kills. He does not rape them, but he does touch them. It is implied he molests them after killing them. Rape and molestation and incest are mentioned a number of times but never shown. In one scene, a man lies about a serial killer molesting his male victims and having had a sexual relationship with his mother.
Sex workers are catcalled and sexually harassed. A woman recalls her experience of being sold into sex work: she was drugged and likely raped. She recalls other girls also sold into sex work being drugged and forced to engage in sexual acts for clients like dancing naked. She also recalls how her pimp kept her locked and forced her to do whatever he wanted. Presumably, he also rapes her as she reveals she has a four month old baby from the ordeal.
We overheard conversation about a man trying to get a date with a girl even after finding out she is under 18. A man gropes a woman while he is robbing her A sentient male dog breaks into a house intentionally while a female dog inside tries to get away from him. The next scene pained yelps can be heard and then at the end of the movie, the female dog has puppies.
It is revealed that the protagonist's uncle, who has a colony of slaves in Antigua, actively participated in raping and torturing them with other slave owners (1:27:30-1:28:50). The protagonist finds out by happening upon a book of graphic drawings, which we see on-screen, showing these acts (sound effects accompany the drawings).
There is an on-screen rape about 19 minutes into the movie: it is briefly shown but the audio continues.
The Mantis (TV Show)
Worthy of note: in S1E5, there is discussion of a botched vaginoplasty.
A woman is forcefully grabbed, pinned to a table, and raped. The camera spends a long time on the woman’s pained and crying expression and the man’s face during the act. There is also a flashback of this type of attack happening in the past.
A group of boys grab the protagonist's sister. They lift her skirt and one tries to disrobe to rape her. The protagonist tries to fight them off but is too small. The protagonist's uncle ends up chasing off the boys. This scene is referenced multiple times after the fact.
A major aspect of the plot of this movie is the subjection of the main character's race - the Iorphs - who have the appearance of children. There' i a whole subplot revolving around one of the characters being in a forced marriage, raped, and having a child. The abuse is non-explicit but it is heavily implied and discussed. There are also implications of pseudo-incest between the main character's adoptive child and her in one segment of the movie. 9:12-9:20: two soldiers leer at the Iorphs and comment on their youthful appearance. One of the soldiers laughs and asks the other if they are "into this type of thing?" 10:21-10:27: brief scene of soldiers being ordered to kidnap woman and girls of the Iorph and them fleeing. 23:47-24:06: a kingdom that has kidnapped a girl discuss the forced marriage and desire for her to have a child with another character. 38:24-38:50: a girl reveals to her friend that she is pregnant after being held captive and raped. 50:10-50:16: an adult male slaps a girl's butt as she is working. Another male leers and comments on her appearance distastefully. 54:50-55:31: people holding girl captive discuss abusing her. They further dehumanize her and people's worth to their ability to bear them children. 55:32-57:55: a girl has breakdown about the abuse she has gone through and her feelings on the child she was forced to have. 1:02:29-1:04:14: an adoptive son attempts to kiss mom and comments on others saying they look like "lovers." The mom is shown to be uncomfortable and tries to push him away. Further into the scene he gets more violent and pushes her up against a wardrobe. The interaction ends when they accidentally knock over a lamp and start a small fire. 1:19:53-1:22:36: a boy attempts to take girl from captivity. He touches her face which she looks uncomfortable with. When she refuses to go with him he becomes violent. The scene ends when another character interrupts them. 1:35:45-1:39:48: a girl meets the child she was forced to bear for the first time. She then leaves the child soon afterward and grieves what happened to her and her relationship with the child.
Marcella (TV Show)
Season 2 involves extensive discussion of child abuse, including sexual abuse. A pedophile tries to brush off his interest in children by saying he has not assaulted a child in years, though this is framed in the show as repulsive and unacceptable. Detectives report signs of sexual abuse on a corpse. It is revealed that a boy is being sexually abused by his father. A woman recalls being given alcohol by a celebrity and raped at the age of 14. A boy is tied down to a bed by a pedophile who wants revenge on the protagonist. The man takes off his own shirt and tells the boy his mom will have to watch him be hurt. Police intervene before the boy is physically harmed. In season 3, two man attempt to rape a teenage girl in an alley, but the protagonist quickly intervenes. There are also other brief scenes of men getting physically violent against their patners.
Marco Polo (TV Show)
This show glamorizes sexual trafficking, pedophilia, rape, incest, murder (including child murder), child abuse, etc.
Mare Fuori (TV Show)
S1E1: attempted rape.
At the end of episode 5 and into the start of episode 6, a male character tries to rape the protagonist. He forcefully kisses and grabs her. She fights back. She is 16 and he is the eldest son and likely an adult. He loses.
Child sexual abuse is mentioned as part of the widespread system of indentured servitude. Children who are no longer able to do factory work are sold to more extreme workplaces like mines or brothels. A teenaged main character is briefly threatened with this fate a couple of times.
The titular character is threatened with gang rape at the very beginning of the movie, and when the men arrive, they discuss their plans in details. She is then raped on screen twice: once in the beginning (23:00) and once at the end (01:25:00). There is a lot of talk about the rape during the film.
Marnie (Movie)
Early in the film, the main male character kisses the protagonist (a woman) against her will while she is having a panic attack. She seems visibly distressed. Later, he blackmails her into marrying him. On their honeymoon, she appears vividly repulsed by any physical intimacy with him. He firstly respects her wishes, but after a few days, eventually rapes her. She attempts to kill herself the next morning, but is rescued and then forced to live with him. In the final sequence of the movie, it is revealed that the protagonist is (unconsciously) traumatized by having killed a man when she was a little girl. The man was a client of her mother (a prostitute), who kissed her (the girl) against her will.
Marrowbone (Movie)
The movie is about a mother and her children fleeing from their abusive husband/father and at one point, there is an article title that says that he “abused his daughter”: nothing sexual is ever mentioned or implied (it i’s unclear what kind of abuse occurred).
A women is abducted, kept in a marsh and has a child with her abductor.
The protagonist has escaped from a sexually abusive cult.
Martin (Movie)
A man admits to raping women after drugging them with sleeping pills. We see a woman get drugged, the man says he will rape her but she will "go to sleep" and that he "won't hurt [her]." We see him take off his shirt, caress her exposed breast, and kiss her. Then the scene cuts to a different scene. Later we see him covering her up with a blanket as she rolls over, seemingly soundly asleep.
S1E8: a man talks about the time he was almost sexually abused when he was 10 or 11. He talks about a guy that he thought was cool would always hang around the group home. He found out something was wrong when they were alone and the predator called him pretty. Knowing nothing good would come from it, he attacked the predator, which resulted in the child’s arm being broken. S2E4: the villain from the first season confronts a predator from the group home he grew up in. It was mentioned in season 1 that the predator tried to sexually abuse the villain when he was a child, which resulted in the villain’s arm being broken. The predator talked about loving the kids in the group home and some of them “loving” him back. S2E6: from the beginning of the episode to, the main character and a girl goes to a place where they could develop some photos. The place they go to seems to be used for child pornography. The main character beats the photographer, asking if he likes taking pictures of little girls, before eventually burning the whole place down. A character attacks and kisses a woman he has overpowered. S2E10: a paid female sex-worker is forced to perform oral sex on a villain.
Marvin's Room (Movie)
Flashes of a TV show a side character is watching frames a woman struggling and screaming as a man attacks her.(09:30-10:05) Nothing beyond that is showcased, but the character states the woman had been raped offscreen. References to this show and its characters, exempting mentions of rape, are made throughout, including the ending.
A woman is threatened and subsequently raped in order to force her to consent to marriage.
The film contains several instances of sexual harassment. One sequence shows the protagonist at the cinema, watching a movie depicting a woman getting chased and cornered, brutally prevented from calling the police and being physically forced to perform barely-offscreen (only the upper half of face is shown) oral sex. This is depicted as something interesting and erotic for the moviegoers. The protagonist passes an implied rape on his way without any further glance.
MASH (TV Show)
Many episodes contain period-typical casual sexism like men cat-calling, groping, peeping and making persistent advances towards women treated in a lighthearted, joking manner. S1E5: one soldier has a young, possibly underage Korean servant/slave who was sold to him by her family. There is no overt assault, but it is implied she is expected to perform sexual services. The plot of the episode revolves around the main characters trying and succeeding in freeing her. S1E7: two captains lead another captain to believe a major (woman) is interested in him. They set him up to sleep in her place (by lying, saying it is visitors quarter). When she comes (in the dark), he scares her when the first thing he is saying is if he should help with her bra and starts to make out with her despite her screaming and calling for help. Those two captains use this prank so that they get a vacation and that one of them does not get admitted by the psychiatrist. S3E2 + S5E1: the possibility of being raped by enemy soldiers if captured is briefly discussed by some characters, mostly in a serious tone, with any jokes implied to be a way of coping with the fear with black humour. S3E18: there is a scene where a false rape accusation is used to resolve a plot line and is treated in a very cavalier manner. A nurse makes advances towards a doctor who is initially uninterested but eventually responds. Hwever when someone walks in, because it would damage her reputation to be caught fraternizing, she claims he tried to rape her. No one takes it seriously and there is no resolution, the scene is entirely played for laughs. S8E8: an teenage Korean girl attempts to prostitute herself because she desperately needs money. The soldier she is propositioning is told she is underage but he clearly intends to go through with it anyway before he is stopped by a main character.
Mask Girl (TV Show)
S1E1: a subway passenger grabs the protagonist's behind (off-screen) and angrily denies it when she confronts him. They end up at a police station, where two (male) police officers ask her if she was mistaken. The assaulter says that because she is ugly, no one would want to touch her, hence he is innocent. The assaulter and the protagonist fight in the station. A senior (male) police chief tells her to let it go because she was just seen assaulting the man in front of the police. This incident was meaningful and illustrated victim-blaming quite well. All this happens between 40:20 and 42:30. S12E2: a fan of the protagonist meets up with her under the guise of wanting to treat her to food and drinks. Over the course of the night, he convinces her that he thinks she is attractive. He pressures her to go into a motel and posts online that she is "uglier than I thought," that he would post pictures of her, and that she is so ugly but he still wants to "have a taste." In the motel, he tries to convince her to have sex but becomes frustrated and pushes her onto the bed. She gets up to leave, but he says that if she did not want to have sex, she should have said so, so that he would not waste so much money. In addition, he asks her why she is "playing hard to get" when she is so ugly. After she hits him, he forces her onto the bed again, she kicks his groin, and they fight. No sexual content occurs after that, but his actions and words seem realistic and could be quite triggering to some. All this happens between 36:30 and 40:00. This episode also introduce one coworker of the protagonist, who becomes unhealthily obsessed with her. At first, he seems to mean well, saying that she looks even better without her mask and thinking of ways to confess to her. However, he finds out that she has a crush on another character and witnesses them go to a motel. In a jealous rage, he sends her an anonymous email saying that he knows she is Mask Girl. Later, he finds out she is meeting up with the above-mentioned character, then sees on his page that he is planning on taking advantage of her. He appears protective and well-meaning as he tries to find them so he can warn her. He even kills the offender and hides his body. However, she quits her job the next day, prompting him to get her address from the offender without her consent. After she finally answers the door later that night and they have a tense conversation, he pushes her onto her bed forces himself onto her. She resists at first, but stops moving as he removes his trousers and pushes up her dress. This scene is especially triggering because of the realistic sex scene. She stabs him to death while distracting him with sex. All this happens between 52:20 and 58:10.
A group of boys plans to rape two women they perceive as stuck up and possibly gay. They attempt to rape the two girls, dragging them into a classroom and restraining them while ripping their clothes off. They are then stopped by another student.
The Master (Movie)
The main character is revealed to have had an incestuous relationship with his aunt as a child.
Master (2022) (Movie)
While a woman is jogging at night, two college boys run out of the woods past her. A college girl is crouched down, and her knees are scraped and bloody. She refuses to talk about or report the incident.
Master Keaton (TV Show)
S1E14: a father tries to rape his 13 year old adoptive daughter. She stops him by choking him with his tie.
S1E1: a woman is raped by her abusive husband. S1E4: a man tries to force his wife to have anal sex. S1E12: this episode has instances of necrophilia. S1E13: the episode has several instances of rape, some involving a child and incest. S2E5: a teenager is raped by the devil off-screen. A man is genitally mutilated. S2E6: a man attempts to rape a stripper. Later, she asks him to stop during sex and he does not. S2E7: in this episode, a plague causes men to be extremely violent to all females. A man tries to sexually assault his daughter. S2E10: a man claims to have raped another boy when they were children. It is implied he may have raped or molested others.
Chapters 33+35: man is locked in a viewing room where human-hybrid creatures are forced to either "fight or fuck" based on the viewer's choice. The human level intelligence of the hybrid creatures varies so it is unclear how much they all understand what is happening. The viewer initially chooses fight, but he later has no choice but to choose the other option. Chapter 35 contains a brief semi-descriptive scene of the creatures having sex.
Matriarch (Movie)
The author discusses going to the doctor as a teenage girl for one issue, and the doctor just assumed she was sexually active and hiding a pregnancy or an STI. The doctor made this assumption because she was a young Black woman. In reality, she was still a virgin. The doctor performed a pelvic exam on her without preparing or informing her in any way, and the speculum caused her to bleed. The author described not really understanding what was happening, and her older sister confronted the doctor on her behalf.
A character offers a drink to a young woman, aware that it has been spiked and alluding to it making her consent sexually. He is seen bragging about this fact to other characters, and follows her to the bathroom.
About the 01:09:00 timecode, a character watching tv says that American soldiers in Afghanistan kidnap women and rape them. About the 01:12:00 timecode, a lawyer mentions defending rapists. About the 01:34:00 timecode, the main male character is tortured in prison during a long sequence: part of it invovles being raped by a masked woman soldier. About the 01:41:00 timecode, the captors of the protagaonist threaten to imprison his mother and hints that she would be raped in jail. This is mentioned again about the 01:47:00 timecode.
The Maus (Movie)
Maxine (TV Show)
The main male character is discussed to have assaulted children and teenagers. None of this is shown on screen.
MaXXXine (Movie)
The movie has a plot on the Nightstalker who was a famous serial killer in the 80s who raped and murdered women. There are a few scenes of non-consensual touching throughout. The female protagonist is accosted by a male with a knife and unknown intentions. Before he is able to do anything, she pulls out a handgun, forces him to strip nude and perform oral actions to the barrel of the gun. He is then commanded onto the ground where his testicles are crushed with her heel. A woman has flashbacks to a scene where she was molested (caressed by an old woman while asleep). A man video records himself with women crying in the background. He points the camera toward a closet door which he opens up to two women who blindfolded, tied up, and sobbing. Three men grab one of the women while she is still blindfolded and drag her to a door where a man walks out, grabs her face and she screams. The camera glitches out and flashes and it is implied that she is raped and/or murdered. Her body is later found by police. A woman’s nude dead body is found in a park and a forensics team rolls her body over revealing a bunch of “satanic” markings on her skin.
May December (Movie)
The film follows a married couple, which started their relationship 24 years ago, when the man was 13 and the woman was 36. They were caught having sex when he was 13 and she gave birth to his children a few years later. The main focus of the film is the start of this relationship. An actress enters their lives to play the character of the woman in the film and she exhibits signs of being aroused by the story. She calls 13 year old boys not "sexy enough". The child of the woman says the woman was repeatedly molested by her two older brothers. The woman denies this.
Mayans M.C. (TV Show)
S1E4+6: a presumably underage female character working as a sex worker has an off-screen sexual relationship with an adult. After running away from her father, she gets into a truck and offers a sexual favor to the driver, who accepts. She also takes off her shirt infront of the main character to show the same truck driver beat her after she tried stealing from him. S1E5: one of the main couples, having a toxic relationship, have a disagreement that leads to them physically hitting each other. It ends with them kissing and sleeping together. In a later season, the husband chokes his wife while they sleep together with the intent to kill her but is unable to go through with it. He later on drugs her wine while she is in the bath and waits for her to drown but is unable to go through with it. After learning about that attempt, she tries to flee with her child but in the end of he takes the child and forces her to return. S2E2: a recurring female character is taken advantage of while under the influence of drugs. She later meets with her rapist, who is caught and murdered. A bystander to the assault appears in later episodes. S3E8: the main characters love interest is cat-called by two men who also make racist remarks. She attempts to leave the situation but the main character gets into a fight with the two men resulting in her being accidentally hit and getting a black eye.
Mayday (2021) (Movie)
One of the male characters has the female main character trapped in a freezer and it is implied that he forced himself onto her as shown with a timeskip of him adjusting his clothing upon leaving, revealing a disheveled and on edge main character trying to get herself together.
Mayday (TV) (TV Show)
Throughout the series the material is handled with care/is not gratuitous, and is a central part of the plot and the crime(s) being solved. A cop is implied to have raped or assaulted a drunk woman over the course of arresting her. S1E3: there is a conversation about a male character who is revealed to have started a relationship with his now wife when she was only 14. He is referred to as being "older". The conversation it not graphic and it is in keeping with the themes of the series in which a teenage girl has gone missing. A man is revealed to have been caught masturbating in public presumably around teenagers/children. In this episode he is also revealed to have been spying on teenagers having sex in the woods. Worthy of note: In another scene of S1E3, a different male character is seen kissing a younger woman in the woods, it is likely that she is underage. They have sex off camera. S1E4: a woman has a conversation with a man who, it is implied, raped her in high school (14:40). This is discussed again in S1E5 (26:00). S1E5: a teenager admits to being paid to have sex in front of the older peeping tom character. A teenage girl is kidnapped by an adult man who says that he had "come on to her" at an earlier time (38:00). There is physical violence as this scene unfolds and he is on top of her but the violence does not get sexual.
S1E2: a man cat-calls a woman. S1E3: a character who is portrayed as promiscuous is harassed in the bar where she works. Shortly later, another character finds her crying and it is revealed that she was raped off screen and a good part of the rest of the episode deals with that, such as reporting it to the police.
One of the adult characters has sexual fantasies regarding two teenage girls. We do not see his fantasies, but he does write down descriptions on pieces of paper and tapes them to his apartment window for the teenagers to read. The descriptions are very sexually explicit and could be triggering for some. In another scene, two teenage girls harass another boy their own age, trying to persuade him into letting them perform oral sex on him. They do perform the act and a younger girl peeks in on the scene from outside his bedroom. This same boy and his very young brother chat on an online sex chatroom with an anonymous older women who does not know they are children. The younger brother continues to chat with the woman before eventually meeting her in person, where she kisses him. Their conversations never gets too sexually explicit, but the inherent nature of the relationship could be upsetting for some.
Medieval (Movie)
This historical drama based on real events contains plenty of sexism and sexual harassment. About an hour and a half in, a brief scene shows men pillaging a village and there is a fast clip of a man ripping a woman’s clothes off and raping her on screen. It is not very long but it is violent.
Medium (TV Show)
S1E14: a child (said to be around the age of 4) is abducted and the abductor (a grown man) is shown to be likely naked and touching her. Rape and sexual assault are heavily implied. He finally buries her alive. S1E15, S2E12, S3E4: the spirit of a rapist possesses doctors in order to gain access to young female patients. There are several graphic verbal descriptions of this. S1E12: the protagonist has a vision that a woman she is talking to was raped by a cop years before. S3E18: a man gets violent when the woman he is with changes her mind about having sex with him (21:06-22:01). The scene cuts when she points a knife at him and there is never a clear confirmation of what happened next in that occasion. S4E2: a character relives a memory of a teenage girl that was alone with a police officer in his car and realized he was not taking her home as promised. It is implied that she was sexually assaulted by the officer, but never managed to report it. S4E9+10: 2-part episode about young women who were abducted and repeatedly sexually assaulted while captive. While there are no graphic scenes of the assaults, they show some memories of one of the women's captivity and the subject is discussed at length. S5E8: the protagonist has a dream about a home invasion where one of the female victims is raped by one of the invaders. It shows her being dragged to the other room in one scene and, on the other scene, the man closing his pants back after, with her half dressed on the bed behind him. The matter is discussed throughout the episode, as the case is investigated.
A rat tries to rape a poodle. Worthy of note: a man meets a teenage girl when she is 16 and it is implied that this is when there relationship starts, though nothing sexual happens between them.
The male protagonist's boss sexualizes his employee's teenage daughter and severely sexually harasses his wife (grabbing her legs and waist, motorboating her breasts, and chasing her into the kitchen to press her up against a wall, even shouting "no means yes"). Her son and husband come to beat him up and end up murdering him.
While on a date at a man's house, a woman attempts to leave but her drags her back to the couch. He rips open her shirt, pins her down and kisses her. He is attacked by a scorpion before it can go any further.
Megalomaniac (Movie)
This horror movie is about a serial killer and his sister: the sister is raped multiple times at her job (on screen and off screen) by multiple men. At one point she has an incestual and graphic dream about her brother. A woman is kept chained in a bathroom.
At a party with their peers, girls are told that they must either pay $10 for entry or perform sexual favours for one of the male hosts. Later, one teen boy attempts to grope a girl while his friend films the interaction. The boy slaps the girl when she pushes him away. These scenes consistently feature very young teens drinking, doing drugs and engaging in sexual contact (often under pressure). It is revealed that one of the main characters (a young teen) was raped by her stepfather over a two-year period from the age of 9 onwards, resulting in his eventual imprisonment. Her mother, afraid of being abandoned by this man, blames the daughter and treats her poorly as a consequence. The film's primary plotline revolves around one teenage girl's disappearance, which follows her striking up a relationship with somebody who she believes is a teenage boy online, eventually meeting him for an in-person 'date.' Prior to their meeting in person, he makes numerous sexually-charged advances, i.e. asking her to pan her webcam down, ostensibly so that he could see her blouse. In conversations following the girl's disappearance, the same online man makes comments regarding the missing girl's perceived promiscuity, implying that nothing which went on between the two was out of the ordinary. When the other female (also aged 14) lead reports her knowledge of this man to the police, he threatens her via an online chatroom. It is revealed that sexually explicit photos of the kidnapped girl were uploaded to an internet fetish site; she is shown bound and bloody, clearly having been abused both sexually and otherwise. The film ends with what captions claim are the final 22 minutes of raw, unedited footage from the video camera of the girl who reported the man. These scenes feature the graphic and disturbing rape and torture of the teenage girl in question. Worthy of note: although this film is fictional and performed by actors, some may find it more disturbing due to its claims (at the beginning) that its plot is based on real events.
Mela (Movie)
The male protagonist pins down the female protagonist agressively and grabs her wrist down.
This film contains a lot of very extremely graphic material, including but not limited to acts with animals.
The end of the first part of the book takes places in Prague during World War II. First Jews and then Germans are rounded up and taken away, and there are instances described of violent assaults, women being taken away and mutilated, and of gang rape/sexual assault on the street. The instances are briefly described, but the tension of the chapter and horror of these violent or sexual happening seemingly everywhere is very disturbing.
Chapter 30: the main character is cornered by her boss in the bathroom. He kisses and touches her forcibly, ignoring her as she tells him to stop and tries to push him away. Someone else comes in and it distracts him long enough for her to get away. This is discussed again in chapter 34, when it is revealed that similar instances have happened with other people. There are no graphic details provided during that conversation.
Memento (Movie)
The movie revolves around a woman having been raped and killed, but there is no rape scene. Her body is shown, nude, wrapped in plastic. There is a scene where the main character hits a woman on screen. An escort is hired but nothing is shown beyond her arrival and leaving. There are multiple mentions of rape, but nothing is shown. There is a brief glimpse of man on top of a woman: we see the woman's face inside of plastic, and we hear struggling off screen.
After a Geisha was stripped of her clothes it is then implied that she was sexually assaulted by the same man, but nothing is shown only implied. A young geisha is gradually stripped of her clothes once being forcefully kissed. A geisha suspected of having sex is handled roughly by another woman, implying non-consensual touching.
The author's mother is held at gunpoint by her abusive ex-husband, and she attempts to placate him by having sex with him. The event is not shown or described in detail, but she recounts the event to the police after the fact.
TLDR: The film is about an investigation on the rapes and murders committed on young women. A lot of dialogues discuss the crimes and a few flashbacks show parts of it. 2:58-3:11: the nude body of a female murder victim is shown with her hands bound behind her back. 3:28-3:35: a group and children find and hold up the above mentioned woman's underwear. 3:48-3:52: the body is shown again. 5:08-5:25: a detective states that this is a rape and murder case, and asks a witness of his impression of the victim; specifically if she is "sexy or pretty." 7:34-7:42: a female murder victim is shown. She is clothed, her hands are tied and her eyes are covered with a girdle. 9:24-9:48: the Police Chief points to two men sitting side-by-side and tells the detective that one is a rapist and the other is the victims' brother. He asks the detective to identify which one is which. 12:55-13:05: a detective asks a male suspect if he murdered a female victim in order to touch her breast. The man asserts that he did not touch or kill her. 24:03-24:16: a detective reviews crime scene photos showing women gagged with their hands tied and heads covered. 26:54-27:06, 27:50-27:55: the detectives attempt a re-enactment of the assault with the male suspect and a male officer dressed as a women. The officer bends over in front of the suspect, simulating a sexual position. 35:35-35:40: a detective asks if there is evidence of rape. The coroner says that there was semen found at the crime scene. 35:54-36:06: a stocking is shown around a female victim's throat while the detectives discuss the case. The victim's face is covered by her underwear, and her hands are bound. 36:14: the corpse of the aforementioned victim is shown wearing only a bra. 44:07-44:13: a detective asks another colleague if he is hard and grabs his penis. 46:47-48:22: a woman is shown walking alone. She thinks that someone is nearby and begins to run. At 48:22, a man climbs out of a ditch and screams. 48:58-49:10: the aforementioned woman is shown dead. The police remove a stocking from her mouth and her hands are bound behind her back. 50:14-50:52: a detective briefly mentions rape cases and mentions that the defendant must not have pubic hair due to none being found at the scene. 1:01:31-1:02-53: a man pulls a bra and underwear from his trousers and arranges it on the ground. He pulls down his trousers and reveals that he is wearing red, lacy underwear. He begins to masturbate into the undergarments. 1:19-32-1:21:13: a female victim describes being assaulted. This description is accompanied by shots of her being restrained by her attacker. 1:24:33-1:24:40: a female victim is shown partially undressed. Her bra and underwear are seen on the ground and her hands are tied behind her. 1:25:01-1:25:52: the aforementioned woman is shown on the coroner's table. The coroner removes several pieces of peach from her vagina. 1:52:13-1:52:20: the killer carries a bound female victim. There are several close-ups of the visibly distressed woman. 1:54:13-1:54:32: an investigator describes the state of the aforementioned woman's body, specifying that she has injuries to her breasts and genitals.
The Memorist (TV Show)
S1E14: the main character uses his memory scan powers on a politician. A rape is briefly seen in memory scan flashback (56:11-56:22). S1E15: rape is discussed and characters talk about what happend to the victim. More flashbacks. A girl is walking in the woods and a group of guys corner her (25:20-31:40).
Memory (2022) (Movie)
At the beginning, an underage character is shown being prostituted by her father (not graphic), which is told to be a recurring situation. A brief video is shown from one of these implied rapes (nothing graphic). It is revealed that the previously mentioned adult character abuses of his power to sexually abuse kids (while hosting parties for guests). A minor character is mentioned to abuse children in these parties. A policeman character threatens someone with the potential of sexual abuse in prison.
Memory (2023) (Movie)
The movie mentions traumatic child sex abuse and rape. The plot heavily relies on the rape trauma of the main character. Though no rape scenes are shown in the film the topic comes up so quickly and heavily it may be scary and disturbing to watch.
The film opens with a man (a policeman undercover) paying the father of a 12 years-old girl to have sex with her (organised child prostitution). The girl starts kissing the man and touching his crotch, revealing that he is wearing a microphone to record her testimony. She warns her father, who is later killed by another cop. Child prostitution is mentioned multipled times throughout the film, as an underlying theme. About halfway through the movie, it is hinted that the protagonist (a man) was sexually abused as a child.
In a story written by the main character, a woman is held captive and implies that her captor sexually assaults her on a regular basis. She does not say these words explicitly, but implies that he "does all sorts of things to her" on a bed.
Men (Movie)
The theme of the movie has to do with intimate partner violence, harassment, rape culture, and how most women feel they cannot escape the violence of men. A vicar puts his hand on the main character's leg in an inappropriate situation, she is clearly uncomfortable. Near the end of the film, when the main character runs into the bathroom, the same vicar attempts to rape her, pushes her up and against a wall in a humping position, though both are fully clothed: she eventually stabs him with a knife. A naked man is seen throughout the film: he stalks the main character and tries to break into her house. Flashbacks of the main character's past show that her husband threatened to kill himself if she divorced him, and that he punched her once. Worthy of note: There is a 'body horror' sequence at the end where a man essentially gives birth to himself multiple times from 'vaginas' on random parts of his bodies.
An attempted rapist drags the main antagonist into the bushes with the intent on sexually assaulting her. Nothing is shown but it is implied. A man asks what "Anal probing" is as it is a subject many aliens are interested in.
In the beginning of the movie, the main male lead is poisoned and begs a female alien to give him an antidote by promising her "anything she wants". In the next scene, he wakes up next to her in a bed, impliying that she has forced him to have sex with her.
During the court cross-examination of one of the sons (57:30), the question is raised of his father sexually assaulting/grooming him as a child. The response goes into slight verbal detail of incestual grooming and sexual assault, but no actual visual depiction of it.
The Mentalist (TV Show)
As a crime procedural show, there are multiple cases of killers and perpetrators committing acts of sexual assault, such as in episode one where a teenage daughters diary reveals her father was sexually abusing her. There is also an episode where a teacher sleeps with their teenage student. There are also victims who were said to have been raped but it is not shown. S1E22: the director of a wilderness “wellness program for young adults” assaults / rapes his student. It is not shown, only mentioned and confirmed by the victim that was under pressure to perform certain acts. When she is asked, she says she did not want to have sex with the man. S2E3: the episode is focused on the case of a serial child rapist. Ages are mentioned, a vengeful parent is shown. There are no images or vivid descriptions of the crimes. S2E11: a woman is kissed by am intoxicated man who confuses her for someone else. Even with that context, it is clear that the person he intended to kiss would have been assaulted as well. S2E14: a young woman mentions someone is threatening her, and that he beats her and “has sex” with her after he gets high on cocaine. The cops across her make sure she knows it is assault, and not normal. One is focused on discovering who murdered a housekeeper's daughter, as the eldest son is convicted of her crime but insists he is innocent. it is revealed that the father had an affair with the housekeeper so the eldest son and the housekeeper's daughter were siblings and would hence make their romantic affair an incestuous one. Neither character knew they were related to each other and both die at the end of the episode.
About 3 minutes in, a villain and his henchman are in a bedroom and try to force feed an intoxicated young woman drugs with the intention of assaulting her. The assault is prevented by a mercenary.
Mercy's Girl (Movie)
A date rape scene occurs in a bathroom, in which the main character is assaulted by a man. No body parts are visible but some may find the scene upsetting.
Merlin (TV Show)
There is incestuous flirting between two characters in the beginning of the show but this dies down by around season 2. All of it is prior to them finding out they are related. S2E4: a group of men insist on watching a character get undressed, despite her asking them to look away. She manages to flee the scene. S2E6: a man and a troll (female) go to bed together. The man is under her enchantment so it is implied that this would not have happened otherwise. It is stated that they have shared a bed for multiple nights. S4E11: a character is saved from being killed by a man who says 'there's still some pleasure to be had here'. She later appears dressed in clothes he has picked to eat with him, with the implication of sexual intent, but she escapes before anything happens.
This film is about a house with dancing girls which is turned into a brothel, with the resident women forced to have sex for money. The beginnings of these encounters are shown. In one scene, an older man sees the owner's very young daughter and attempts to rape her.
Near the beginning of the movie, a woman gets stabbed and then raped in the presence of a child she is trying to protect. The scene is extremely graphic.
A man has sex with his wife but gets too rough. She asks him to stop several times as he pins her down but she has to yell before he does stop. While at a neighbour's house the same man is drugged by the woman who lives there and she rapes him.
During a scene where the protagonist wakes up, a woman wearing a bikini is getting changed in front of him: the player can press R1 to get a POV prospective to stare at her behind whilst in her bikini getting into her outfit. A woman is taken hostage by a man at knifepoint. When she tries to escape, he pulls her back by grabbing her chest. He then is surprised that she has breasts and that she is a female spy, then comments "This bitch is wearing perfume". A woman is strangled and electrocuted by a man who grabs her breast until her tights start to rip. He then says "you shall entertain me until the rain stops" (this could imply he rapes her later off screen).
When the main character meets the president, the president grabs him in the crotch, causing the main character to push him away. A character talks about being assaulted by his step mother when he was 14. There are no graphic descriptions, and it is taken seriously. The step mother doesn't appear in the game.
The main villain (Skull Face) captures a former ally (Paz) of the main character and proceeds to torture her. The torture includes gang rape and beatings. These are not shown on screen but the rape and torture is recorded and be can heard on cassette tapes audio logs you can find in game. Another ally (Chico) of the main character is captured and forced to watch soldiers rape Paz repeatedly. In one the audio recordings Skull Face forces Chico to have sex with Paz after she was gang raped. He refuses at first but Paz consents to him. The issue is Paz is in her 20s and Chico is 13 years old.
Episode 45 ("A Quiet Exit"): the agressor takes off a victim's pants, whom he thinks is dead.
Metod (TV Show)
A young man tries to give ammunition (the local currency) to a hungry woman and her young child. The mother misinterprets this as him trying to buy her son. She is insulted by the low amount and demands he pays 'twenty cartridges for half an hour'. The man is horrified by the implication and quickly leaves. The woman attempts to haggle with him as he walks away, lowering the price to fifteen cartridges.
Metro: Last Light (Video Game)
Level 14 (Bandits): the player is able to choose whether to intervene in the attack. If the player takes too long, the woman is accidentally killed by her attackers.
Metro Manila (Movie)
Early in the film, a woman is kidnapped by two men in a public space at night: no one in the street reacts, despite her screaming and trying to fight them off. The female protagonist is compelled by her financial circumstances to work in a strip club as a sex worker: we see her being forced to be examined by a gynecologist, being "picked up" by clients, and then fondled and sexually assaulted by one man. She is visibly very distressed and during the rest of the film, we see her repeatedly leaving work deeply affected. She eventually leaves this job when her boss says that she will force her to prostitute her daughter (a child) too. In a bar scene, one man grabs a female waiter's bottom without her consent.
Metropolis (Movie)
Near the end, the inventor of a female robot character tries to force himself upon her.
The protagonist is sexually assaulted in what she believes is a dream. The family of the manor she is visiting has history of incest and one of the members of the house attempts to rape her.
In this anthology film, many of the stories involve implied or off-screen sexual violence. The third and the fourth sequences are the most explicit. The 3rd sequence, Drena/Drain by Aaron Soto involves a teenage girl being coerced into stealing blood from her older sister’s vagina by a demon. And the 4th sequence, La cosa más preciada/That Precious Thing by Isaac Ezban, involves a teen couple going on a date to a remote location, where the girl is raped by a goblin. The rape scene takes up the majority of the running time and is very graphic.
M.F.A (Movie)
Rape and sexual assault mentioned throughout. This film has two major rape scenes. One occurs early on in the film and happens to the protagonist. The other occurs in a video that is part of rape case in which none of the three rapists are convicted. Each of these events haunt the protagonist and are often intercut as flashbacks whilst she is enacting her revenge. We learn that a friend of the protagonist was also sexually assaulted and we see the aftermath of this in pictures, but the event itself isn't shown on-screen.
The movie is about a paedophile who keeps a captive child in his basement.
It is implied that men interrupting a couple having sex proceed to rape them (not on screen). There are several flashback montages of the rape of both a man and his girlfriend by a group of men.
Three men with knives corner a woman at a subway station and tell her she has to “pay the toll” and that she has to pay the toll on her knees. Another character stops them before anything happens. There is also an uncomfortable sex scene between a couple where the man is being more aggressive than usual and the woman does not really seem into it, but does not ask him to stop or anything. She just looks mildly displeased the whole time.
Midnight, Texas (TV Show)
S1E2: an invisible demon attempts to rape a witch, bus is banished (28:00). She is held upright by invisible tethers, and her skirt is hitched up. She is terrified. S1E4: this episode around a woman who seduces men and eats them. S1E7: a main character implies that he is the product of rape. S1E9 features a woman accidentally killing her boyfriend before sex and its revealed a demon wants to have sex with her because she is a virgin. This plot line continues in episode 10. Season 2 contains many instances of sexual acts with people lying about who they are and sex scenes where someone uses the sex to injure someone on purpose, non consensually. S2E2 features a woman drugging a man and committing reproductive violence. S2E4 mentions a pregnant woman being held captive. It also shows a woman drugging her ex boyfriend so he will not be in love with her anymore. S2E5 reveals that someone's blood was taken to make a clone of her. S2E8: incest.
Midori (Movie)
The titular character (a child) marries an adult: no character has an issue with this. The only concern is that she is "not a virgin" because she was raped off screen earlier in the film by one carnival worker.
Midsomer Murders (TV Show)
Midsommar (Movie)
A male character is drugged and then coerced into sex with a female character. This female character is implied to be in her teens, and only recently of an age where her culture/community permit her to engage in sexual relations. It is mentioned that members of a community engage in incestuous sex with the sole intention of producing disabled children, believed to have prophetic powers.
The Mighty Boosh (TV Show)
S2E1: the group is held captive and are threatened with rape. They escape. In the same episode, a man is raped and killed off-screen. S2E3: a very young character/child is described as 'a violent and sexually deranged being from the fourth dimension'. This is played for laughs. S3E5: a joke is made about the moon being a 'vanilla rapist.' In the same episode, a decapitated (but still living and conscious) head is raped by a non-human creature. S3E6: a homeless person admits he had planned to rape a key character. During the same episode, a character also makes similar comments towards a different character. Worthy of note: in the Book of Boosh it is mentioned that the hobbies of the Hitcher character include 'playing cards and raping.'
A man tries to kiss a woman and hits her when she rejects his advances. A man has sex with a woman despite her saying no over and over; he then tries to have his friend have sex with her. She cries and slaps him. The men leave.
There is an implication of incest by the birth of a deformed baby and the family saying that they needed "new blood". A woman, her daughter, and later a male scientist, are kidnapped by the family living in the woods. The daughter is forced to marry one of the kidnappers, her mother and the scientist are both threatened with rape and forced marriage. Both of the women are forcibly kissed, all three are touched and tied up. Though the daughter is taken away to the bedroom, they are all able to get away before any further assault happens.
S1E12: sexual harassment. S1E14: a character reveals she was molested by her uncle as a child. It is implied her mother was also a victim (21:00). S2E3: the sexual assault is mentioned. S3E10: a teenager is groomed by her teacher. He records her dancing in her bathing suit and later masturbates in her presence (off-screen). She believes it is her fault, but other characters assure her this is not the case. Season 4 deals with the assaults of previous seasons. Sexual assault discussions are handled sensitively.
A character mentions having been molested by his uncle as a child. A now-adult woman reveals that she was married to an adult man at age nine, and the two have been having sex since then. He later attempts to rape her onscreen, but she knocks him out before he can.
A man and woman are hooked up to a machine that forces the man to penetrate the woman. The man is injected with drugs to constantly keep him erect.
Mind Over Murder (TV Show)
The documentary is about the rape and murder of a woman. The assault is discussed frequently, graphic confessions regarding the assault are shown and read aloud, and re-enactments show the assault multiple times.
Mindhunter (TV Show)
The series revolves around interviews with serial killers, many/most of whom have also committed sexual crimes. S1E1: rape is briefly mentioned in the context of a crime scene reconstruction (33:47-33:36). Description of a crime scene, including the bodies of a woman and her young son, who have been beaten, sexually assaulted and murdered (51:59-54:54). This verbal description is accompanied by a series of relatively graphic photographs of the crime scenes and bodies. S1E2: a man discusses some of his past violent sexual attacks (26:41-27:02). This continues in more general terms until roughly the 29:20-minute mark, including the man's description of his intense contempt for women in general. Brief mention of a violent rape and murder (29:33). Discussion of a sexual assault (groping, assault), accompanied by photographs of a beaten and bruised elderly woman (33:08-33:12). Mention of rape (40:49-40:54). A man describes murdering his mother and 'humiliating' the corpse (43:00-43:32). S1E3: mention of rape/necrophilia in passing (07:40-07:45). Discussion of a sexual assault against an elderly woman, accompanied by relatively graphic photographs of the crime scene and body (14:51-15:04). This continues - with occasional, briefer flashes of the photographs - in more general terms until roughly 16:17. A man mentions his desire to rape women (27:55-28:09). S1E4: rape mention in passing around the 4:00-minute mark. A man mentions the women who he raped (06:20-06:25). He mentions these crimes again between 07:50-08:00 and discusses them again between 9:40-12:59. Rape mention in passing (20:10). A brief description of a rape/murder (20:10-20:26). Rape mention (25:27). Brief, general discussion of rape (44:17-44:32). S1E5: Mention of rape in the context of discussing a murder (15:18-15:35). Much of the episode revolves around the murder and sexual mutilation of a woman: includes some factual descriptions of her injuries, but no images. S1E6: mention of sexual assault - description of a situation where a man wanted to sleep with his girlfriend but knocked her out when she didn't comply (04:30-04:40). Rape mention (06:20-06:30) and rape discussed generally/alluded to during the process of an interrogation until 07:00. Rape mention (16:10-16:20). The details of this crime are mentioned and discussed more generally until the 17:50 mark. Rape mentions in passing, referencing the circumstances of an investigation (25:00-25:23). S1E7: a man begins masturbating while two FBI agents and a guard are present - non-graphic, no nudity is shown but the man's back is seen and sounds are heard (25:25-25:44). Rape mention in passing, in the context of discussing various violent crimes (roughly 38:55). S1E8: discussion about a school employee (principal) who 'has a thing for tickling' young children (under 10) in his care, when they are sent to his office for disciplinary reasons - it is strongly implied that this has a sexual overtone, is inappropriate and may lead to more overt sexual advances towards children in the future (7:09-8:40). This is mentioned again in another conversation (10:20-11:35) and again until 12:52 in a discussion with a police officer who denies the seriousness of the reports. A mention of necrophilia (19:40-19:43) and discussion of sexual assault until roughly 20:52, with the implication that a victim 'probably liked' being coerced to take sexual photographs. Mention of violent necrophilic act (25:50-26:00). Discussion about the actions of the school employee mentioned earlier in the episode (28:00-28:40). Another discussion about this, with the perpetrator (who defends his actions), occurs from roughly 28:55-30:30 and more generally, amongst other characters, until 37:10, when they return to discussions with the perpetrator until 38:30. A brief discussion about the school employee who tickles children in his care (roughly 48:38-48:50) and again in general slightly later (43:25-46:04). A discussion regarding the continued employment of the aforementioned school employee and the potential for his behaviour towards children to escalate (49:50-50:46). S1E9: graphic sexual threats, which are not acted upon, from a man in a cell (06:40-07:37). These include slurs for POC and LGBT people. Reference to potentially forced fellatio, in passing (09:10-09:15). Discussion of rape and murder, with the perpetrator of these crimes (11:45-13:30). Discussion of violent sexual crimes (18:40-19:35). Conversation with the wife of the school employee from the previous episode who was fired for tickling children, in which she expresses anger regarding her husband's dismissal and subsequent ostracisation from their community (23:20-25:28). Discussion of the kidnapping, rape and murder of a 12-year-old girl, accompanied by black and white photographs of the crime scene and corpse which show no nudity or gore (26:41-29:40). Further discussion of this incident, without the photos, continues in other settings until 33:10. S1E10: mention of the rape of a child, in passing (04:03). Discussion in which a 12-year-old girl is talked about in sexual terms, in order to make a suspect feel at ease (12:00-14:07 and 15:22-19:03). Brief mention of the previous discussion about the sexual appeal of very young girls (21:00-21:10). Mention of rape, in passing (25:11). Mention of rape (27:10-27:25). Mention of the rape and murder of a 12-year-old girl, in passing (39:35-39:41). A number of sketches of nude women bound and apparently in distress are seen as they are thrown into a fire (49:00-49-48).
This is a non-fiction book about investigations into serial killing cases. Many of these cases have sexual components and as such, descriptions of violent sexual attacks and their aftermaths occur throughout.
Several rape jokes made, and at one point a character who had gone to prison mentions that he was not there for a violent crime e.g. he did not "murder anyone, or rape anyone". S2E2: a (relatively) sober person kisses someone who is clearly very intoxicated. When he protests the kiss, she says that 'nothing happened, you liked it.' In the same episode, it is implied that a different sober woman led the drunken man away to have sex. S3E4: a man is having consensual sex with a woman and repeatedly tries to initiate anal sex, which she does not consent to, despite his partner's protestations.
The Mine (Movie)
While discussing the ghost story behind a mine, it is briefly mentioned that the previous owner's two young daughters were raped and killed.
Chapter 3: non-graphic mention of a foster father trying to molest a teenage girl in his care. There are a few other brief mentions of human trafficking and pedophilia.
After a conversation with a nazi, a man opens a curtain to show his female colleague he is with a woman who has been abused by the man who they have just met with (40:19- 40:39). A Black woman is briefly shown injured and nude hanging by her bound hands. The implication is that she has been sexually assaulted by the nazi and that the female colleague of the man pulling back the curtain will also be hurt like this woman if she gets involved with that nazi. There is later pressure for that female colleague to take on this risk in order to help the mission around 01:15:00. The female character is shown to be tough and capable but the risk is still demonstrably terrifying in the film. It serves to further villainize the nazi as well as to up the ante on the tension in the film. The female character enters a dungeon of the male nazi character and the threat of sexual assault is obvious, along with the threat of restraint, and there is a male nazi spectator as well: it is implied that voyeurism is part of the act (01:34:00-01:35:00). This scene is interrupted by other events in the film and she is not subjected to sexual assault. She saves herself (with backup from her male supporters).
Minx (TV Show)
S1E1: a male boss massages the shoulders of a female employee in a creepy way. Men cat call women several times very explicitly. S1E2: a man rubs a woman's arm without her consent. She is obviously perturbed. A man says he will advertise in a woman's magazine, but only if they deliver a woman for him to sleep with. A woman tells a story of when that same man grabbed her ass when she was 12 at a tennis tournament and that is why she quitted tennis. S1E3: children accidentally see pictures of adult penises. S1E4: a woman sleeps with a male model for the magazine she edits. A discussion of employers having sex with their employees and stalking follows. A male character suggests that he had sex with his teacher before he was of age. A model wants to pull out of a nude magazine, but he has already signed consent. A thoughtful discussion follows about the ethics of this.
Miracol (Movie)
Around the middle of the movie, a young woman is violently raped then brutally murdered by her cab driver (the scene lasts several minutes).
S1E11: the protagonist gets drunk at a company holiday party, to the point where she cannot speak coherently or stand up unassisted. A coworker takes advantage of this by leading her back to a bedroom and raping her (8:11-9:53). The event is not framed as rape in-universe at all. It is framed as a regrettable sexual encounter, in large part because the man who rapes her is awkward, nerdy, and unattractive to the protagonist. S2E11-12: the last two episodes in the series involve the protagonist and her coworkers having to attend an anti-sexual harassment workshop because of alleged sexual misconduct in the workplace. During the workshop, several employees rather eagerly act out the scenarios in which they're harassing coworkers or the workshop facilitators (inappropriate comments and touching). Some characters are visibly uncomfortable with this. The scene is mostly played for laughs due to the incompetence of the workshop facilitators (S2E11 9:23-11:55, S2E12 0:00-5:05).
Misao (Video Game)
The game revolves around a teenage girl who went missing and put a curse on her school. As the game progresses, the truth of her dissappearance is revealed: she was raped by a boy in the girl's bathroom after school and a teacher found her crying. Once she opened up to the him, he tried to make sexual advances towards her. When she refused, he murdered and raped her. Although these two instances of rape are not shown, disturbing sounds can still be heard. In the True Ending, the teacher's backstory is explained and he is hugged and forgiven. This is poorly handled and problematic because the man who raped and killed a teenage girl is portrayed sympathetically and forgiven for his crimes. A scene of the teacher's backstory shows he was friends with a girl in highschool whom he had romantic feelings for. One day he confessed his feelings while trying to grab and kiss her without her consent. She pulled away, saying she did not have romantic feelings for him and only befriended him out of pity. He then pinned her to the ground and began screaming at her. Afterwards, someone finds them after hearing her cry for help. The scene ends there and the girl escapes relatively unharmed.
Misfits (TV Show)
Season 1: a girl's power consists in touching someone to make them want to have sex with her. She is taken advantage of many times, and takes advantage of others. S2E3: a man tries to have sex with another man and attempts to pull down his pants after struggling. Throughout the entire show, rape jokes are frequent. In the final season of the show, there are multiple on-screen rape scenes. One of the characters gains a power which enables him to take others' powers by having sex with them. It leads him to using it as a weapong and raping enemies to strip them of their powers.
The main character, a 13 year-old boy, lives with his abusive father and his three uncles, all of whom are alcoholics. He sleeps in a room where one of them frequently has sex with women. At some point, his father forces him to put his pants down and to compare his penis with his, in order to remind him that they are father and son. Later, all the men go to a bar with the main character's cousin (a girl about his age). A man jokes about the fact that she is too young to be the girlfriend of one of the adults.
Sexual violence is mentioned several times throughout the course of the series. S1E1: the murder victim is a rapist. His crimes are never shown but they are mentioned. S1E3: a woman is blackmailed into providing sexual favours to a man. S1E4: a romantic relationship between a step-mother and step-son is mentioned. Earlier in the episode, the characters assumed the relationship was between the brother and his sister. No sexual content is shown. S1E7: the show references the main character's previous abusive relationship, showing some non-consensual touching and kissing. S1E9: an adult male has an ongoing relationship with two teenagers, murdering one and attempting to murder the other. The relationship is not shown on-screen in explicit detail. He is arrested for his crimes. S1E12: an underage character who is involved in sexual relationships with two adults is murdered. S2E1: brief mention of marital rape. S2E8: an incident in which a woman is drugged (potentially with 'sinister motives') is mentioned. The discussion does not go further into the topic. S2E12: one plot point is the human trafficking of women.
Miss Meadows (Movie)
A man catcalls a woman and pulls a gun on her to get into his car, she immediately shoots him. A man is discussed to be a convicted child sex abuser . A convicted pedophile priest forces a young boy to preform oral sex. When the main character walks in on them, the boy runs away and she shoots the priest. This is scene is very brief.
Miss Violence (Movie)
This movie is about saving young women who were kidnapped to be sold to sex traffickers. It is implied twice during the film that the female protagonist was raped, and that it is how the daughter she is trying to save was conceived. The male protagonist also mentions another woman being raped. About an hour in a woman is pushed against a rock and is about to be raped when she is saved from her attacker.
The Missing (TV) (TV Show)
The show centers on sexual predators who prey on children.
In the latter half of the movie, a sex worker (the love interest and one of the few featured female characters) explains her past to the main character: she mentions that her parents sold her as a child. There is a non-graphic (i.e. no nudity) but quite triggering flashback of a middle-aged man bringing a little girl into a shed and pretending to initially check her legs for injury. As she resists, he begins to strike her and then assaults her as she cries. The child is no older than middle school age.
A minor is forced to perform fellatio on an adult. A man rapes his younger cousin. A relationship between an adult and a 16-year-old.
The Mist (TV Show)
In S1E1 it is revealed that a female teenage character was raped while intoxicated and drugged. She is accused of lying. It is a recurring theme throughout the series, is discussed further throughout the remainder of the series. SPOILER: S1E10: There is a revelation that the rape of one character was incestuous as the rapist was the victim's half-brother.
The book opens with a man planning to rape one of his enslaved women. Slaves who are raped must, by law, be executed immediately or soon after to prevent pregnancy. A male character reveals he was forced to have sex with an enslaved woman when he was a child, the woman was then executed. Rape is mentioned in passing as a frequent act that happens to lower class women by noblemen, and as a fear that the main character expresses she had growing up as a poor woman.
A male protagonist has a sexual relationship with a teenage secondary character. Both are manipulating each other for political reasons though it is implied later that they both enjoyed aspects of the relationship. A male antagonist kisses the female protagonist without her consent in the middle of combat while he stabs her in the breast. A female secondary character was forced to participate in "breeding programs" in her youth where she was repeatedly raped and forced to give birth. A male antagonist has numerous "mistresses" in order to attempt to breed magical children. It is implied these women are his slaves. A male antagonist threatens to rape the female teenage protagonist in order to taunt her boyfriend. When he is unable to do so, he decides to rape another teenage girl who looks like her instead. It is implied that this girl is one of his slaves.
Mister Lonely (Movie)
There is a scene in which a man asks insistently if his wife slept with another man. He even goes so far as to touch her intimacy against her will. He asks her if by removing his fingers he will smell the scent of this other man (40:55-42:12). Later in the movie, the man starts to kiss her and to touch her body. He continues even though she asks him to stop.
The male romantic lead in this book frequently expresses guilt over not being able to protect several characters from being raped by his fellow soldiers in the previous book. Prior to the events of the book, the female lead, then a teenager, tried to get the male lead, who is six years older than her, to have sex with her. He rejected her then. They do not actually have sex or enter a relationship together until they are both in their twenties. There is mention of an athletic director "who lingered a bit too close to the girls' locker room." The female lead mentions a classmate who flashed his genitals to her. Another classmate offered to drive the protagonist home when her car broke down and then tried to reach under her skirt while he was driving. When she rejected him, he claimed that she was just trying to play hard to get like Asian girls in the porn he watched. A college dorm mate forces a kiss on the female lead on two separate occasions. A male coworker ogles her and implies that she is a lesbian for rejecting his advances. A female coworker is mentioned to have bitten someone's hand who tried to touch her behind. The protagonist's female friend is drugged by an antagonist character, who told her he was just giving her tea. The protagonist saves her friend before anything bad happens. Both the protagonist and her friend get kidnapped toward the end and one of the kidnappers makes a veiled rape threat toward them.
MM! (TV Show)
This show explores sexual perversion and general weirdness. One of the three central characters is revealed within the first three episodes to have androphobia as result of attempted rape and physical abuse (shown on screen) by her middle-school boyfriend. In episode three, the agressor is shown to accost her on the street, threaten her about telling anyone about the assault, and harassing her via phone messages and emails. This causes the girl to have a mental breakdown and hide in her bedroom and cry when approached. Regarding adult-minor relationships, the school nurse is shown to groom some of the students into wearing her handmade fetish costumes. In the specials, she is also shown to hide hidden cameras in the changing areas to watch the students undressing. A character's mother and older sister both have attraction to him and attempt to be intimate with him in an incestuous manner. This is shown repeatedly at various junctures, despite his rejection of them. Another woman is very childlike, and is desired by her assistant (a lolicon-type pedophile) for her childlike body. Their interactions are deliberately a nod to child sexual abuse. An expert masseuse goes around all the time groping and molesting those she finds attractive, often forcing them to orgasm with her touch.
A major character is engaged to a 9-year-old girl.
A character hugs another character, who says “this is sexual harassment.” The villain forces a woman on a bed and begins pulling her clothes off, but stops before he goes any further; no nudity is shown.
It is implied that a woman was forced into child prostitution.
Mobland (TV Show)
S1E4: a woman is grabbed in a threatening manner. S1E4+9: flashbacks show a man being raped in prison by a guard.
Chapter 11: it is implied that at the age of 15 a boy was told that he could remain in a pack if he performed sexual services for other members of the pack.
A character mentions on how she believes a girl could have been assaulted by one of her doctors due to her masturbating in public. There are also images of severe child abuse throughout the film.
The Model (Movie)
The movie ends with a rape scene.
Moesha (TV Show)
A main character goes to a college tour and attends a party where a guy slips something into her drink. The same main character also has a relationship with her teacher.
Mogeko Castle (TV Show)
In the beginning of the movie, a priest tries to molest the protagonist as a child but she stabs him with a knitting needle. About 1/3 in, she also has to undergo a hymen check to be "pure" enough to live in a certain house (this she goes into willingly). She also then becomes a prostitute and does not want to have sex with the man her enployer tells her to.
Mom (TV Show)
A character tells her friends about being raped at a party. A character briefly talks about his sexual abuse by a babysitter.
Mon Garcon (Movie)
There is a mention of "someone that touches children" paying to get kids kidnapped.
Mona Lisa (Movie)
The film contains scenes of rape enactments with prostitutes, drugged sex and medical sexual violence.
Money Heist (TV Show)
S1E1: a graphic scene shows a 17-year-old girl being assaulted on-screen. S1E7 : a woman offers herself sexually to a man who is holding her hostage. Although this scene is ostensibly consensual as she initiates the interaction, the implication is that she is doing this in order to ensure her own safety. A man discovers the woman he loved and thought was dead is in fact alive and attempts to have sex with her while she resists. A man kisses a child who is being held hostage. S1E8: a woman kisses a female student who is an hostage. There is a clear power imbalance. S3E8: a man offers a woman who he is holding hostage some sleeping pills. Once she is unconscious, he touches her inappropriately and without her consent. Later, she confronts him for having assaulted her and he denies that this ever happened, telling her that her perception of events is unreliable due to the pills she had taken.
Monga (Movie)
Monkey Man (Movie)
The protagonist infiltrates a club that traffics women. Most encounters between clients and victims play like a normal club scene, yet one scene sees a woman groped by a man: she and the protagonist are both visibly uncomfortable. The antagonist attempts to rape the protagonist's mother in a flashback, she fends him off with a knife but the he beats her to death with a belt (01:09 -01:12).
Monsieur Spade (TV Show)
In a flashback, a veteran of war relives witnessing the rape of a civilian in front of her children. Worthy of note: there is a flirtation between an adult in his 20s and a 15 year old girl. He describes himself as a "patient man" to another character in regards to her age. It is unclear how the girl feels about the relationship, she seems to flirt and enjoy his attentions but also uses his this as a distraction to pick his pocket, etc.
A main character is revealed to have been molested by an older family friend when she was young. It is implied that he attempts to repeat this behavior with another young child by first teaching her how to kiss with tongue.
Rape and torture scene.
Monster (TV) (TV Show)
E49: a young child witnesses a prostitute being raped by a professor on a trash can.
Monsterland (TV Show)
S1E3: this episode centers on sexual abuse (a pediatrician sexually abuses his patients). No acts are described beyond the term "sexual assault." Audience sees the word "rapist" written, but the term is never spoken.
Mood (TV Show)
The main theme of the programme is how vulnerable and financially desperate young women are groomed into the sex trade, and then exploited once involved in it. From episode 3 onwards, all episodes contain one or more explicit on-screen sex/rape scene in which the main character clearly does not freely consent, and is upset by the experience, but is being financially coerced. S1E1: a young woman/late adolescent yells at her stepfather that he has the "face of a nonce" (paedophile) and is probably trying to sleep with his (other) stepdaughter. This is not backed up as factual by the rest of the plot. S1E2: the main character is peer-pressured to work in a strip club and to create a "Dailyfans" (clearly Onlyfans-inspired) profile, both of which she refuses to do. Her male roommate walks in on her whilst she is on the toilet and refuses to leave for a long time. At night, he comes into her bedroom and asks her to join him in his bed. He accepts her refusal, but it is made clear that there is a long-term threat of sexual violence to the protagonist from him, unless her living situation changes. Later in the episode, he threatens her with a katana while saying she is "only good for getting on her knees." In a conversation between two women, one talks about how her ex-boyfriend wanted to replicate degrading acts he had seen in pornography (such as choking and spitting). At the end of the episode, one of the women spanks the other without consent for a "Dailyfans" video. S1E5: a group of women are sex-trafficked to attend a party. One of the women refuses to have sex with one of the men, and another attempts to peer pressure and offer her money to do it. A later scene in which she appears with bruises all around her neck makes it clear that he raped her. One of the women is seen leaving the bedroom of a teenage boy (his exact age is unclear). S1E6: flashbacks reveal that the main character was raped by two adult men when she was 13 years old. The rape is not shown but implied offscreen and talked about verbally.
Moolaade (Movie)
This movie is about the genital mutilation and forced marriages of girls. It contains one scene of excision, showing a young girl crying and shouting while the mutilation is performed. One character accuses the men of the village of being pedophiles, because they marry underage girls. In the opening of the movie, that same character proposed a young girl to have sex with him as a form of payment. A flashback scene shows a woman having non-consensual sex with her husband. She is visibly in pain because of the genital mutilations she was inflicted earlier. A man is supposed to marry his cousin.
A main character has an inappropriate romantic interest in one of his students. She is not the first teenage girl he has developed feelings for, but she is the first one he actually kisses. This same character attempted to rape one of his peers when he was a teenager, but she was able to fight him off. This scene is vividly described. The schoolteacher describes another relationship with a 17 year old student that involves kissing. His wife responds to his noticeable distance by strongly pressuring him into sex even though he says no multiple times and attempts to walk away. He eventually agrees but acts violently during sex in an attempt to hurt his wife. This is a vivid description of an unhealthy relationship where sexual coercion is met with sexual violence.
Moral Orel (TV Show)
S3E4: rape is discussed and strongly implied. S3E6: brief mentions of rape/sexual assault.
The Morning Show (TV Show)
Season 1's main story arc revolves around a superior who has coerced coworkers. He is portrayed semi sympathetically through the show. Other workplace romances also occur, but are probably consensual. S1E8 shows some of the sexual assault that happened. S3E2: a main character's private video is hacked and leaked. S3E4 includes two white men blackmailing two Asian women. One of the Asian women is part of the power dynamic. The 4th person, is a waitress and paid to lick a drink off a table and then catcalled while doing it. S3E8: this episode features a woman reading her girlfriends private emails about having sex with someone else. The first season is brought up again and a main character is accused of crying rape.
A male antagonist goes to great lengths, including grave threats to her life, to force the female protagonist to marry and have sex with him (not necessarily in that order). The actual violence is not sexual in nature, but the possessive undertones and his explicit intentions toward her lend a disturbingly sexual flavor to their encounters.
Mortel (TV Show)
Season 1: the main male character is thought to have raped the main female character. It is later proven to not be true. S2E5: it is strongly implied that a character was abused by his coach as a child. The coach's son also says that his father abused him. This is briefly discussed in later episodes. A character is exposed for helping drug girls.
In the second story of this film, while having sex, a man removes the condom without the woman's knowledge.
S1E3: a man comes home drunk and rapes his wife (32:49-33:59).
A man spies on a woman while she is in the shower; he attempts to rape her later on and kills her off screen when she resists. You can hear the muffled struggle in the background.
Motel Hell (Movie)
While sitting in the car at a drive-in, a man tries to grope a woman's chest. She tells him to stop but then he crawls over her and begins kissing her while she struggles to push him off. He stops when he receives a call on his CB radio.
An on-screen rape takes place about 46 minutes in.
Mother! (Movie)
A man gets angry at his wife because she does not want to have sex with her. He begins to forcefully kiss her and initially she protests, but eventually she submits. Towards the end of the film, the main female character is beaten and groped (her breasts are exposed) by a crowd of people: the scene is pretty violent.
The movie centers around a woman trying to protect her daughter from two abusive exes (both of whom are leaders of criminal organizations) who want to use her to get to the protagonist. When the protagonist attempts to rescue her daughter from the first of the two, she is held at gunpoint and is threatened both physically and verbally with sexual assault. After she kills him, she implies that he previously assaulted her by saying they "never had a safe word". Additionally, we find out that both of her exes are involved in the human trafficking of children. While no sexual assault related to this is explicitly shown, we see a shipping container full of children and there are multiple lines of dialog referencing powerful people who want "things that aren't on the menu".
The author describes sexual abuse at the hands of her pastor when she was a child. There is also a scene where someone breaks into her apartment and attempts to rape her, but she is able to talk him out of it.
Moulin Rouge! (Movie)
The unrequited love of an older man for a young (although adult) woman - as well as her need to, at least ostensibly, reciprocate this love in order to maintain financial security - is central to the plot of the film. There are a number of scenes in which he touches or otherwise pursues her in ways she is evidently uncomfortable with. She continues their relationship only due to fear of what might happen if she does not (as well as due to pressure from other characters). Near the end of the film (1:20:31-1:21:57), the man tries to rape her before being stopped by another character.
The main female lead character is raped on screen by the villian.
The main female character (who is a virgin and underaged) has sexual intercourse with an older man. She cries throughout the whole scene because she is in pain, and the man continues without paying attention. He leaves her abruptly on the floor once he finishes.
Mouthwashing (Video Game)
Rape, and overall the topic of misogyny (one of the titular plot points), is handled with respect throughout the game. Rape is never shown, yet it is highly implied throughout dialogue and symbolism in the game. At the beginning, the protagonist makes unwarranted sexual comments to the sole woman on the crew. Later on, it is heavily implied several times she have been raped and impregnated by him. She reports the rape to her crewmates, however, they decide not to take action. Eventually, she commits suicide out of fear for the protagonist and the crew's situation.
Movie 43 (Movie)
MovieStarPlanet (Video Game)
MovieStarPlanet is an online children's game where players can create characters, dress up, play minigames, and chat. The in-game chat has a filter designed to prevent players from sending inappropriate messages. Despite this, there have been multiple reported instances of underage players receiving sexually explicit messages. It should also be noted that there is a feature where players can send requests to be each other's boyfriend/girlfriend, and this relationship status will show up on the player's profile. Since there's no way of knowing the true age of the "boyfriend" or "girlfriend" on the other side of the screen, this has led to grooming in some cases. Even though the feature encourages children and teens to engage in online dating, it remains in the game to this day.
Moxie (Movie)
There is strong controlling, manipulative behaviours and sexual harassment/assault from men throug out the movie. Boys are shown touching girls as a joke: discomfort is shown by the girls, and one of them directly tells one boy that she does not like that. A boy who gets rejected by a girl forcefully grabs her drink and gits in it to assert dominance. The last third of the film strongly discusses rape and is used as a plot point. We see the survivor being supported in speaking about her experience and feeling. A schoolgirl admits being raped by a classmate.
While speaking in tongues, a tertiary character confesses having been sexually abused as a child. This is a passing mention.
Mr. Mercedes (TV Show)
The majority of potentially troubling content relates to the relationship between a parent and their child. While no sexual abuse is shown while the son is still a child, the abuse is mentioned several times and there are several scenes in which the abuse is shown to continue into his adulthood.
Mr. Robot (TV Show)
S1E1: child pornography is mentioned near the beginning of the episode. A character refers to a type of malicious software as "a serial rapist with a very big dick" S1E2: a woman is found naked and unconscious in a bathtub. She explains that she and a man got high together, but that she doesn't remember anything after that point - especially having had sex with him. She chooses not to report the incident, despite her friend's insistence that she should. Later, the man who she had been with boasts about having raped her, in code, on Twitter. S1E5: as a power play, one of the characters follows another into the bathroom while she is peeing. She says not to come in but he does. He stands silently and watches her, before leaving. S1E6: a woman is violently murdered by a man who previously raped her. A lawyer says that her client violently raped his pregnant girlfriend S1E7: a woman is strangled to death during what began as a consensual sexual encounter. A man in a position of power tells a young woman that if she wants what she asks for, she will have to perform oral on him first: she stands her ground and leaves. S2E5: a man is revealed to run a black market website that deals in sex slaves, among other illicit goods and services. S2E7: a gang corners a man in an alleyway and attempts to rape him. This scene is violent and graphic and may potentially be disturbing for some viewers. S2E11: a very young girl asks a grown woman whether she 'cries during sex.' S4E7: two characters discuss their experience of child sexual abuse in-depth (one of them was abused by his father). Half the episode is devoted to the subjet. Additionnally, one character strokes another character's without her consent. It is briefly and vaguely implied (one line) that a main character sexually abused another main character in the past, and that she may be a serial abuser.
Mr. Turner (Movie)
The titular protagonist sexually exploits his housekeeper (who is apparently in love with him). This is shown on two instances. In one of the first scenes of the movie, he grabs her breast and her crotch without asking her consent. Later on (about one hour into the movie) he suddenly appears between her and rapes her. Both times, he does not say a word. Worthy of note: at some point, the protagonist goes to a brothel and enters a room with a much younger prostitute. He asks her to expose her breast, but only to draw her / use her as a model.
Mrs. America (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is coerced into having sex by her husband. S1E4: a feminist activist is portrayed naked in an erotic magazine (cartoon) against her will. S1E6: a big plot point in this episode is the fact that secretaries are sexually harassed and assaulted at work. At about 23 minutes in, there is a conversation between two characters, one of which says that 'those kind of woman invite this behavior' and that 'virtuous women are rarely accosted by unwelcome sexual propositions'.
Mrs. Fletcher (TV Show)
S1E6: a female character preforms oral sex on a male character, which turns nonconsensual after he becomes forceful and aggressive. She ends up punching him to get him off her, and is in tears after she kicks him out (21:38-22:50). There are also multiple times when women are objectified, including derogatory language. It is presented as a negative thing.
Ms .45 (Movie)
The film contains multiple vicious rape scenes and multiple scenes of sexual harassment. It falls under the rape/revenge sub genre.
The Ms. Pat Show (TV Show)
While not explicitly said, it is heavily implied a character was groomed by the father of her two oldest children when she was 13. S2E7 revolves around the main character (a comedian) trying to cope with her and her sisters childhood sexual abuse.
Muck (Movie)
A woman is seen wandering mostly naked in the opening credits. A woman is tied up and men rip her clothes off while she screams for them to get away. She is later seen naked and bloody when her boyfriend returns from looking for help. A man watches through the window as a woman gets undressed. She is grabbed and then is heard screaming for help off screen. The men pull a woman out of a car and begin ripping off her clothes before they are stopped. Her date makes multiple comments about the men being rapists.
The Mudge Boy (Movie)
A boy forces another boy to perform oral sex on him, then rapes him.
The film is an absurd comedy, thus the two rape scenes are in this tone (one by a giant lobster).
Muoi (Movie)
A woman is raped by three men, while two others are filming.
The protagonist enjoys raping, torturing and killing women and a young girl.
Murder Weapon (Movie)
A character mentions how she was molested by her father (nothing is shown on-screen).
As a mystery show, several cases involve sexual assault. The main character (a man) is also assaulted on screen several times. S1E10: child sexual abuse discussed, not shown on screen. S3E02: sexual assault of a young Chinese immigrant, off screen prior to start of episode. S3E04: pedophilia mentioned, pedophile brought in for questioning, no child sexual abuse occurs. S4E10: attempted sexual assault off screen prior to episode. S4E11: no sexual assault, but does involve young girls being coerced by an older man into 'liasons'. It is mentioned that the man was previously accused of sexual assault. S5E12: a main character is stalked by a former partner, the man is prevented from assault, but the scene implies that he would have attempted to assault her. S7E09: the main character is forcibly kissed by recurring villain. S8E01-02: episodes involve discussion of human trafficking of young women and girls. No explicit sexual contact on screen, but the implication is there. S8E07: discussion of pedophilia and minors engaging in sex work (human trafficking). Nothing on screen or graphic mentioned. S8E11: a male main character is harassed by a woman, including the woman letting herself into his hotel room. S8E13: a female nurse is accused of sexually assaulting female inmates at a psychiatric hospital. By the end of the episode, it is revealed that a male caretaker was the perpetrator. A main character is forcibly kissed by a recurring villain. S9E04: murdered women are electroplated and displayed naked in public. S9E15: a woman is implied to have sexually assaulted male workers at her husband's mill. Attempted assault of main character interrupted. S9E18: the main character is kidnapped and assaulted (forcibly kissed, tied up, on screen attempted rape). The scene is the most explicit in the show (14:00-15:00). The perpetrator is a woman, the survivor is a man. S10E06: character was assaulted prior to episode. Nothing explicit on screen, but survivor tells the story. Other characters say victim blaming things, but this is not said by any of the protagonists. Protagonists do not appear to be victim blaming. S10E9: a young couple is in the back of a car, and the man pressures the woman to kiss despite her protests to leave. He then forcibly kisses her. S10E10: flashback to previous sexual assault of main character, forcible kiss from S7E09. S12E3: one of the bridesmaids at a wedding attempts to force a man into sex despite his protests.
Musaranas (Movie)
The plot revolves around a woman who was repeatedly raped by her father. It is featured heavily in the second half of the movie.
Mushoku Tensei (TV Show)
It is mentioned that the main character's father raped his maid when they were younger The main character is a 34 year old in a child's body that makes perverse actions against women his age (10 years old) and teenagers. There is a character who needs to have sex in order to gather mana (sometimes she partakes in group orgies with non-human characters), majority of her encounters are extremely uncomfortable to watch.
A male minor is raped by a male adult. The minor does not tell him to stop, he completely panics and all he can do is lay there and not move. In the book, the rapist tells the minor to come to his place. The minor decides against it. He gets upset when about to be very intimate with his now-boyfriend (the rape happened 1-3 months before) and tells him what happened. He talks to him mom too. This was unconsenual sex, with a minor, by someone over the age of 18. The rape has traumatized the victim, and this may be triggering to readers. This is handled sensitively.
The Musketeers (TV Show)
S1E1: A man forces a kiss on a woman in order to disguise themselves. He does this again in S1E2. S2E8: A character discusses selling young girls as sex slaves. In that same episode, a man tries to rape a woman, which includes throwing her on the floor and pinning her down. S2E9: The off-screen attempted rape of a family member is discussed.
This highly-acclaimed feminist film calls out the rampant misogyny in conservative Turkish culture by depicting five young sisters' survival in an abusive household. The director took events from her own life: - Teenage girls are beaten by family members. - "Virginity tests" take place, where teenage girls are forced to go to doctors and obtain written proof they have their hymens intact to restore their honor. - Multiple teenage girls are married off against their will to older men. - Implied rape of teenage girls by an older male family member happens twice off-screen. - A teenage girl has sex with an older man off the street as a form of self-harm.
Mute (2018) (Movie)
The actions are portrayed from the perspective of the victim and are viewed completely negatively. However other characters around her do victim blame her, and we as the reader are never granted closure on whether or not the perpetrator is punished, which may also be triggering for certain readers.
The book contains an in-depth discussion of the 1964 rape and killing of Kitty Genovese. The author also describes her experience prosecuting a child pornography case. There are non-explicit descriptions of the videos created by the defendant.
The movie begins when one of the main characters, commits suicide. Throughout the film we find out that she was beaten and controlled by her father as a child, and raped by him as a teenager. Her mother accused her of seducing him and this imposed guilt and the violence she endures at the hands of men is one of main subjects of the movie. There are also scenes where some men start laughing at the other main character after she gets drunk on her own in a bar. They start telling her to sit with them, invite her for drinks and warn her jokingly of the presence of a molester. A hooded man runs after a girl, the attitude is menacing although his intentions are not cleared in the movie.
My Child Lebensorn (Video Game)
The talks of rape in this are very sensitive but there is no way of stopping it and the victim is seven years old. The abuser is her/his teacher who also urinated (off-screen but shown in drawings ) on the child. He/she stops eating and playing and does not want to be touched.
My Dangerous Life (Video Game)
During certain character relationship routes, such as with Chad, the main character can experience frequent sexual harassment, such as non-consensual grabbing, kissing, unwanted sexual comments, and touching. During the beginning of Chad's relationship route, he chases the main character throughout the city. Later on, the main character wakes up to Chad pinning him down on the bed, but nothing further escalates. During Brad's relationship route, Brad's ex boyfriend attempts to rape the main character, but is stopped by Brad. Other instances of harassment include ridicule of the main character's appearance, such as purposely calling him a girl and misgendering him. There are no bad endings, and each relationship route ends happily.
This novel is about the seduction and continued abuse of a 15 year old boarding school student by her 42 year old English teacher. The plot escalates as grooming turns into sexual abuse, much of which is disturbing and explicitly forced. The protagonist is followed as an adult in alternating chapters as the impacts of this relationship on her life are explored.
My Eyes Deceive (Video Game)
The female main character is a child and does not understand a lot. She is told the outside world is dangerous by a man assumed to be her father and is constantly drugged. If the player chooses to stop taking her medication, the father comes down, he is heard unzipping his pants and saying "Lets get this over with" before being stopped by a knock at the door. This is the "Good ending" in which the player can escape and run outside to freedom, what happens afterwards is unknown and its revealed the father may have been questioned in relation to another sexual assault case of a child. If the player chooses to continue the medication the child ends up pregnant, the symptoms are there such as her saying she is even mord hungry than before, feeling sick, and asks her father "why her belly is so big and round?" this is considered the "Bad ending" and what happens afterwards is unknown.
S2E1: a senior student known for harrassing drunk students prepares a drink for a girl, and forces her to an isolated place. Knowing that her phone battery is dead, he locks the doors of the car and grabs her leg. Before he can do anything else, someone rescues her.
The movie tells the story of the high school life of an infamous real-life cannibalistic necrophiliac serial killer and sex offender “Jeffrey Dahmer” who killed 17 men and boys. The movie portrays the killer’s early deviant sexual fantasies. The teenaged (17-18 year old) main character is paired with a black classmate as roommates. The main character’s friend makes a racist joke and said that “if the black guy tries to rape you, just knock on my door” (~52:05). The main character is aware that he is perfectly healthy, yet meets an adult male doctor to get a physical. A scene implies that the main character may have orgasmed when the doctor was checking his testicular region, which makes the man uncomfortable. Then, it cuts to another scene of the main character masturbating (59:20 - 1:02:50). The main character sexually fantasizes of a man’s dead/unconscious body. Nothing much is shown other than the boy sleeping on top of the man (1:09:40 - 1:10:35). The main character hides within the trees while holding a bat as he intends to physically/sexually assault a man that supposedly passes by the road. However, the man does not come by the road and the attempt fails. (1:18:05 - 1:19:00) The main character invites his classmate to his empty house for a drink and creeps behind him which causes discomfort to the latter. Then, he and grabs a bat silently, and it is implied that he wanted to knock him out and sexually assault him, but the said classmate soon leave before anything gets to happen (1:36:20 - 1:37:25).
An adult man knowingly catcalls a minor. Throughout the story, there are instances of the same man being a general creep, and references to him having hidden cameras. Discussion of rape-revenge as a movie genre . There is discussion around without explicitly mentioning a father molesting his daughter. Several people are asking her to admit that it happened so they can provide help but she refuses. It is later revealed that he raped her when she was 11 but there is no explicit description of it happening.
S1E1: a group of men threatens to strip a girl and post her naked body on the internet. The scene is pretty triggering as the vibe was set as if they would probably done more if the main protagonist walked away.
Worthy of note: a character is implied to have been raped by her father in the past.
My Little Eye (Movie)
A woman is ordered to lie on a bed at gunpoint and straddled by her attacker. One character tells a story in which rape is briefly mentioned. In a throwaway joke, one character simulates sex with two dolls during which the male doll penetrates the female doll anally without prior discussion.
The entire short film acts as a metaphor for rape and recovery. The victim is a young child and his own father, the rapist, is shown undressing, caressing, and licking the kid (the father himself also removes some of his clothes). No actual rape takes place, but the intent is extremely clear. The child has injuries on his arm, which is heavily implied to be from his father's previous abuse.
My Name (TV Show)
My Name is Earl (TV Show)
S3E1: the titular character gets locked up in jail and mentions that he is locked up with murderers and rapists. He wakes up one morning and mention that he has to make sure nothing happened to him in his sleep and locks down toward his crotch implying that it is a possibility that someone may assault him in his sleep. S3E7: a cop makes a joke to a man and tells him that he reminds him of his old prom date. He tells him to be careful for he’ll drug him and sexually assault him later like he did his prom date. A cop arrests the titular character and they use a camera probe to do an unlawful cavity search without his consent. S3E9: a prison sign says “if you were a rapist you’d be home by now”. The protagonist gets woken up by his brother and he explains that he keeps his hands over his penis while he sleeps for protection because there’ i an inmate who regularly assaults other inmates and thinks it is funny. A man stalks an exotic dancer and shows up to her dressing room with rope and weapons asking when she gets off work. The girls have to lie to protect the dancer. A prison guard reaches into a cell door to hand an inmate his food. The inmate yanks his arm in and the guard freaks out because the inmate forced the guard to touch him inappropriately using his hand. A prison guard introduces a new inmate to the current inmates telling them he is a former cop that molested a little boy. S3E12; a prisoner disguises himself as a female infirmary nurse. He walks past other male prisoners where one prisoner yells “female!” And a bunch of prisoners jump on him thinking he’s a woman. It is implied they intended to assault him thinking he was a female nurse. S3E13: a man breaks out of of prison in just his underwear and hitchhikes. He gets picked up by a known character who previously had issues with touching others without their consent. The prisoner gets in the car with him and later we see the prisoner jumping out of car in anger. It is implied the man sexually assaulted the prisoner. The same prisoner shows up on an elderly woman’s porch to eat her meals on wheels food and she takes him in. She dresses him in her late husband’s clothes and confuses him with her husband. He lives in her home knowing she is confused and he pretends to be her husband. The protagonist steals the prisoner’s idea and does the same, kicking him out and taking his place. A woman mentions that her mother taught her to think that all men want to rape her mother. S3E14: a woman gets hit by a police officer driving a car and is knocked unconscious. A second policeman comes over ready to take photos and asks if they’re going to cut her shirt off. He comments on her breasts again while she is still unconscious. Her shirt is not cut open. The protagonist gets hit by a car and is also knocked unconscious. He is put on a stolen ambulance and the bed rolls out the back of the ambulance and gets hooked onto the front of a truck. The female truck driver takes him home and puts him on her couch while he is still unconscious and attempts to have sex with him, The protagonist's friends break into her house and rescue him before she can. She seems a confused and doesn’t understand that he is unconscious. S3E18: the protagonist is in a coma, but is removed from the hospital by his brother. While he lies in a parking lot, still in a coma, a homeless removes his pants either trying to steal his pants or go through his pockets. Worthy of note: two paralyzed siblings have their wheelchairs stolen by the main characters and are forced to lay in their driveway unable to move. The brother says that he was leg-humped by a Doberman and the sister says she was shoulder-humped by the Doberman “to completion”. One of the main characters laughs very hard at the situation at her. S3E19: one character cries and the protagonist asks him to point in a bear where the “bad neighbor” touched him. The man opens the bear’s legs and points to between the legs and cries harder saying “he doesn’t have one” implying that the neighbor touched his genitals without consent. S3E21: a man gets behind a woman to try and hump her without her consent. She gets upset and smacks at him. S3E22: the protagonist and his brother try to make up for seducing women by getting them drunk to have sex with them. There is a flashback to a car shaking and moaning is heard.
In My Skin (TV Show)
S1E3: rape off-screen. The aftermath is explored in the following episodes of the season (not in season 2).
It is shown in a relatively brief flashback that the titular character was raped as a girl.
Thw book revolves around the main character overcoming the gaslighting by her family to try and make her forget the violent gang rape she experienced as a little girl. Flashbacks of the incident in varying levels of graphic detail are described in first-person. A teenager has a sexual relationship with her adult piano teacher, who she seduces by role-playing as a much younger girl. A father has several creepy, incest-implying moments with his daughters. A 13-year-old girl is married and their wedding night is dubiously consensual at best.
The main character finds out that a man only had sex with her because of a bet A man tries to have sex with a girl who does not want it: she says 'no' and gets away, but is traumatized. A third man she tries to have sex with keeps trying to feel up another guy while they are kissing. The main character then also tries to feel this guy up: he eventually says 'no' and gets away. Statutory rape is discussed.
A male character is raped with a strap-on; this is played for laughs.
The abuse of young boys by an adult man and their resulting trauma is a key plot point of this film; there are multiple scenes that depict these relationships. There are multiple scenes of a teenage boy engaging in sex work with much older men; one of these develops into a very graphic and violent scene of rape. The film also contains child on child sexual abuse.
The Mystic Nine (TV Show)
S1E14: a character's ex-fiancé attempts to rape her. We see the ex-fiancé on top of her and him putting some superficial tears in her clothing before her new fiancé fights through a group of men to get to her and save her. They then fight and the new fiancé is victorious. In a later episode, there is a flashback to this scene, but the flashback only includes the fights and the saving, not the attempted rape.
Mystic Messenger (Video Game)
In the first three days before a route and the routes themselves, there is a chance depending on what decisions you make that the MC or love interests can be kidnapped by a villain, some of these include CGs of collars being around necks, forcibly restrained, ect - If you avoid bad endings, you should not see these. Jae-hee: no sexual harassment or assault. 707: no sexual harassment or assault. Yoosung: no sexual harassment or assault. However he compares the MC who he has romantic feelings for to his cousin. His excessive mention of his cousin when doing his route might make players uncomfortable, but there's no explicit implication of him feeling romantic feelings towards her. If the player gets his Bad Story Ending 3, he will be kidnapped by a villain and there is a CG of him being held by the man with a collar around his neck. Zen is the most flirtatious of all the characters to the MC, however this is always done respectfully . In his route, there is discussion of sexual harassment he experienced as a child actor. There is also a woman that makes a false rape accusation against him and this is not handled tactfully. Jumin: in his route, he locks the MC in his mansion and refuses to let her out. The game makes it so to get the 'best ending' you can't directly try to get away from him and instead walk a line of appeasing his abusive behavior which might make some players uncomfortable. In his Bad Story Ending 2, where the player acts obsessive towards him the route ends with him tying her up, putting trackers on her, and not letting her escape. Rika Behind DLC: though nothing explicit, it is mentioned that a pastor sexually abused a young girl 'hundreds of times'.
In the very first episode, assault is explicitly shown repeatedly as a plot point. The perpetrator is 'punished'/ suffers for it, but only after the assaults are shown over and over again. The victim feeling helpless is focused on extremely heavily.
Mystic River (Movie)
"He Fell Howling": there are several references to Zeus kidnapping people to take back to the mountain or disguising himself to sleep with them. "Kali_Na": here is online harassment at several points in the story. "Live Stream": the entire short story is about the following events. While drunk, a man coerces a woman into performing oral sex where he then take a picture of her without her consent. She stops and demands he deletes the picture, but he only pretends to and instead keeps it to show it to others. He then stalks and threatens her, forcing his way into her apartment and coercing her into another sexual situation which she uses to get him to confess while she is recording (he is unaware that she is doing so). During this encounter there is no sex as she stops everything once she has gotten the confession from him.
Naked (Movie)
The film contains several rapes on-screen, as well as many physical and sexual abuses. The main protagonist is one of the rapists.
Naked Killer (Movie)
There are constant rape threats throughout the film, as well as many instances of sexual assault and attempted rape.
Chapter 21: one female character is captured by "flesh peddlers" who sell primarily women and children into sex slavery. The leader of the group approaches her cage intending to enter it and rape her. She is rescued before anything happens. Prior to this there are mentions of flesh peddlers throughout. After being captured the slavers comment about how some men will like a woman that struggles or fights back during rape.
A man gives a teenage girl food in exchange for sexual favors (45:18-49:15). At one point, she hides from him while he searches for her, the implication being that he will attempt to rape her. Worthy of note: A man uses valuable information to get another man to have sex with him. This occurs off-screen.
Nana (TV Show)
One character is a 15-year-old boy who makes money by sleeping with older women. One of the characters is only 15 years old and has a relation ship with a 23 year old women, this is showed in many chapters. It was not shown as something good, kind of the opposite, but also theres never any consequences or any kind of sensitivity for the victims, rather the whole problem is ignored and avoided. Episode 34: one of the characters wants to be intimate, while the other clearly does not. While one insists, the other make excuses for not doing it, until the other turns violent: out of fear, she cedes (09:20-09:56).
Narcos (TV Show)
S1E2: gang rape, aftermath on-screen. The scene is fairly explicit/violent. S1E6: a man harasses a maid who is clearly afraid of him and does not reciprocate. Later, he hugs her from behind and kisses her neck, while she protests that she is married and yells “don’t touch me.” That’s as far as it goes.
Nashville (TV) (TV Show)
S1E10: a female character is locked in a backstage room with a man. He tries to force himself but she is saved by her uncle. S4E21: a man tries to coerce a 16 year old girl into having sex with him. He stops her from leaving and gropes her, but is interrupted before anything else can happen.
A subtitle is shown stating that one of the antagonists was raped in prison (1:42). A male character watches several half-naked women through a window. A character debates having sex with a passed out girl he is unaware is underage, ultimately deciding not to.
An adult male show host grabs the teenage daughter of the main character and kisses her gratuitously without her consent.
This game is about a 20 year old woman who is prostituted by her brother for money. She endures on-screen rape, assault, self-harm, drug abuse, and even suicide.
Nattlek (Movie)
The father of the main female character abuses her and her family. He makes remarks about sexually abusing her and he is later killed by her lover. About 31 minutes into the movie, short clips are shown of the main male character assaulting a woman who had been kidnapped and tied up. Worthy of note: although ages are not confirmed in the script, the protagonists are based on a real criminal couple with a man in his twenties and a girl in her mid-teens.
NCIS (TV Show)
S1E2: in the very beginning of the episode, a couple is in a car. The guy tries to pressure the girl into having sex, she says no repeatedly. He is stopped.
Necronomicon (Movie)
This film contains an alien gang bang rape scene.
A child has a dream where he touches himself in front of his speech teacher. A few minor characters are pedophiles. They own physical copies of child pornography, which is described vaguely. Two of these characters are said to have raped young (prepubescent) children in their past, but the scene is only referenced, not discussed in detail. None of these incidents are portrayed as positive and the characters are shamed by others.
This game focuses on the career of a female social media star who struggles with her mental health, and there are candid depictions of the abuse and trauma many internet celebrities face explored in the game, including sexual harassment. Throughout the game, there are several sexually charged comments made towards the protagonist across different social media platforms, including parasocial relationships, asking the protagonist to expose herself, unwarranted comments about masturbating to her livestreams, and several more. It is possible for the player to delete most harassing comments on livestreams for a small in-game benefit, there is no way to get rid of harassing comments on other in-game websites. While the player can make the choice to avoid these websites as much as possible, it is often necessary to go through these comments in order to progress through the game. An optional route involves the protagonist livestreaming increasingly sexually explicit material. While these livestreams do incur in-game benefits like more followers, these suggestive livestreams will often cause her to have a severe mental health relapse if her stress levels go unchecked. It is made clear she does not enjoy making sexual content, but may choose to do so anyway, solely to gain more followers. Some routes also have an exposition of the protagonist's backstory, where she explains that, as a minor, she narrowly avoided being forced into sex work by her mother. Worthy of note: one ending has the protagonist being addicted to sex, to the point she forces it on the player character, leading to a non-standard game over.
This book is predominantly about child sexual assault. Several chapters are written from the POV of a sex offender, and discuss the ways in which he rationalizes his actions. He is not the protagonist, however, as the book does not support or glorify child sexual assault.
Nekromantik (Movie)
There is discussion and depiction of necrophilia throughout the film.
Nekromantik 2 (Movie)
There is necrophilia throughout the film.
Neo Ned (Movie)
One of the main characters discusses having been raped in her youth and bearing a child as a result.
Plot centred around group of women who become obsessed with becoming successful models, murder and sexually assault those who get in their way. A man can be heard raping a teenage girl from another room. The film also contains a necrophilia scene.
Neptune Frost (Movie)
Nereus (Movie)
A woman forces a man to undress so that she can confirm he does not have a curse mark on him. A man pins a woman down and kisses her neck while she screams for help: she is able to stop him before anything further happens.
The movie contains stalking, non-consensual touching/grabbing, attempted rape and forced underage prostitution with strongly implied rapes.
Kushtuka: a woman's mother wants her to have a child with a man for money. When she refuses, her mother threatens to send her 15 year old sister instead. Non-graphic mentions of sexual harassment while working at a party. White hills: a woman is tricked into getting a medicated abortion. Navajos Don't Wear Elk Teeth: a man coerces another man into having sex with him. Hunger: a man has fantasies about raping a woman. Scariest Story Ever: mentions of someone being a pedophile. Dead Owls: mention of rape in a book the character is reading. Prepper: a man fears his mother may have been raped but she was not. Sunday: a man has a graphic memory of being raped by a priest when he was a 9 year old boy, and there are mentions of it happening to others as well. The whole story is about him confronting the priest about this. He forces the priest to bend over and remove his pants and underwear, threatening to penetrate him with a broom handle, but he does not.
Several times throughout the book a teenage boy is called a slur that is later revealed to mean ´child of rape´. Chapter 2: a young man touches the face of a teenage girl without her consent. She manages to chase him off. He later returns with another man. It is implied this man wants to rape her. Very short scenes and both men get killed by the girl before they can harm her. Chapter 16: a boy wants to buy a girl a drink, she declines. He becomes pushy and grabs her wrist, but his boss stops him before he can harass her any further. Chapter 20: a teenage boy reveals that he was conceived as a result of rape and that his grandfather detested him: seeing his grandson's face reminded him of his daughter's rapist. Chapter 25: the same boy reveals that when he was born he was frail, and his mother was told to drown him as his people would never accept him. His mother refused, and as a result was shunned from society. Chapter 30: a teenage boy who does not have any teeth reveals he was enslaved in a pleasure house when he was young. The main character then states that she finally understands why the boy doesn't have any teeth, but does not elaborate. Short conversation (one paragraph), but it could still be disturbing to some.
New Amsterdam (TV Show)
S1E1: a child talks about how she was sexually abused by her foster father. S1E21: there are discussions of a doctor inappropriately touching his children clients, though the children themselves never seem uncomfortable. A minor discusses how his aunt sexually abused him at a young age. It is discovered in another episode that an engaged couple are actually brother and sister through their individual mothers using the same sperm donor. A woman discusses that she was assaulted by a family member and she was impregnated by said family member. S2E8: rape is mentioned. S2E18: a doctor is being sexually harassed by a patient. Other doctors do not believe him. S3E8: a pregnant woman discusses multiple rapes that resulted in the baby. S4E5: from 9 minutes on, a rape case is discussed in court. It gets dismissed due to the psychiatrist's statement that recurring memories are probably false. S4E21: this episode deals with sex trafficking. S5E3: this episode features a child bride. S5E7: a doctor tells how she got raped in college.
Pregnancy resulting from incest or rape is mentioned a few times in passing.
The author references the following throughout the book: low conviction rates for rapists, Trump's declaration that Mexican immigrants to the United States are rapists, Obama's opinion that child rapists should be executed, racist fears that Black men would rape white women, and Willie Horton's rape and murder of a woman while he was on work furlough from prison. The author generally discusses rape in the abstract, as opposed to detailing specific acts of rape.
The New Kids (Movie)
The New Look (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman sets a trap to get Nazis to try and rape her, and then they are shot.
A female character jokes about sexual assault, and talks about “showing where it happened” on a puppet. She later has multiple flashbacks from her childhood, about repeated sexual abuse she suffered from adult men. It eventually leads to her having mental breakdowns.
This series is a satire in which the main character does many offensive/triggering things.
Ni Una Más (TV Show)
This series deals with the rape of a teenager, that is shown on screen. There are many other triggering scenes throughout the whole series including non-consensual touching, adults praying on teenagers, psychological abuse, victim blaming, an adult having a relationship with the protagonists friend, self harm after the abuse; etc.
Nicole (Movie)
Social workers discuss how a teenage girl was molested as a child. A teenage girl is groped and made to have sex with an adult man in order to purchase a gun. The sex itself is off-screen.
A man spanks a stripper while she is performing: she pushes him away and he tries to grab her but she runs off stage. There are several mentions of rape as a crime A man has a woman tied up, and he pins her down and begins to lift her shirt but another woman comes in and attacks him before anything further happens.
The main character works with her verbally abusive ex-boyfriend, who keeps trying to get back together with her. At one point he drugs her with intentions to rape her. The narrative does not explain the details of what happened, but it is clear that she is (at least ultimately) able to defend herself while drugged.
The movie's plot involves the diary of a young boy who chronicled the years of sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of his parents and their friends.
The film contains multiple scenes of rape and torture perpetrated by concentration camp guards against their prisoners. A trauma bond relationship is explored after the end of WWII between a former prisoner and the guard who was her abuser.
The first scene is an act of necrophilia. Later, zombies rape living people to transmit the zombie virus. A man sodomize an unconscious man thinking he is his girlfriend.
In this documentary series, survivors detail their accounts of being raped and molested by serial killer Richard Ramirez over multiple episodes. This includes survivors who were children at the time. There are also pictures and details recounted by police and reporters about what victims experienced, beyond sexual violence, including mutilation and murder.
A woman is forced to enter into a sexual relationship with a professional acquaintance, who threatens to get her fired if she doesn't comply.
Chapter 30: a man attempts to rape a woman when she returns to her office. He gropes her several times and pulls her in to rub against her before she is able to fight him off Chapter 34: the same woman is made to strip naked at gunpoint by a group of men to prove that she doesn't have anything on her.
Nightflyers (TV Show)
S1E7: four men are lying on tables, having just been captured, and a woman enters with a machine. This machine is for obtaining their 'seed' by masturbating the men until they orgasm. The scene is not overtly violent but may be unsettling to viewers. The scene initially occurs about halfway through the episode.
The sexual violence scenes serve the narrative and are contextualized in the experiences of women in the historical period. There are at 5 graphic rapes shown in the film as well as implied rapes. The main character is forced to sleep with the villain as she is a servant of sorts. The villain allowed her to get married and she has a little girl. The villain works under the guise of a “good guy” trying to get her papers so she can be free but things happen and he ends up at her home where she sees her husband and child murdered and then gang-raped where she can still see their bodies. Later on, the villain is on a road trip and comes across a native woman and her child, they capture her and take turns until her village comes to rescue her. They kill her right in front of them.
It is heavily implied that the villain was both a child molester and killer. The main character finds pictures that are heavily implied to be child porn of her.
Although no rape is shown on screen the villain's mother is shown being locked in a room with tons of men then giving birth. A newspaper clipping referring to the villain as a child molester is shown on screen (though it is in the background and only shown for a second”). It is mentioned that the villain was the result of a rape.
An on-screen rape takes place between 27:45 and 30:23.
Nightsiren (Movie)
The villain in the movie is a necrophiliac, and this is mentioned a number of times, as well as the film showing the aftermath of these activities. Worthy of note: in the beginning of the movie, the villain attacks and murders a sex worker before engaging in intercourse with her body, although this act is not shown on-screen.
Nine Dead (Movie)
A woman describes the event of being raped in her past. It is mentioned a gay man raped a young man and gave him HIV/AIDS. (Extremely homophobic). One of the main characters is a pedophile and rapist.
Ninja Scroll (Movie)
The film contains two graphic non-consensual sex scenes. The first shows a man grabbing and kissing a naked woman and the second features a man inserting his fingers into the vagina of a tied up woman.
There is an attempted rape scene between a child and a ghost which is described in fairly vivid detail but the character blacks out so it is unknown how far the rape scene actually goes. There is also a scene in which a character has been videotaped while she performs sexual acts, in this scene she is under the influence of a drug, though the rape itself is not described in detail. However, the after-effects on the character are, as well as the character being coerced before the rape occurs, it should be noted that the actual act is explain briefly but remains off-page. The main character was previously in a relationship with an adult while she was a teenager. The scenes are handled well for what they are, they serve a purpose and are portrayed with sensitivity.
Nip-Tuck (TV Show)
Throughout the series, there are several episodes featuring talks about rape, sexual assault or child molestation.
Nitram (Movie)
In the last part of the film, a TV report briefly mentions that a killer had molested children.
An teenage girl is sexually assaulted graphically on screen more than once. In one scene, a mother propositions her underage daughter for oral sex. The act is not shown on screen. A man prostitutes his teenage daughter: she later prostitutes herself.
The author reveals that he and his grandmother were raped by several relatives while being confined at these relatives' house. The author also discusses Alice Walker's book Overcoming Speechlessness, in which she interviews Congolese women who were victims of sex slavery and other forms of systematic sexual violence. Both of the above are in the essay called "Fighting Words"
An attempted rape is quickly stopped.
No Game No Life (TV Show)
One of the two main characters, a 10-year-old girl is sexualised by her older brother throughout the whole serie. For example, he tries to sneak into the bathroom while her sister's showering, he even thinks and talks about her underwear and her breasts.
This book contains very graphic illustrations of child rape and incest.
The main character mentions how she is always turned on by her friend, and wants to do innapropriate things to her. In the manga it is worse as she openly admits to sexual assault and harrasment.
No Mercy (Video Game)
This game is about grooming female family members into having sex with the main character. Part of the game's description also says, "never take 'no' for an answer". The topic of rape is handled in a way in which the game seems to say, "it's acceptable to rape women as a punishment", as the main character discovers his mother had cheated on his father and the main character wishes to punish his mother for it (through blackmail and rape).
No More Heroes (Video Game)
The protagonist's half-sister is the final boss of the game. During the pre-fight cutscene, she reveals that not only was she the one wh ha'd killed the protagonists parents, but that their father had sexually abused her all her life, forcing her into sex work to survive. The cutscene in which this is spoken about is sped up and is not usually discernable in normal play.
No Surrender (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie a young local woman is raped by two soldiers. The rape is not shown but her screams are heard from off camera. Worthy of note: the film is a rape revenge film about a man who avenges her.
No Tell Motel (Movie)
A man leans in to kiss a woman but she pulls back in refusal: he respects it and stops (29:44-30:18) A man drugs a woman and rapes her on-screen while she is unconscious (50:55-:51:55). Earlier in the movie, a woman discovers that she is pregnant. Later, a man admits to her that he put something in her drink at a party and raped her while she was unconscious. She discovers he is the father. During the scene, he tells her how he feels about her and grabs her, but she pushes him away and he stops (57:39-59:49). In another scene, the same woman is tied down to a table by a man who attempts to rape her. There is a struggle, and she ends up escaping, but has a miscarriage in the process (1:11:16 - 1:17:28).
No. 6 (TV Show)
One character, said to be younger than the main characters who are 16, poses as a sex worker in order to get information from an older man. The older man touches the young character's leg and before anything happens, the young character drops the act in order to get him to stop. They are visibly uncomfortable throughout the scene.
No. 6 (TV) (TV Show)
A major character runs a prostitution service: while this is mostly off-screen, it does come up occasionally and there are hints that some prostitutes he has pimped out are minors. S1E4: a prostitute forces herself on the protagonist and forcibly kisses him, then continues to get physically affectionate with him even when he protests. She only stops when the deuteragonist steps in and tells her to get off of him, at which point she demands payment for the kiss she gave to the protagonist; in turn, the deuteragonist forces a kiss on her. Later in the same episode, the pimp offers a prostitution job to the deuteragonist (who is also a minor), but the protagonist shuts down the offer. S1E9: a teenager goes undercover as a prostitute to get information from an older man. After he fondles them and licks them, they retaliate by punching him and other characters involved in the operation further restrain the man. Also worthy of note is that the man misgenders the teenager and aggressively questions their gender, while the pimp (who is also going undercover for this job) simply comments that gender does no't matter if a prostitute is that young, implying he has had experience with handing out underage sex workers. The teenager is later shown visibly traumatized by the experience.
No.6 (TV Show)
A major character runs a prostitution service; whilst this is mostly off-screen, it does come up occasionally and there are hints that some prostitutes he's pimped out are minors. S1E4: An adult prostitute forces herself on the teenaged protagonist and forcibly kisses him, then continues to get physically affectionate with him even when he protests. She only stops when the deuteragonist steps in and tells her to get off of him, at which point she demands payment for the kiss she gave to the protagonist; in turn, the deuteragonist forces a kiss on her. Later in the same episode, the pimp offers a prostitution job to the deuteragonist (who is also a minor), but the protagonist shuts down the offer. S1E9: a teenager goes undercover as a prostitute to get information from an older man. After he fondles them and licks them, they retaliate by punching him and other characters involved in the operation further restrain the man. Also worthy of note is that the man misgenders the teenager and aggressively questions their gender, while the pimp (who is also going undercover for this job) simply comments that gender doesn't matter if a prostitute is that young, implying he's had experience with handing out underage sex workers. The teenager is later shown visibly traumatized by the experience.
Two women (one of whom is a teenager) are sexually harassed by a group of men. There is a short and implicit but still potentially disturbing rape scene in which a woman is restrained and screaming. The perpetrators boast about raping and murdering women throughout the film.
Noir (TV Show)
A teenage, pregnant, tertiary character first became pregnant due to date rape. Upon finding out that the protagonist is intersex, a character starts tearing off her clothing to try and find a penis that she does not have. He tries to isolate her in an alley, but someone intervenes on her behalf.
There is a weird conversation between two guys and its unsure if they talk about rape but one of them is angry because of a woman and says to the other man 'she has no idea what i want to do to her'. There is one instance where two woman are attacked and one is grabbed by the hair by a rapist. he later reveals that he was going to rape her. He also gives an description of how it felt to rape women.
Norsemen (TV Show)
Rape is constantly mentioned to be a normal and fun part of Viking pillaging. Sexual assault is used as a punchline multiple times throughout the show, including onscreen. One man recreates a pillage like rape scene with his new wife because he cannot get in the mood without it. The same wife is later to be raped by a leader of the neighbouring committee, she clearly desires the intercourse but it is used as a way to taunt her husband. It does not occur because of performance issues of the male. The main female lead constantly talks about how raping is her favourite part of pillaging. She rapes via jumping the face of another Viking in order to prove her worth for pillaging. She also cuts of men’s genitals and wears them as a necklace, both dead men and men she has raped. S1E5: the main village is attacked. The women are all rounded up and separated from the men, save for three men who were dressed as women at the time of the attack. A man from the attacking tribe makes his way around the women, saying he will "defile" them one by one. He picks one of the men dressed as a woman and brings him to a back room. He can then be heard raping the man, although the man is shown to be enjoying it (he goes on to state and defend his enjoyment in the next episode). He is then outed as gay when the other two men save him and uncover gay pornography and sex toys amongst his things. S1E6: an enemy man tries to uncover one of the men from the previous episode. He wrongfully assumes that a woman is him, and to prove it he grabs her by the genitals. A woman is told she will be raped in public to taunt her husband. She is happy with this course of action, however, and demands that her husband not prevent it from happening. The men then debate who should rape her, but they each decline for various reasons. The leader then agrees to do it but is unable to. A man becomes angry at his sister in law and yells that he should have had her raped when he had the chance. However, he is currently buried up to his neck, so she responds in kind by peeing on him. S2E1: a group of Vikings, after having attacked a settlement, debate on whether to commit rape or eat first. A woman makes a joke, "who likes to rape on a full stomach?"
The rape scene is both on and off screen and is very drawn out.
North Country (Movie)
Sexual harassment at work is the main theme of the movie. It contains a graphic scene in which a teenage girl is raped by her teacher. It is then revealed that she had a child from it.
The Northman (Movie)
Rape and sexual assault is present throughout the film, usually when men attack and pillage villages (they are shown violently taking women in order to rape them off-screen: they are shown struggling and crying). Most female characters are slaves who are regularly sexually abused by men off-screen. It is implied during most of the movie that the protagonist's mother has been coerced into a marriage by her late husband's brother. It is eventually revealed that it was in fact her late husband who took her as a wife when she was a slave, and that the protagonist is the product of a rape. During that scene, she kisses her adult son and promises to be his queen if he kills all her family.
NOS4A2 (TV Show)
S1E4: it is strongly implied that a teen with a developmental disorder rapes his mother after murdering his abusive father. S1E8: it is strongly implied that a man rapes a teenage girl he is holding captive. He also confesses to raping his mother and another woman he murdered in an earlier episode.
There is no obvious sexual violence. However, the depiction of vampirism at times resembles and/or may be interpreted as sexual or erotic in nature. It is not glorified or shown as humorous. * A man wakes up in bed to find his shirt has been opened and bite marks on his chest; another character later implies this man "fell into [the vampire's] arms like a maiden" * A naked male vampire is crouched atop a mostly-clothed man (shirt open) drinking his blood and the vampire is moving his body in a way that could be interpreted as sexually suggestive (gyrating hips) * 2 female characters are inflicted with dreams about the vampire supernaturally against their will, and the ways they act out in their sleep can be interpreted as sexually suggestive, and may imply the dreams are sexual in nature * It is implied that the female protagonist was molested as a child by the antagonist. * The vampire is obsessed with a woman, who does in some ways seem to be attracted to him and want to be with him too, but the consent is dubious as there's "fate", dreams / supernatural control, and threats to her loved ones. At times she acts positively about him and at other times she rebukes him. * A woman, in the past, promised herself to the vampire, but seems to regret it now. However, she still seems to be attracted to him but feels shame about this due to it being blasphemous. * A woman verbally consents to be with the vampire but again this is under duress and at least partially to protect loved ones; however it is intentionally unclear whether she wants this or not * As part of an anti-vampire ritual, a naked young woman (described verbally by a character as a "virgin child") is led on a horse to a grave site. Nothing happens to her. * A woman is found in the morning having fallen out of bed, and her nightgown is open showing a breast, and there are rats on her stomach. This is implied to be the vampire's doing. * One of the male main characters kisses his wife's corpse shortly after she dies: it is implied that more (necrophilia) happens off-screen. * While killing a woman, the vampire touches the woman's breasts. *Intense, somewhat violent sex scene between two characters, one of which is known to be possessed at the time (and therefore not able to properly consent). The other character is implied to also be possessed during this scene. The sexual act is graphic and of a violent nature.
Near the end of the movie, a man starts to try to rape a woman in her sleep (puts a jacket over her to hide what he is doing and begins to kiss her neck) but she is awoken before anything more can happen to her.
A woman is driven out to the middle of nowhere by a group of men. They talk about how they are going to rape her. The audience sees the aftermath of her running through the woods, crying. Whilst she is modelling, a photographer touches a woman's leg and is immediately reprimanded. Several producers attempt to proposition the protagonist, which she rejects.
November (Movie)
There are multiple mentions of a woman being raped while being captive: we also see flashbacks of it happening.
Now Apocalypse (TV Show)
The show contains several rape scenes shown on-screen.
A young girl being held captive by the army is implied to be regularly sexually assaulted. We see her fight off a man trying to force himself on her. Later, we find out she is pregnant as a result of this.
One character rapes and beats another, who later commits suicide. There are other scenes of consensual violence during sexual situations.
Throughout the entirety of the book there are mentions of rape and sexual assault, as well as graphic scenes depicting rape and sexual assault in great detail, and young women talking about how they feel after being raped or assaulted.
The rape scene occurs in the middle of the movie. Some criminals attack a family, and throughout the film, several nuns are exploited by a corrupt clergy.
Nuevo Orden (Movie)
The rape scene (at 47:45) is very long and graphic. There is a scene where a man is sexually tortured.
Numb3Rs (TV Show)
In the second part of the movie, after having escaped the mistreatment of her mother superior, the main character (a nun) finds refuge in another convent. There, the mother superior makes repeated sexual advances towards her. After she rejects it, her superior sexually harasses her but she always manages to escape. Finally, a monk helps her to flee, but he also ends up trying to take advantage of her. She escapes once again but is taken by a woman to a brothel. When she realizes the situation she is in, she jumps out of a window and kills herself.
Nun of That (Movie)
A priest is verbally reprimanded for apparently having sex with a 14 year old girl. Someone makes a joke about priests being pedophiles. A group of three men attempt to rape the protagonist. They lick her neck, shove her around, and bend her over. One unzips his pants but does not undress further. They are killed before she is undressed or further assaulted. Later, a sex worker is told she has to do sex acts with a client that she does not want to do. The scene is eventually shown from the waist up. An antagonist orally rapes a nun by performing cunnilingus on her.
S2E4 (Demon Capital or S1E4 as labeled on Netflix): a man attempts to rape a princess. She successfully defends herself with a sword, after which he decides that he is interested in more of a relationship with her, and takes off. Later interactions are very forceful and qualify as harassment, but the show portrays this harassment as ironically charming for the princess.
Nurse 3D (Movie)
A character is given drugs without her knowledge or consent while at a nightclub and, as a result, proceeds to have sex with a number of other characters. This is not acknowledged to be rape.
Nuts (Movie)
The protagonist (a woman) is a call girl, and one evening one of her customers gets particularly aggressive, threatening her, physically beating her, and attempting to rape her in the bathroom. It is also revealed in the film that her father molested her as a child.
A character is anally raped by a giant mutant hamster.
Nyad (Movie)
Memories of the main character's child sexual assault are portrayed. At 01:00:00-01:02:00, we see the scenes leading to the first assault, and the girl lying on a bed asleep, with the rapist approaching her. She is then shown afterwards, visibly distressed. Other, more graphic scenes are depicted at 01:11:00 and 01:15:00. After that, the sexual assaults are discussed and referred to until 01:22:00.
Follows the life of a self-diagnosed nymphomaniac and includes a scene wherein she has sex with an 18-year-old boy at the age of 14. At one point, the main character performs oral sex on a man despite his asking (or begging) her to stop throughout. The main character later acknowledges this is wrong, although it is unclear that this isn't because he was a married man. Another character even praises her 'forwardness.'
Near the end of the movie, a man attempts to rape the main character.
O (Movie)
The first scene shows a woman being raped by multiple men.
Obliterated (TV Show)
S1E4: threats of sexual violence. A woman has to masturbate to get a man's attention to save her life. S1E5: threats of sexual violence and graphic sexual violence (torture). S1E6 features a couple having sex in public. A father and son can see them.and they keep going.
The O.C. (TV Show)
S1E19-22: the main character's mother sleeps with her daughter's ex boy friend who at the time is only 17-18 (she has known him since he was a young child.) The show only shows how traumatizing it is for the daughter and presents it as a comedic storyline. S2E21: the main character is attacked by her boyfriend's brother who attempts to rape her. This is repeatedly shown in flashbacks and dreams in the next episodes. A teenager has a sexual relationship with another character's mother: this storyline is brief and not mentioned again.
A paedophilic character steals a little girl's underwear and attempts to put a 24-hour vigilance camera in said girl's room.
October Faction (TV Show)
S1E4: attempted rape. S1E5: the attempted rapist accuses the survivor of assaulting him: she is suspended from school.
In the very beginning (towards the end of chapter one) a small girl leads the main character to a man who brutally raped her. The description of the act is quite vivid. The rapist is discovered to have taken a sample of the victim's blood from the rape and to like smelling and licking it.
The book contains multiple instances of rape and frequent threats of rape. There are also implied incest and physical abuse of the children.
The whole movie is about an officer catching sex offenders. We see them forcing themself onto a woman.
Okja (TV Show)
An animal character is forcibly bred to another creature and cries out in pain and terror.
S1E4: rape attempt (33:00-34:00).
Okupas (TV Show)
This serie is a slice of life drama about the street life in Argentina during the economic crisis. It slowly becomes a hardboiled but realistic crime thriller. S1E4: one scene shows the protagonist almost getting gang-raped by the antagonist and his goons. Luckily he is saved by his friends but the longetivity, decadent atmosphere, realism, uneasiness and overall intensity of the scene make it nothing short of nightmarish.
The Old Gun (Movie)
Rape on-screen (circa 32:00-34:00).
Oldboy (2003) (Movie)
A man runs into the bathroom a woman is in and forcefully kisses her on the mouth and attempts to pull her clothes off and rape her. A woman is held hostage by gang members while tied up and shirtless: she is groped on screen and it is implied through dialogue that the men assaulted her with their tongues as well. A brother and sister have sex. A man and woman have sex: it is later revealed that the woman is his daughter. Worthy of note: (1) a consensual sex scene takes place where the woman tells the man that it is painful and she is enduring it for him. (2) The depiction of incest and sexual abuse in the film is done with intent, not gratuitously. Its intent is disturbing the viewer, and to further serve the twist in the end which adds to that intent
Oldboy (2013) (Movie)
Incestuous relationships feature as a recurrent theme throughout the movie. A man stands over a woman with the implied intention of raping her. He harasses her in a very crude way. She forcefully rejects his advances but is very clearly troubled. A character is forced to watch footage of his ex-wife being raped.
Towards the end of the book, the titular character is raped by an ex-boyfriend. Later, she explains other times she was sexually assaulted in the past to a trusted person.
Olla (Short) (Movie)
The film contains a brief but very intense scene of sexual violence, which clears up a lot of issues hinted at prior in the movie.
One of the protagonists was sexually abused by a psychiatrist as a child. In a flashback, it shows the psychiatrist (who he confronts later in the movie) asking him a sexual question and putting his hands on the child's thighs.
A woman is raped by a main male character. A woman is raped by a alien creature.
On the Verge (TV Show)
Two friends are in a car, and the woman knows her male friend is a sex addict. They kiss, he pushes her away, she then goes to give him a blow job, he says "no" repeatedly. Eventually he says "okay" and because he enjoys it. Her and her friends joke about it later and it is a punchline throughout the series.
Once Upon a Time (TV Show)
Characters frequently coerce others into having sex with them by magic or simple deception throughout the series. Throughout much of season 1, there is an ongoing sexual and romantic relationship which is a result of mind control. S1E7: rape off-screen of a character being controlled by another. One character forcefully kisses a female character: she pushes him away. He does not apologize for his actions. Later in the episode, everyone tells the victim that she is pushing him away because she is allergic to intimacy, and that he is a good man. She caves to the pressure from her peers and they kiss again. In season 2, there is a rumored sexual relationship between an adult and teenager: the age of the character said to be an adult is never revealed. This plot appears in S2E6. In season 4, there is a side plot where, through magic means, a female character assumes the form of another character's wife in order to coerce him into having sex with her (off-screen) and impregnating her. This plot appears in S4E17. In season 7, there is a variation of the above. In this case, the male character did not know the female character, nor the form of the character she assumed. The intercourse happends off-screen but the scene afterwards includes many unwanted touches. This plot appears in S7E7.
This film contains two scenes depicting rape. The one taking place in a car lasts quite a long time: the driver does nothing during the entire scene but kicks the rapist out afterwards and drives the girl home.
Late in the movie, there is discussion of a gang making a deal trafficking Chinese prostitutes to America. There is also a scene where a woman is taken to a man's room for the purpose of raping her. She fights back, but is knocked out. The man is fought off before he can commit rape.
Rape is shown on screen. No physical coercion is readily apparent, though it is clear that refusal to participate would incur the threat of social, physical and financial harm. In another scene, a man tears an item of clothing from a woman, exposing her. A man also storms into a room where a woman is shown bathing.
A woman is beaten and raped by her husband (off-screen). The husband's friend rapes the couple's 13-year-old daughter (on-screen), resulting in her suicide.
Child pornography and bestiality are briefly referenced. A man forces a man and woman to mime sex acts while he photographs them. This is treated in the film as tantamount to sexual assault, and both of the victims are traumatized. A man implies that his father exploited him for child pornography.
One Tree Hill (TV Show)
A main characters romance storyline starts because another character wants to upset his half brother. S1E6: a high school girl flirts with a college junior for pain meds. S1E7: someone dares a high schooler to pinch a grown man's ass. S1E8: an attempted date rape is shown on-screen. S1E16; an adult woman says she likes younger guys and hooks up with a high schooler who is a minor. We later find out that she' i the mother of a high school boy's baby. The high schoolers are over the age of consent in the state, but not 18. S1E18: joke about statutory rape. Season 2 features a character developing a romantic relationship with someone that is paid to be with him. Their making out and post coitus scenes are shown on screen. S2E1: incest joke. S2E2: non consensual nude picture are taken and posted on the internet. It is treated like a good hearted joke. S2E3: one character takes off another character's towel non consensually as a joke. S2E6; a man lies about being sick so his soon-to-be ex-wife will take care of him. S2E8: a professor gives his student (who is sleeping with him) an undeserved grade. Both are adults. S2E15: a girl is really drunk at a party and a guy tries to take her home. S2E19: a girl gets groped by a group of boys at a party. S2E22: a man forcefully kisses a woman. Season 3 features a story arc where a girl who is 17 (legal age) seduces a man in his thirties. When he funds out her age, he tells her to leave. She then takes off her clothes and seduces him again. S3E7: a man kisses his friend without her consent before she tells him news that makes him end the friendship. S3E8: a joke about a pepping tom by a girl is played for laughs. S3E10: a woman's father-in-law is sexually creepy towards her (who is 17). S3E12: prison rape joke and peeping tom joke. S3E14: a 15 year old on drugs is taken advantage of. A 17 year old is hit in by an adult who says he wishes she was younger. S3E15: date rape drugs and gang bangs are mentioned. The video of a topless 17 year old is distributed unconsensually. S3E20: sexual harassment. S4E3-6: these episodes deal with a story arch of a guy pretending to be a main character's sister. - Episode 5 features a sexual assault and battery of a prostitute made to dress up like that character. It also features violence with sexual undertones towards main character, as well as an 18 year old high school student lying to a college graduate, who ends up being her high school teacher. He also hits on another student. S4E14+15: a sex tape is shown to an audience it was not inteded for. S4E15: a date comment that his son's 16 year old sexual conquest is hot. It ends with a stalker punching a main character who is his victim in the face. S4E16: a main character gets kidnapped, tied down, drugged and almost raped. S4E17: prison rape joke. S4E18: victim blaming and PTSD related to rape. A victim confronts her stalker/attacker. Season 5 contains a whole story arch, where a female boss sleeps with almost all of her employees. one of the male employees thinks it is his fault, and though the female boss gets fired, none of his friends support him as if he was taken advantage of. They accuse him of sleeping around to get ahead. S5E1+2: sexual harassment. S5E3: workplace sexual harassment. S6E7+8: these episodes feature workplace harassment. S6E11: this episode is a 1940s parody. A main antagonist forcefully kisses a main character and sexually harasses her and says that he owns her. S6E15: incest joke. S7E14: workplace sexual harassment.
There is a passing mention in the beginning about the protagonist fighting back against a kid who was flipping girls' skirts in a kindergarten class. SPOILERS: We find out over the course of the book that the main antagonists have a tradition of hunting "fallen women" for sport. Many of these women are vulnerable, poor, racialized, queer, etc. An antagonist leaves the protagonist in a situation where he assumes she will die, and he brags about going off to rape two other women.
One protagonist regularly hooks up with a guy. That guy comes to her family’s apartment uninvited and starts trying to force a sexual encounter until he is interrupted. This protagonist clearly says no and is called a tease. Another protagonist receives days of harassment based on a rumor that he once experienced erectile dysfunction. Some male characters make sexual comments towards his ex-girlfriend.
Onihei (TV Show)
Underage prostitution is a major theme of the movie.
Season 1: someone's girlfriend lies about their identity, and seducing someone to cover up their involvement in something. S1E1: a character mentions that men sexually assault women every day. S1E7: a woman gropes a man in an elevator. S2E6: a main character mentions a former coworker getting handsy at work. S2E10: a boss sexually harasses his female employee. S3E1: this episode features a mother and son kissing on the lips. She says "he's gay so I can kiss him like that". It also mentions a producer under investigation for sexual harassment. S3E7: description of someone sending unsolicited dick pics. There is a mention of sex between cousins.
There are multiple attempted rapes and rape of males and one woman in this series. S1E1: attempted gang rape of a man by men (about 20 minutes in). A past rape by women and men is recounted by a man. S1E2: women are attached and their hair is cut. A monk is forced to have sex with a female prostitute or else his companion would be killed (the prostitute was sold into it by her husband to cover debts). S1E3: the emperor goes into a village with the intention of murdering a homeless person, but rapes a woman walking by when his companion finds her beautiful (about 12 minutes in). The scene is graphic and lasts several minutes. S1E4: a boy is gang raped on screen by men.
The whole movie focuses on the aftermath of sexual assault and how it can strain relationships.
The Operative (Movie)
The main female character is forced to hide in a car, in which a man stucks his hand down her pants.
Ophelia (Movie)
There are two instances of attempted sexual assault in this film.
Rape or sexual assault discussed/mentioned/implied: In S1E8 sexual violence is threatened by a guard, who makes multiple inappropriate sexual advances, including groping an inmate in an earlier episode. In S1E10, a flashback shows the teenage years of one character, during which she lived on the streets and stole to survive. It is hinted that she left home due to a problematic family life and she makes a reference to her 'rapist stepfather.' In S7E11, a foreign woman struggles to explain that she wants to get an abortion. Eventually, a flashback strongly implies that she was raped by smugglers before entering the US. Sexual harassment on-screen: in flashbacks (S2E4), it is revealed that one character stalked a man who she'd developed an obsession with at length. This resulted in the man moving several times, changing his phone number and email, and getting a restraining order against her. Her stalking escalated into threats and eventually actual violence, with the inmate threatening to strangle him and his girlfriend and leaving a homemade explosive under his car, leading to her arrest. She continues to refer to him as her 'fiance' throughout early seasons, until the reality of the situation is exposed when the man visits her in prison and threatens to kill her if she ever comes near him or his wife again (also in S2E4). S1E3: a male guard abuses his power when patting down an inmate and gropes her breasts on screen and another woman tells after that he also grabbed her butt during the search. In season 5, prison guards are taken prisoner by inmates during a riot and subjected to a series of humiliating ordeals, often being stripped naked and/or forced to perform, notably in S5E2 (where captive guards are paraded in front of an audience of inmates and subjected to intense humiliations, including public stripping and, in one case, a forced 'cavity search') and S5E4 (where guards are forced to take part in a 'talent show' for the amusement of inmates). In S6E1, two prisoners are handcuffed to poles and sprayed with cold water as punishment for fighting: two officers force them to kiss each other (33:55). S4E2: within a flashback, a young girl is forced to do a pat down in which the officer remarks and gropes her bottom. Attempted rape: a military woman is assaulted by one of her fellow soldiers while she is asleep. She eventually wakes up and manages to stop him when he has his hand in her pants (S7E2). Rape off-screen or strongly implied: in a flashback, it is revealed that one of the prison guards previously worked at a men's high-security facility and had a romantic relationship with one of the inmates, who was severely beaten and raped by other inmates when they found out he was gay (S5E10). The circumstances of this death were covered up. Rape on-screen: In S3E10 a woman is raped by a man who she used to have transactional sex with (in a flashback). In the same flashback, her mother is seen telling her that men would always want sex from her, and that she must grin and bear it. Years later, this woman is seen to regularly engage in sexually irresponsible behaviour, resulting in multiple abortions. In season 3, she develops a relationship with a male member of the prison staff, who, in S3E10, progresses to treating her in an aggressive and demeaning fashion and eventually rapes her. He does the same on multiple occasions after this event. She and her friend plan to rape him in revenge, but never actually do. The psychological implications of her rape, as well as her relationship with the prison officer, remain a theme of the show throughout the rest of seasons 3, 4 and 5. Later, she seems to forgive him, apparently willingly initiating romantic contact. One subplot involves a prison guard coercing prisoners into giving him sexual favours by trading them for drugs which he has smuggled into the prison. In S4E6 an inmate has sex with a female guard in exchange for heroin. Worthy of note: in season 1, an inmate strikes up a romantic and sexual relationship with a C.O. and both recognise that the relationship is forbidden by prison rules. The inmate eventually becomes pregnant and decides to keep the baby, but who the father is has to be kept a secret because the father could be imprisoned for rape, as prisoners are not, by law, considered able to give consent. The inmate, her mother and the father of the baby plan for the inmate to seduce another officer and accuse him of rape in order to provide an alibi. Prison officials want to avoid a scandal so the accused officer only receives a suspension.
S1E2: it is heavily suggested that a police constable preys on children. S1E3: it is revealed that a main character raped a teenage member of his staff, resulting in a pregnancy. Additionally, another character is drugged and has an abortion performed on her without her consent.
Original Sin (Movie)
Gang rape implied.
Orphan Black (TV Show)
S1E1: a man has sex with a woman whom he mistakenly believes to be his girlfriend. A plot in season 2 involves a clone's ability to reproduce being exploited by a cult. S2E5: rape on-screen. The rape is never addressed after the fact, and this is likely because it involves a woman attacking a man rather than the other way around. Although not explicit, the scene is unambiguously not consensual. S3E1: a woman is groped by a man. Season 4: an ongoing sexual relationship between an adoptive mother and her son. This may not be technically considered incest, but a character has a relationship with the woman who both created him (as a clone), and then adopted him.
Oruchuban Ebichu (TV Show)
Sexual violence is shown for comic purposes. S1E1: sexual relationship between adult and teenager implied.
The Orville (TV Show)
Throughout season 1 a main character repeatedly makes sexual advances and hits on another main character even though she says no. Eventually, while under the influence of a substance, graphic sex is shown on scene with these two characters (S1E9). Other than the woman briefly saying "I don't want to see this guy" after, the show does not treat this like rape. Several other characters almost have or have sex while under the influence here too. The character who excretes the druglike substance does not reveal that people are under the influence until after the sex has taken place. S1E1: a main character is shown to be cheating on his spouse. It is later revealed that this sex was under the influence of a drug he excretes, so non consensual. S2E4: it is revealed that the main character had a relationship with an alien disguised as a human. She seduced him in order to entrap him. S2E7: a character is put to death for his sexual orientation after having a date with someone, but it is then revealed that he faked his death. S3E7: characters talk about how a "wife mated with another male". This is referring to the rape that took place in season 1, where the alien used pharamones to get her to have sex with him. No one ever calls this act rape throughout the show.
There is a description of child pornography, which two teenage boys access through an adult's computer. One of the children from these videos becomes a central character in the next book in the series. The teenage boys also view torture porn.
Os Parcas (Movie)
Multiple scenes have sexual assault either happening on screen or verbal sexual harassment. It is always played as a joke or as a normal thing. The off-screen rape scene takes place at 50:00, and is later briefly mentioned around 55:00.
Osama Game (TV Show)
The whole plot of this series is about performing malicious missions in order to stay alive: a lot of those missions involves sexual assault or rape.
A woman is raped after refusing to have sex with a man. After suffering a msicarriage, a woman and her brother plan to have sex in order for the woman to become pregnant again: however, they do not actually follow through with the plan.
The Other Two (TV Show)
S1E2: a joke is made out of a full grown woman thinking an 11 year old is a 30-ish year old because of her makeup. She then thinks the 11 year old wants to have sex with her. When she finds out the truth, she is worried about the consequences. Worthy of note: the character is played by an actual 30 year old. S1E3: an incest joke is made. A man tells a story about attempting to smell another man's nderwear without his consent. A female character recalls kissing a guy when he was asleep: it is named as sexual assault. Adult women send a teenage boy underwear. A man is non consensually outed as gay, and then subjected to homophobic behavior that is played for a joke. A joke about exposing his penis is also made. S2E5: there is a mention of child sex abuse. S2E8: a main character is used by a straight man pretending to be gay. S2E9: a main character has a picture of his anus leaked nation wide. S3E1: this episode contains several jokes about people waiting for a child star to turn 18. Pedophilia rings are mentioned. S3E3: someone forgets to turn their camera off on zoom and showers while people are watching. They know his camera is on and watch anyway. One of them mastrubates to him without his knowledge. S3E8: sexual harassment by a therapist is mentioned. S3E9: a man's boyfriend refuses to use lube while having sex despite his partner telling him to wait. This is played for comedy. A woman sneaks into her ex-boyfriend's apartment and stalks him: he is then forced to chase her outside in a towel. Sexual assault allegations are mentioned. A woman watches a teen mastruabte outside his window.
Throughout the film, a man putting his fingers in a woman's mouth is meant to symbolise sex. There are two occasions in the film where the man forcibly puts his fingers in two separate women's mouths, forcing them down their throats, simulating rape. It implied throughout the film that the man leading the cult has been having sex with teenage girls, many of whom are his daughters.
Otis (Movie)
Otoshiana (Movie)
The only woman character in this film is raped and murdered, and she becomes a ghost like the male protagonist. While all the murders in the film are treated as dramatic and traumatic events. On the Criterion Channel, an extra short commentary by a scholar does not acknowledge it as rape.
First segment: a man sets up a camera to film himself having sex with his girlfriend after she told him not to. She does discover it quickly and gets up, at which point she's dragged out of the room by the spirit/demon. Both her and her boyfriend are possibly assaulted. Fourth segment: a man rapes his wife as punishment. Though it is not visible on screen it can be heard happening just off camera.
A child is groped from behind at a public fireworks show (the character is implied to be trans and is presenting as female in public for the first time), and the teenaged protagonist accompanying them jokes that they were groped because of their cute appearance. They then lash out at the protagonist and this event makes them feel uncomfortable about presenting as female later on.
The protagonist interrupts a man raping a woman at a party. The scene is a plot device to establish what a good guy the protagonist is.
Two teenage twin brothers joke about 'forbidden love,' stroking each other's faces and suggesting that they only feel comfortable around one another. It is mentioned or implied on various occasions that this running joke is only for show, and is not reflective of a real sexual/romantic relationship between them. The main character is touched without permission and made to wear revealing clothing. At one point, another character attempts to assault her, but is is revealed that he was not going to go through with it and only wanted to scare her. S1E1: a girl fakes sexual assault by pulling a character on top of her in a way that parallels real sexual assault. She claims that the character attacked her though as the audience we see that she faked the attack. She is then confronted about the situation and the conflict is resolved. S1E8: a character pins a female character to a bed, implying she can pay him with her body. Nothing happens on-screen. It is then revealed/discussed that the aggressor only did this so she would understand that being a woman is dangerous and agree to take self defense classes. S1E19: a female character intends to kiss the main character during a play in order to “steal her first kiss” for revenge. When the main character realizes this, the aggressor grabs her wrist and continues to try to kiss her. The main character yells at her to stop/let go and eventually escapes. This is very light and meant to be silly, but could still be upsetting to some viewers (19:38-20:35).
A man grabs a woman's crotch and implies that, if his wife dies, he will rape the woman to impregnate her.
Towards the beginning of the book in the first "The Gang" chapter, a group of boys contemplates luring the female protagonist somewhere and raping her. The female protagonist's stepfather grooms her and sexually assaults her multiple times. He and several other people in their town want her to marry him, saying it is legal to do because they are not blood related. Her grandmother even supports this, saying she was 14 when she married her husband, who was 25 at the time. The stepfather finally fully rapes the female protagonist in the last few chapters of the book. In the epilogue, we find out that the racist news media produces a story that she was raped by a Black boy. In reality, she had been dating this boy consensually.
Out of Sight (Movie)
A man kidnaps a woman and lies in the trunk of a car with her. He insists that he would not sexually assault her, but their close proximity leads to him resting his hand on her thigh. The scene is played romantically. A man attempts to rape a woman, but she defends herself and gets away. A man threatens to rape a woman, touches her without her consent, and later attempts to rape her, but is stopped.
The Outer Limits (TV Show)
S1E13: a female prisoner is asked if she has been tortured by alien captors. She says that she was told to strip naked and was then leered at by the male aliens, before two female aliens arrived and "examined [her] inside". S1E9: about halfway through the episode, a man recounts how he saw another rman putting his hands where they did not belong and forcing himself on a woman to rape her. S1E16: this episode is about a female cannibal who attacks and eats the men she has sex with. S2E5: near the end of the episode, a doctor asks a woman if she has ever been sexually abused or raped. She never was. S2E17: this episode is about a group of women who have sex with men without telling them that it is part of an alien ritual, and that they are going to have an alien baby immediately. S3E4: a woman is held against her will by a doctor, who has her legs up in medical stirrups. She repeatedly begs for help from another man. The scene is played as a flashback throughout the episode. S3E7: towards the beginning of the episode, a woman prisoner is forced to go meet with a male jailer in charge. A male prisoner asks what he wants with her, and a female prisoner says "she's a beautiful woman, what do you think he wants with her?" Upon arriving, the male jailer tells her that he will kill her kid if she does npt do what he says. She starts to undeess, but he stops her, because that is not actually what he wants. Later a male prisoner tries to force himself on her but she refuses and escapes. She is (falsely) berated for trading her body for food. S3E8: towards the end of the episode, a man caresses a woman's face threateningly at gunpoint until another man breaks in and says to leave her alone. S3E10: a woman talks about being probed by aliens. Another woman hallucinates that she is kidnapped and almost probed. A man talks about having sex with the female main character while she was unconscious. S3E12: a professor makes his research group strip makes in front of him and each other. Those who do not want to end up leaving, but those who stay are coerced by the promise of a privileged research group position. S4E12: a woman is attacked in her home by a man and her blouse is torn open before another man pulls him off of her. Later, it is implied that a priest has raped a young girl, and tells a young boy who finds them that "she wouldn't stop screaming". S4E15: child molestation is mentioned. A man has sex with an artificially intelligent robot that cannot refuse: she exhibits a freeze response while he begins. S4E18: rape is mentioned as one of many acts a dictator does. S4E22: a man beats a woman. The aftermath is shown several times throughout. S4E23: the clothing of men and women is removed and they are experimented on without consent. S5E3: a man holds a woman and her son captive in their home. Her father is told that unless he complies with their demands, the son will be killed and the woman will be "worse than killed", implying rape. The man drags her upstairs to the bedroom as they force the father to comply. He yells "don't touch her!" She is returned safely. S5E7: a man and a woman are coerced into having sex by an AI, whose intentions are to create more slaves for itself. They do not know each other at all and go through with it out of fear. S5E8: a woman recalls her childhood during which she and her sister were repeatedly sexually abused by their father. A man says that his wife was mugged and raped and died; she is shown bloody and dying in the hospital. S5E10: a woman who has received in vitro fertilization and was lied to about who the father is tells a man that he practically allowed them to rape her. She confronts the man who did it to her and he has a very creepy speech; she gets very upset. S5E14: a man wants to have sex with a woman who does not. He injects her with a shot that will make her more submissive, then he takes her to his apartment and while she is drugged, he starts to undress and kisses her even though she repeatedly says no, tells him to stop, and pushes him away. His intention is to rape her. She escapes at this point. The man is portrayed as the hero/victim, and the woman he assaulted keeps trying to help him and is very sweet to him afterwards, even after he attacks her again. S6E3: a woman sleeps with a man under false pretenses - having altered her appearance. A different man does the same thing later in the episode. S6E21: a female minor is raped onscreen at gunpoint by a man. Partway through, another woman appears and tells him he ruined her life by raping her. It is revealed that he is done this multiple times to different women and girls. The woman recounts her experience to a court that disbelieves her. S7E1: a teen girl repeatedly tells a teen boy who is trying to rape her to stop. A robot stops him at this point. S7E20: throughout the episode, a woman is triggered by everyday occurrences and has 8 separate PTSD-style flashbacks of being tied down and raped that are all shown. At one point another female victim in a mental hospital from suffering the same trauma describes her experience in detail and says "not a part of my body was sacred and I wondered if they were violating Jennifer (her 12 year old daughter)" Other people around laughed as the rape was happening, and no one believes her afterwards. It is revealed that the woman's daughter is the product of rape. An adult man takes a 16 year old girl to an abandoned warehouse and gets super creepy with whispering to her and touching her shoulders. The entire episode is about this trauma and the fallout from it on family and friends, and the scenes and language used to describe it are disturbing. In another episode, a man tells another man that something he dislikes is "like we're violating your daughter".
A woman being chased by a bounty hunter is temporarily unable to move. He says he wants to have some fun since she cannot move and begins unbuckling his pants but he is stopped before going any further. An adult woman is in a sexual relationship with her father, and it is revealed that they did have a baby together.
Outlander (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is almost raped by a military officer, but is rescued by a man. S1E2: in a flashback, a woman is attacked by two soldiers who intend to rape her. Her brother attempts to protect her but she is recaptured by a third man, who publicly undresses her in order to humiliate her and her brother. It is implied that she then endures rape in order to protect her brother from severe punishment for his actions. Later in the episode, a man is sceptical when a woman attempts to convince him that a man under his command attempted to rape her. S1E4: a group of men attempt to force themselves on a lone woman. She attempts to fight them off and is eventually rescued by a man. The man who saved her then drunkenly attempts to force himself on her, and she fights him off. Later in the episode, a man grabs hold of the same woman asks her male companion (who violently declines) whether he can 'keep her.' S1E5: a man is loudly teased by his peers, who 'encourage' him to 'have biblical relations... with his sister.' S1E7: a woman is placed in a position where she must marry a man who is not her husband in order to secure the safety of she and her peers. It is revealed that, in order for this marriage to be considered valid and binding, they must consummate the marriage on the wedding night. S1E8: a man intends to rape a woman but she stabs him and escapes. Later, the same woman is taken hostage by a different man, who ties her up, strips her and threatens her with a knife in a prelude to rape, before another man intervenes. S1E9: a woman is partially stripped and beaten by her husband as punishment for her actions. S1E11: a woman has a flashback about being knocked unconscious amidst being sexually assaulted. In another flashback, a man tries to make another man have sex with him under threat of being flogged. The man refuses, and while being flogged, his father has a heart attack and dies. Both the man and his sister feel at fault for their father's death, as they both refused to have sex with the man that flogged him. S1E12: flashblacks from episode 2 (a young woman is sexually assaulted on screen by a man who then attempts ro rape her and knocks her unconscious. It is implied that she was raped while unconscious). S1E15: a man is taken prisoner by another man and brutally raped. S1E16: a man graphically relives the brutal rape which he endured while in captivity. There are graphic and potentially upsetting scenes throughout the episode. S2E2: the man who was raped in S1E15 shows many signs of PTSD from the assault, including nightmares that graphically show the rape as well as flashbacks while attempting to have sex with his wife. S2E4: a woman is raped by a group of bandits, who flee when another woman arrives at the scene. S2E5: a woman is cared for following her rape. The aftermath and consequences of this attack are also dealt with. S2E7: a woman is coerced into having sex with the king in order to save her husband. This happens shortly after she has given birth. A man rapes a young boy on-screen, and a man remembers a rape by the same man (20:40-24:00). The boy is shown to be struggling with shame and guilt for the consequences following his rescue. S3E3: a man is flirted with by another man, who holds a position of power over him. It is heavily implied that, as a result, the man being flirted with is reliving his past rape. S3E4: a man is coerced into agreeing to sex through blackmail and is raped by a woman on-screen. Later, the man offers to let himself be raped by another man in exchange for his child's protection. S3E6: a woman is attacked by a man and he threatens to rape her. S3E7: the scene from the previous episode continues (2:30-3:20). S3E12: an adult woman rapes a teenage boy. Seasons 4 and 5: continual references to the rape from S1E15 and S4E8 throughout. S4E1: an adult woman rapes a teenage boy. S4E8: a woman is rape off-screen, while men jeer and laugh in the adjacent room. S4E9: the injuries of the victime from the previous episode are shown (2:30-9:50). The victim is distressed and the attack is a theme throughout the episode (it is described towards the end of the episode). S4E10: the attack from episode 8 is a major theme in this episode. The victime has a nightmare of the attack (shown on-screen). S4E13: the sexual assault from episode 8 is mentioned. S5E1: a woman has a flashback to when she was raped (between the 26:00-28:00 minute marks). S5E6: a man attempts to rape a woman (on-screen). S5E10: a rapist captures the woman he attacked in S4E8. S5E12: a captured woman is raped by a group of men, who discuss wanting to assault her. She is then violently gang raped during a brutal and long scene. At the end of the episode, her injuries are shown on camera. Throughout season 6, the rape in S5E12 is frequently brought up as the victim deals with her trauma. She has nightmares and flashbacks of the attack and turns to sleeping gas in an attempt to clear her mind. S7E2: a man reveals that he had sex with his sister. This is shown on screen in a flashback in which the sister is clearly in a state of distress.
The Outlast Trials (Video Game)
A male main villain has multiple lines of dialogue referring to the sexual abuse he experienced as a child. The same villain has multiple lines of dialogue referring to how he'll sexually assault the player character if he catches them (though if he catches the player he will only kill them via electrocution). There are multiple mannequins left in poses that resemble graphic sexual violence. There are multiple corpses that have been left with clear signs of sexual mutilation. Multiple NPCs in the game refer to either committing sexual assault or having been a victim of sexual assault. Another male villain is obsessed with the idea of pregnancy. He frequently refers to the idea of mutilating the player character's abdomen so he can crawl in and be "born again". A female main villain commits graphic sexual mutilation of a male NPC in a hallucination cutscene.
A young woman is cornered by a group of bandits. They approach her, rip her clothes off, and forcefully push her to the ground. Another character intervenes but it is heavily implied that the girl should remain "fresh" for later rape by a higher-up in their organization (01:15:00).
Outlaw King (TV Show)
In one of the first scenes of the movie, the titular character is part of an 'arranged marriage' with a woman: they do not have unconsensual sex. About one hour into the movie, brief scenes shows soldiers brutalizing women: rape off-screen is implied. A bit later, another woman is briefly threatened by a man, who stops when soldiers invade the castle. Different women are beaten several times throughout the movie.
Outrage (Movie)
This movie is a tactfully told story of a rape survivor. The PTSD and flashbacks experienced by the protagonist throughout the film may be disturbing.
The Outrun (Movie)
The protagonist has an addiction problem which obviously impairs her judgement. A man is seen having sex with her whilst she is intoxicated and arguably incapable of giving consent. Later, someone attempts to rape her after giving her a lift in his car. She is physically assaulted.
The Outsider (Movie)
One character mentions a woman who claims that she was raped. A characters attempts to rape a woman but eventually stops.
The Outwaters (Movie)
When characters are in a tent, it is implied that an alien entity comes into the tent and restraints all the living survivors with its tentacles and rapes them. The whole tent is soaked in blood on the inside and everyone else is soaked in blood and slime. The survivors scream while this occurs but is distorted with screams of pain and pleasure. The scene is one in a first person perspective.
The author discusses how he was sexually abused as a child by another child who was older than him, as well as the psychological ramifications of that abuse.
There is a scene in which a character mutilates her own sex organs.
Overlord (TV Show)
S1E10: two female characters are stopped by a group of male bandits. It is assumed that they had the intention to rape them; they claimed that they will let them live as long as they behave. As the leader tries to grope one of the woman's chest, she stops and kills him. S2E7: it is implied that a female side-character got raped. She was found brutally assaulted and naked on the street. It was later clear they she got anal rupture, and sexual dissease. S2E9: a naked big man beats a naked woman unconsious in bed for sexual pleasure. He is on top of her but is stopped before raping her.
This book contains a very graphic rape scene where one underage character gets raped by his aunt, and is seen scared and shaken up. Another adult character also almost has sex with a young girl, but does not actually do it.
Oz (TV Show)
Paatal Lok (TV Show)
Pachinko (TV Show)
S1E2: attempted rape (28:30). S1E4: a man starts stroking the back of a woman’s neck suggestively without her consent while she is eating. She is visibly uncomfortable.
The short is narrated by a woman remembering a holiday at her grandparents where she was sexually abused by her grandfather. Nothing is shown or talked about directly; it is all done through subtlety and implication.
Padre Padrone (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, the protagonist (as a young boy living in the mountains) has his first sexual experiences with a donkey and (along with other boys) with chicken.
Pain Hustlers (Movie)
The main male character talks about how a foster parent tried to sexually assault him when he was 13 year-old (4 minutes into the movie).
This film contains numerous graphic scenes of rape and sexual assault throughout.
SPOILER: The plot twist involves the main character's daughter (a young adult) being accosted and raped by three men at night. The assault is not shown in detail but there is a long scene in which she can be seen and heard screaming, sobbing and attempting to fight off the men while they make degrading comments (01:45:40-01:46:10). She is then shoved to the ground and shown having been beaten, bleeding and crying to her father.
Pale Rider (Movie)
One antagonis kidnaps a young woman and starts raping her while his partners watch. He rips her clothes off but he is then stopped by the protagonist. It is mentioned that a woman married at 15.
There is a discussion of rape at the hands of the Israeli Occupation Force and other repressive governments around the world. There are passing mentions of surveillance technology being used to catch pedophiles.
Palindromes (Movie)
Rape and pedophilia are recurring subjects throughout the film, and the perpetrators are depicted somewhat sympathetically.
This film revolves around a relationship between a teenager and a man twice her age, who eventually coerces her into prostitution.
Prostitutes are featured throughout the movie. At some point, a main female character is attacked by several men and dragged away. There is audio of her screaming/crying and men are shown standing over her undoing their pants, before the scene ends.
Palo Alto (Movie)
The child sex abuse of the titular character is mentioned.
The premise of the book is that a fifteen-year-old girl is kidnapped by an adult man. The man drugs her and films himself and other men raping her. The actual instances of rape are not described. The kidnapper reveals that he had been stalking her and her family for months and that he has kidnapped other girls around the US before. He threatens to kidnap the girl's younger sister if the girl does not comply with being sold to another trafficker. The girl does manage to escape in the end. A separate teenage girl is in a physically and verbally abusive relationship for much of the book. The boyfriend views sex as something that she "owes" him. Towards the end of the book, he sends revenge porn photos of her to all their friends and classmates. Many of her male classmates react to the images by verbally harassing her. The boyfriend does get arrested for distributing child pornography in the end.
The scene (situated in chapter 12) is a pivotal moment in the story. The location is not violent but is vivid. It is between a brother and a sister.
The Paperboy (Movie)
Papicha (Movie)
The movie is set in a prison and gendered/homophobic threats are frequently made. One of the secondary characters is persistently touched, groped and grabbed by another man without his consent, eventually caving into the man's demands for sex in order to further his escape plan. The secondary character then attacks the man as soon as he is unconscious. Nothing is shown on-screen but faint noises are heard.
The villain ties down the protagonist and touches her against her will, slaps her and fondles her breast. He then penetrates her forcefully with his hand, moving his arm up from her vagina through her body to her throat: this rips her in half and uncovers her alter-ego, who is naked. This animation is fantastical and occurs within the context of a dream, but is very violent in nature. The alter-ego is then grabbed by another antagonist with a tentacle-like arm, which strangles her and penetrates her throat. Later she is kissed by a man she works with and trusts while she is unconscious. She slaps him but this event is not framed as problematic. Shortly after, during a fantastical parade, schoolgirls characters, dressed with skirts, stops in front of "cellphones-characters": they take pictures under ther skirts.
In the last few minutes of the film one character ties a woman to a tree and attempts to forcibly impregnate her, but he stops before raping her and changes his mind after she reveals something to him (01:54:37-01:55:37).
A character is a victim of marital rape. Another character tells her mother that, when the mother left home, the father tried to "bother" his daughter. There is discussion of domestic workers being raped. There is a scene where white men drive up and expose themselves to young Black girls who are walking along the road.
Paramedics (Movie)
Paranoia Agent (TV Show)
Episode 4: a middle-aged man insists that the woman who is his sexual partner refers to him as 'daddy.' Later, he is stealing from a house, with the inhabitants restrained. Their daughter unexpectedly arrives home and it is implied that the man rapes her: she is heard screaming as the scene cuts away. The man keeps the girl's bag as a 'trophy.' Episode 6: The same man's daughter finds images of herself in various states of undress on her father's computer. She then finds the associated camera behind a bookshelf in her bedroom. Within the context of earlier scenes and his established fixation with being called 'daddy,' it is heavily implied that the man is sexually attracted to his daughter.
Paranoid Park (Movie)
A 16 years old girl has sex with her boyfriend, who previously expressed having no interest in sleeping with her. He is completely passive and absent-minded during the act and later says that it was entirely her idea. She gets angry and when he leaves her, she accuses him of only wanting to sleep with her.
While the rape itself is off screen, there is a bloody aftermath in the woman's bed that is quite graphic (about 75 % of the way through).
The demon of the film is assaults or rapes a main character off-camera multiple times, with her shown to be distressed and traumatized. The film ends with an extremely graphic rape/murder scene involving the invisible entity.
S1E1: the main protagonist somehow accidentally ends up touching his female friend's breast (3:50-4:28). It is implied that this fondling is a result of the parasite living in his hand. Towards the end of this same episode, a man stabs a woman to death. The woman is in a state of undress, implying he may have raped her as well (from 20:40). S1E3: a female character verbally and physically confronts a male character for touching her butt on a crowded train (00:00-00:41). Later on in the episode, this character, who is acting as a teacher in the protagonists' school, requires the protagonist to have a meeting with her after class. A male classmate starts applauding the protagonist, wishing that he could be "taught" by the teacher after class instead of the protagonist, assuming that the teacher was trying to have sex with the protagonist (07:00-08:00). While there was actually nothing sexual whatsoever at this meeting and both parties knew this, the character who made this joke is perpetuating the idea that underage male students who are targeted by female teachers for sexual reasons are somehow lucky. S1E18: a male character who is revealed to have been a serial killer starts immediately masturbating upon seeing an attractive woman. When she leaves in disgust, he says to the main protagonist: "You got a cute face there, boy. I bet if you put on a skirt or somethin', I could rub out another one." and starts laughing (19:00-21:06). S1E19: there are flashbacks with the serial killer character, showing him stabbing a woman. It is revealed that he is the same person who stabbed a woman in the first episode. The way that he kills women seems to connote that he gets sexual pleasure from doing so (licking his lips, having a fiendish look in his eyes, etc.), and may have raped his victims in addition to killing them (02:22-03:11).
Parched (Movie)
Although no image was particularly violent, and definitely not gratuitous, the film wants to denounce the misogynistic behaviours in a rural Indian village, so this violence is a central plot point.
Parthenope (Movie)
The protagonist's brother is implied to be attracted to his sister. Agirl and a boy are forced to have sex in front of their families, the girl is visibly upset and it is clear that she is being forced .
Party Monster (Movie)
A man mentions how he was molested as a child: it is not shown on screen.
Party of Five (TV Show)
There are two instances of attempted date rape on teenage girls, at two different times. The series also contains a domestic violence storyline.
Several characters’ suppressed memories of sexual violence during childhood are brought into their dreams by a mysterious otherworldly force. One of these characters is a sex offender himself.
Near the end of the film, a 15 year old boy is raped on screen by a woman older than him. A married woman suggests that the same male character should „elope with her”. Nothing comes out of this.
One of the protagonist comes across a man who is about to rape a woman and kills him. The other protagonist hires a sex worker and hits her several times, after which she and several other sex workers are shown engaging in foreplay with him.
Patch Adams (Movie)
One of the characters confides in a doctor about her molestation as a child.
The Path (Video Game)
Much of the game's horror comes from abstract imagery and allusions to events that are never fully explained, many of which pertain to sexuality and abuse. One of the central characters (15 years old) is implied to have a romantic relationship with an older boy, but nothing is ever confirmed. Another central character (17 years old) is heavily implied to have had sex with an adult man, and the imagery and her body language afterwards suggests it started off or became violent. The teenage character is stated to often flirt with men, and thinks she is ready for an adult sexual relationship, before the events of the game. Like the above character, nothing is ever stated outright; however, the subtext is much more obvious in this storyline.
Pathology (Movie)
A character talks about her father raping her when she was a child.
Patrick Melrose (TV Show)
The title character's backstory involves being molested by his father as a child. There is a brief scene where the beginning and end of one of these incidents is shown, though nothing graphic is on-screen.
A female character has a talk with another female character, where she implies that when her husband gets drunk, he will not take 'no' for an answer. On top of that, in several scenes he is both emotionally, verbally and physically abusive to her. The same character explains how her father married her mother when she (her mother) was very young, and also implies that as she got older, her father would assault her.
The protagonist and her girlfriend are ambushed and sexually assaulted by a man. They are eventually rescued. The protagonist's roommate's boyfriend masturbates near her when he thinks she is sleeping. He then moves on to raping her while she is pretending to sleep. There is passing mention of a queer male character putting a little boy on his lap. There are multiple scenes of street harassment, particularly street harassment motivated by gender nonconformity. There are a few mentions throughout of the police rape of Abner Louima.
Pay the Ghost (Movie)
A man's young son disappears. The culprit is originally presumed to be a sexual predator, but this turns out to not be the case. The child's disappearance has nothing to do with sexual abuse/violence. The man and a police officer have a conversation about the man's missing son. They discuss recently released convicted sex offenders and other missing children's cases (30:02-31:39). One particular case is talked about in detail using language that may be triggering. Worthy of note: a woman and children are captured and killed, but there is no sexual violence (1:10:54 - 1:12:14).
A male main character consciously resists a succubus's magical aura of seduction (Lara Wraith, who is a major character in this book). In some scenes her magic is simply passive. In one scene, she uses it to enthrall, subdue, and rape a male guard who had been trying to kill her. This sex-with-someone-under-mind-control is somewhat graphic, and the perspective character describes it with appropriate horror but does not interfere. Offscreen, a male minor character tries to magically entrance and seduce a female minor character. It fails and he faces consequences onscreen.
Peaky Blinders (TV Show)
S1E1: a character tells a woman that she would be unsafe working at a bar because the bar patrons would assault her. In a later scene, he tells the woman that if one of the bar patrons tried to assault her he would not do anything about it. In another scene, someone makes a reference to child prostitution. A brief scene shows a man having sex with a sex worker: it is unclear if she is a child (18:15). S1E3: a character forces themselves onto a woman and attempts to rape her after she resists. S1E4: a character credibly threatens to send a child to a men’s prison to be raped. This is intended to be revenge on the child’s adult brother. S1E6: a man attempts to rape a sex worker but is killed, allowing her to escape. At the end of season 2, it is implied that a character was raped in prison. S2E1: at the end of the episode, a woman is abducted to be raped in retaliation for the actions of her brothers. She is beaten, partially undressed and fondled, then rescued. S2E2: this episode starts with the sexual violence implied at the end of the previous episode with mildly graphic groping, attempted undressing, and kissing. S2E3: a woman is blackmailed into sex and raped. S2E5: a woman is blackmailed into sex. S2E6: a woman is raped on screen by a soldier during a derby race (about 34 minutes). The soldier killed shortly after. S2E7: attempted rape. In season 3, it is revealed that a main character was sexually abused as a child. The character getting revenge for his abuse becomes a major plot point in the season. The abuser is frequently shown interacting with children, though actual abuse is never depicted. S3E5: rape is briefly shown on-screen as a flashback, when a main character engages consensual sex. A male character is erotically asphyxied unwillingly. He is also raped by being coerced into sex. S4E5: a naked woman says that right before the scene, several male soldiers watched her get strip-searched. S5E1: two people kill a man who had been prostituting children. S6E5: very graphic violent sexual assault. A man’s genitals are strangled by a wire in a locker room: blood is seen dripping down his legs.
Pedaço De Mim (TV Show)
A woman tries to get pregnant and after a fight with her husband she parties at a club of an old family's friend who takes her home, strongly intoxicated, and even though she sends him way multiple times he ends up assaulting her, removing the condom. That leads to her getting pregnant with twins from both men. Throughout the show the rape is not only declared as such, she never tells any of her friends (one is the abuser's sister) or family, including her husband, that she was assaulted. On top of that she has to see the abuser again and again throughout the show, pretending nothing happened while she tries to keep the son away from his father, the one who assaulted her. There are multiple messy, flickery flashbacks to the rape, making it hard to help viewers avoid these scenes.
Peep Show (TV Show)
S1E3: a man (aged 27/28) is shown having sex with a 17-year-old. Although this appears consensual, there is a large gap between their ages. S5E4: a character wakes up to a woman having sex with him.
Two men torture a spy, and discuss raping her on her father's bed. Later we see her tied (clothed) to a bed and the men walking away with disheveled clothing.
One character’s father is friends with someone who ends up being investigated for pedophilia. The father defends his friend during the investigation. Another character is sexually assaulted as a child by her swim instructor and becomes fearful of men as a result. A third character is sexually abused by her father. An in-world true crime podcast that comments on the crime central to the book fetishizes the suspects, all teenage girls, for supposedly being lesbians.
Penance Lane (Movie)
A man aggressively tries to verbally pressure his girlfriend into giving him oral sex in his car, and slaps her when she refuses (6:00). The protagonist interferes and nothing sexual happens further. A female character who is chained up with the protagonist gets taken away by an antagonist, where she is tied down and almost raped, but the protagonist saves her (46:20).
Penny Dreadful (TV Show)
Season 3 features scenes of a teenager who was saved from sexual slavery, who later becomes sexually active with adults. Many characters have sexual trauma involved in their stories.
Chapter 7: a woman says that she looks through websites with child pornography to try and find her young daughter who was kidnapped. Chapter 35: a woman makes jokes about being molested by a ghost. Epilogue: mention of rape as a general crime.
The uncomfortable content begins with several adult men making moves on/catcalling a teen girl throughout the movie, and endsin a full-length rape complete with an assistant.
An underage character lives as a boy for survival: she is discovered to be a girl, and promptly raped for it.
A consensual incestuous relationship between two siblings is mentioned and hinted. There is also implied sexual abuse towards their 'daughter', but nothing is shown.
This documentary features a graphic cartoon rape scene during its final 20 minutes.
A psychotic criminal couple kidnaps a random teenage couple. The woman rapes the male captive, and lets him watch his lover being raped by the man.
Perfect Blue (Movie)
Stalking, slut-shaming, and rape culture are major themes and are shown in multiple scenes. The main character acts as the victim in a gangrape scene for a drama, and dissociates during filming (31:28-34:58). No rape actually occurs, but the experience is shown to be traumatizing outright and the scene is acted out semi-graphically on-screen. A photographer coerces the protagonist into stripping nude for a shoot (44:46-45:42). A dream sequences shows the protagonist graphically murdering an exploitative showriter while flashes of her sexual abuse are shown on-screen (56:23-57:30). An attempted rape is shown on-screen (1:03:33-1:06:44).
The main character's daughter was sexually abused by her stepfather. This is discussed multiple times and is shown in a flashback.
S1E6: two main characters decide to have sex, start kissing, lie down on the bed, but at one point the woman seems to have difficulty breathing and says "calm down, I can't breathe". She blocks the man to stop him but he says "I can't hold back any longer" and holds her hands, continuing to kiss her even though she seems out of breath. The scene is cut to another environment and the drama continues, implying that the act has concluded, without him respecting her request.
A girl's mother's boyfriend grabs the girl with the threat of sexual assault implied. The girl is then seen crying and being comforted by her sister in the aftermath of the incident. The boyfriend rapes the unconscious mother in front of her children.
Flashbacks of implied incest committed by a woman's father/stepfather.
This film is about an escaped convict taking a young boy hostage with him on the road. In one of the first scenes of the movie, another convict breaks into a house and attempts to rape a woman at gunpoint (he threatens her, grabs her, fondles and kisses her) before the protagonist intervenes and stops him. Later, the same man attempts to rape a young boy when they are alone in a car: he asks him to show his genitals, comments on them and starts fondling/kissing him before the boy escapes. The rapist is killed by the protagonist shortly after this event. A man acts in a sexually threatening manner towards the female protagonist of the film while they are in a secluded place: another character intervenes before anything further happens. A child briefly watches two adults having sex without them knowing: they stop immediately when they see him. Near the end of the film, a father is violent towards his son: it is implied/mentioned throughout the film that the protagonist had similar traumatic experiences with his father when he was a child.
An amputee woman sexually assaults another woman by using the stump of her amputated limb (1:13:00-1:15:00). The scene is very graphic. It is later revealed that this was false and planned by the two women to trick the antagonist.
Perfume (2018) (TV Show)
The main female character has an abusive husband who rapes her. In flashbacks, it is implied that she was gang raped by three men and she is also raped by another main character. She gets pregnant and aborts the baby herself, almost dying in the process.
The main character has a breakdown while dealing with the psychological ramifications of past incestuous sexual abuse. No graphic scenes are shown. Another main character reveals that her first kiss was with her father's boss when she was only eleven years old. It is implied the abuse went further than that event. The main character mentions that his friend was often made to get drunk with the upperclassmen when she was a year or two younger.
Persepolis (Movie)
A female teenager grows up in a very misogynist and sexist post-revolution Iran. A very brief scene taking place in Vienna shows a group of men approaching her, most likely to sexually assault her (1:00:20-1:00:27). One scene features the adult protagonist running down the street and being stopped by the police, who insists she must not run, lest the movement of her buttocks be too arousing. Furious, she tells the officers off and they leave her alone afterward.
S1E24: the killer in the series basically states that he killed people because they did not have sex with him. One of these people is an adult, and the other is a senior in high school.
Persona 5 (TV Show)
The first chapter (the target of the first heist) is a high school sports coach who is sexually assaulting athletes. One student is pushed to a suicide attempt to escape the abuse. He threatens another student, a major character, that he will assault her friend if she does not comply. No assaults are shown onscreen or via audio but it is heavily implied. The protagonist and his friends stop the abuse (if the player defeats the dungeon), causing the coach to admit his wrongdoing and face consequences for his actions. The protagonist, an underage high school student, can become friends with several adult women. If the player chooses, he can enter a romantic relationship with any (or all) of them. Nothing is shown on screen but the "romantic path" of the relationship is implied to be sexual in each case. One of the adult women is the protagonist's teacher, who moonlights for a maid service which is heavily implied to involve sex work. The protagonist finds this out because one of his school friends wants to hire the service. When she shows up, the other boys chicken out and the protagonist sees her, but nothing sexual happens. A major plot point involves an teenage female character is forced into an engagement by her father to further his business interests. Her fiance threatens that he will make her do whatever he wants, with sexual implications.The arranged marriage is thwarted and the girl is never harmed. A major male character at several points ogles his female friends. Nothing further happens and it is intended to be humorous.
The premise of the book is that the protagonist and an otherworldly being try to figure out who in the community is a "monster," the in-universe term for a sexual predator, in order to bring him to justice. The monster turns out to be the protagonist's friend's uncle. The uncle had been molesting the friend's younger brother. There are no specific descriptions of what the uncle was doing to the child. The uncle makes several gaslighting statements when his actions are revealed.
Peyton Place (Movie)
One of the major plot points of the movie relies on the fact that a man rapes his step-daughter.
The protagonist sees a man dragging a woman through the street as she protests. She follows him, thinking he is her husband. He drags the woman into a dark alley and we hear protests and then suggestive sounds. The woman walks off after wiping her mouth. When the protagonist checks to see if it actually is her husband, the man gropes her and then steals from her.
Physical (TV Show)
The shows contains sexual harassment (cat-calling, non-consensual touching) throughout. S1E8: the main character discusses sexual assault at the age of 13 with a family friend. Her mom does not believe her. S2E3: one character references her rape as a child. S3E2: imagined cat calling. The previously mentioned rape of a teenager by her father's friend is mentioned.
The Piano (Movie)
The plot of the film involves a woman 'earning' her piano back from a man in exchange for various favours. These include him being allowed to touch her in ways that often make her recoil from him. A man attempts to force himself upon a woman as she runs from him.
This film follows a young man romantically pursuing a masochistic piano teacher. It contains a scene where a young woman is raped by a man. About 1:42:00 in, the female protagonist rolls onto her mother and starts kissing her mouth, telling her she loves her. Her mother tells her that she is crazy and the woman starts to cry.
Picnic (1996) (Movie)
The male protagonist is tied to a table, drugged and raped by his therapist in a "punishment room" in a psychiatric facility. He experiences a nightmare/hallucination in which someone is urinating on his face and he is forced to drink the urine. There are subtle implications of repeated "torment" related to a past teacher/student relationship.
The show features an LGBT student-teacher relationship, which is presented as romantic.
Rather long attempted rape scene by the male protagonist on the female protagonist (who are partners) (56:56-58:52).
Pigman (Movie)
An adult man is knowingly talking to a 14 year old girl and convinces her to send him photographs. A man masturbates over a woman who he has drugged and restrained.
There is a graphic rape scene involving a teenage protagonist and the antagonist, conducted under the threat of the protagonist's brother being executed. There are discussions of rape and attempted rape in multiple places in the book, usually in the context of battles or oppression by the gentry.
Pine Harbor (Video Game)
The player finds a diary that is needed to continue the game, when reading the diary it briefly descibes a male being raped by other men in the bathroom. When the diary's writer confronts a higher up to discuss this, they are told to drop the subject or they will be next.
Pink Wall (Movie)
A woman tries to perform oral sex on her partner: he goes from verbally declining to physically fending her off (26:00-28:00). The scene is intense in the moment but immediately afterwards they move on almost as if nothing has happened.
Pirates (Movie)
There are two rape scenes in the movie, one attempted.
The protagonist's parents try to arrange a marriage for the protagonist, who is in her teens, and the suitors are mostly adult men. They engage her to someone without her knowledge, but she escapes. The other main character is an enslaved girl who escapes with the protagonist to become pirates together. An overseer character tries to punish the protagonist by selling this enslaved girl, who is also a teenager, to a brothel. The protagonist intervenes as this overseer tries to rape the enslaved girl. We later find out that the enslaved main character was conceived through the protagonist's father raping the enslaved girl's mother. It is not framed as rape in the book, and the gravity of that revelation receives scant consideration. While pirates, the two girls dress as men to blend in. Often, when someone finds out they are actually girls, they make lewd comments or threaten to sexually assault them.
Pistol (TV Show)
S1E1: at the end of the episode, a father has his toddler giving him oral sex (graphic).
Pitchfork (Movie)
A man and woman have consensual sex, but afterwards, the woman seems upset and disappointed, and the man is rude to her (30:52-31:52). A woman is knocked unconscious by the antagonist: he licks her face and leaves (47:49-48:29). The antagonist captures a woman and ties her up, touching her and making gestures towards her in a sexually violent way (1:03:52-1:09:42). A man is captured and tied up. A woman straddles him and touches him inappropriately (1:19:12-1:21:32). In the same scene, the woman molests her adult son. It is implied this was not the first time she had done so (1:24:52-1:26:02). Worthy of note: achild is captured but not harmed in any way.
The partner of one character who is violently raped believes her and reports it to the police and the main characters stand up for her, even if it is taboo in the context of the series. The survivor is scarred and physically bruised and the rapist told her that people will not believe her.
A main character is accused of raping a young woman. However, it is strongly implied that the accusation is false. A character has sex with an older mentor figure when he is underage. His consent is ambiguous and the relationship is only referred to through dialogue. A man lusts after his best friend's wife and some of his behavior towards her could be interpreted as sexually threatening. A teenage girl tries to coerce an adult man into having sex with her, but they are interrupted.
There is implied sexual harassment and/or attempted assault by a young adult to his teenage cousin, and by an older man to a young woman he has some authority over. A man stalks and attempts to rape a woman. She escapes, but he later murders her. These are not major characters, but their story has significant effects on the other plot threads.
Planet Terror (Movie)
One of the military guards forces a hostage to dance for him, then attempts to rape her before being stopped by another hostage.
A woman is grabbed off screen while other characters discuss what is happening.
Platinum End (TV Show)
Platoon (Movie)
The rape of a Vietnamese girl by soldiers is implied (56:50-58:04).
No sexual assault is placed upon any of the children in the book. It remains evident in two of the adult character’s pasts since one groomed the other and that groomer had an incestuous relationship with her biological mother. The groomer also has ideas of grooming one of the children but it never happens and the child she intends to groom never even knows about the idea. There is a graphic description of horrific sex, but the past grooming is mentioned is minor detail throughout the book when in the groomed individual’s persepective.
Pleasantville (Movie)
The premise of Pleasantville is that two modern-day teenagers become trapped within the world of an idyllic 1950s sitcom. As the sitcom never discussed the topic of sex on the air, the characters within the world of Pleasantville do not know what sex is. 33:35-34:11: there is a brief scene where a modern-day teenage girl has sex with a teenage boy from the sitcom without his knowledge of or consent to what is happening - she does not explain the act or ask for his consent beforehand, and continues even after he expresses concerns about the act (saying 'I think I might be ill" after presumably becoming erect) and becomes visibly unsettled and anxious. The scene is not overtly violent and is not reated by the movie as anything other than an ordinary sexual encounter.
Please Like Me (TV Show)
S2E6: female-on-male rape scene.
Pleasure (Movie)
This film is about the debut of a young woman in the porn industry. All the sexual encounters take place after all parties signed a consent agreement, however, most scenes show that the characters involved are either uncomfortable, hurting or unconsenting, but pressured to go along. The aim of the movie is to denounce these problems. Early in the movie, the protagonist jokingly says that her father raped her as a child when asked why she wanted to become a pornstar. The protagonist, who agreed to film a rape scene (described by the characters as a 'rough' or a 'hardcore' scene), is raped by two men while another one films. After being comprehensive and professional when she becomes overwhelmed and asks to stop, the men eventually pressure her to finish the scene, which she does. Shortly after, she blames her agent for letting this happen: he dismisses her claims and tells her to be cautious when using the word 'rape'. As the protagonist prepares to film a threesome scene with her female friend and a male actor, she sees him harassing her co-star. When they begin filming the scene, (involving humiliation and degradation) the actor abuses the same woman on-camera. When she protests and asks the protagonist to confirm that he was harassing her beforehand, the protagonist denies in order to protect her career. In the final scene of the movie, the protagonist rapes one of her female rivals (they have sex with a strapon) when they have to shoot a lesbian scene together. She apologizes afterwards, but her co-star, having to deal with the situation without protesting, answers 'for what?'
The film centers around a retired detective trying to catch a serial killer who targets little girls. When discussing the case, they say that the victims are sexually assaulted but do not go into much detail.
Plemya (Movie)
A woman is raped during the last quarter of the film.
Poison (Movie)
A man strokes the penis of another sleeping man. A man forces another man to give him a blow job. A man rapes another man on-screen.
The main character is a survivor of rape, and it is the main reason the story happens. It was a plot point that the author treated seriously, and the sexual harassment that came later was to emphasize that the people doing so were dangerous and bad people.
Poker Face (TV Show)
S1E1: a child porn ring is discussed. Spousal domestic abuse is featured. S1E2: a guy spies on a girl with binoculars and is generally creepy toward her. S1E4: a woman is sexually harassed at work.
Polaroid (Movie)
It is implied that a girl is sexually abused by her father regularly.
Poldark (TV Show)
S2E8: the main character forcible enters his ex fiancée’s room, demanding that she leave her husband and sleep with him. She refuses multiple times, but he kisses her forcibly and pushes her to the bed, where she is implied to then consent. A large ongoing storyline of season 4 involves a forced marriage between a middle-aged man and a nineteen-year-old girl. She is shown on screen to be verbally and physically abused by him, and it is heavily implied and stated by the girl that he rapes and demands sex from her constantly. This then results in her pregnancy and the birth of their son, whom the girl feigned death threats towards to stop her husband from assaulting her. She is later on accused of being crazy and is almost sent to a mental institution for refusing her husband’s marital rights. For the rest of the show she is shown to suffer severe trauma from these events.
A woman is tied up on a bed against her will as a man tries to have sex with her. He leaves suddenly and two men come in, say she is a plaything, and try to rape her. This is all played for laughs.
Police in a Pod (TV Show)
S1E2: the first half of the episode is about a 16 year old girl who ran away from home. She has been working as a prostitute and tells stories about the sex she had with grown men. The police write it all down to catch the men. She later on also reveals that her father has raped her multiple times. The police arrest her father immediately. None of what happened to her is shown on screen. There is also a woman in the episode who is being physically abused by her boyfriend.
Pollen (Movie)
A ghost possesses a man who then touches his wife in a sexual manner against her will and pins her to the ground. Earlier, there is a vague comment about the husband having endured some sort of abuse as a child.
Poor Things (Movie)
The film follows the main female character who has the body of a grown woman and the brain of a child. Throughout most of the film she walks and speaks in a childlike way. Her exploration of the world begins with masturbation and then sex with a man who takes advantage of her naivety. A character points out a tribe of people who are suffering in the heat while they watch on from their luxurious accomodations. The main character insists they must help them, but the other character tells her that if they went down there, they would surely be captured, bound, robbed and sexually assaulted. Later she is hired into sex work as she discovers her sexuality and is regarded as fascinating by the men around her. There are several graphic scenes of her working which include moments where she appears extremely uncomfortable before pretending it is fine. In one scene, a man comes into the brothel with his two young sons and makes them watch as he has sex with the main character as a "learning experience". Her biological body's former husband mentions his plan to circumcise her and then impregnate her. While the film is whimsical and surreal, all this is played of as "normal" in the film.
A possessed kid grabs his mother's breast sexually and asks to be breast fed. A mother comments that her teenage daughter is wearing too short shorts around adult men. A possessed kid tells an older man that he is going to “fuck him” and that he is “going to be coming”. A man mentions the child sex abuse taking place in the church and connects it to a female side character.
Porky's (Movie)
Pose (TV Show)
S2E1: a photographer makes a woman undress and touch herself while he is taking pictures (34:19-35:28). A character is shown speaking to a female secretary at work, and tells her he "can tell by looking at her how she grooms her pubic hair". S2E6: in a dream sequence, a character gets revenge on an adult who molested her (15:00). S3E4: a man discusses how his stepfather raped him as a child.
The female protagonist has consensual sex with who she believes to be her husband, but finds out later that he was not her husband (1:13:51-1:15:50). In a different scene, there is a struggle between them and he rips at her shirt.
Chapter 11: a man kidnaps a woman after she tells him that she does not want to go on another date. He tells her that he is going to rape her, but is stopped before anything happens. Chapter 32: there are mentions of sexual assault as part of police case files but no details or descriptions. Chapter 41: the same woman is kidnapped by the same man and is threatened with rape but nothing happens. There are also non-graphic mentions of a rape in the past.
09:30: mention of child sex abuse from father to son, details of abuse not specified but there is a brief description of circumstance (where/when). 18:00: a threesome is initiated by two people, while all parties are heavily intoxicated on psychedelics, and the third seems scared and confused. It is not shown on screen and not treated as abuse. 44:00: the titular character (while possessed) caresses his sleeping sister's legs under the covers.
Possum (Movie)
This movie is about a man and his childhood trauma, and specifically the sexual abuse inflicted by his uncle. At one point during the climax of the film, the main character is forced to suck on his uncle’s fingers and there is quite detailed and heavy discussion regarding past abuse. His uncle also grinds/humps him while they are fighting on the floor.
Postal (Movie)
A man is thrown and locked into a room with 1,000 monkeys and is implied to be raped by them off-screen. This is played for laughs.
Sexual abuse, torture, and rape are prevalent throughout this film. This includes the rape of a child.
The Power (Movie)
The authors reference a welfare seeker who was a survivor of sexual assault, a person who contacted a crisis text line because her father was raping her, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)'s practice of performing nonconsensual hysterectomies on undocumented people. These discussions are in passing and not graphic.
The Power (TV) (TV Show)
The whole show revolves around legislating women's bodies. Throughout season 1, the wife of a dictator clearly fears her husband. S1E1: a single is made comparing someone sweating to being like a rapist. A foster dad wipes ice cream off his foster daughters leg: it is focused on in a way that seems creepy. He attempts to rape her and it is implied that he has successfully raped her before, and probably other people as well. The rape attempt is shown, but the girl is able to fight back. Her foster mothers knows this is happening and just turns up the radio to drown it out. S1E2: there is a flashback of the attempted rape. A male politician tells a female politician to "not get her panties in a bunch". S1E3: sexual violence against women is mentioned. S1E4: a new act is mentioned where a 26 year old performs an unwanted sex act on a teen girl. S1E5: sex trafficking (including children) is featured. A gymnastic coach slaps a gymnast's bottom. A government official then asks her out. Her father tells her to accept so she can get to the Olympics. S1E6: a teenage couple makes out in a car, when the man says "stop" repeatedly and eventually has to use physical force to get the woman to stop. Neither party seems to feel they were really assaulted, but they do have a good conversation afterwards to explain their feelings. This episode also features triggering incel messages, though only violence is mentioned, not specifically rape by the leading incel character. S1E7: thie episode mentions human trafficking, and shows an awkward kiss between two women with a huge power imbalance. The one who initiated it does it without asking, and has the power. The woman receiving the kiss looks very uncomfortable. It also features PTSD flashbacks of an attempted rape. At some point, a girl talks about nude pictures of her being shown around school. A woman recalls her uncle sexually assaulting her. S1E8: there is a mention of past sexual assault and derogatory talk towards sex workers. This episode also features a non consensual outing of an intersex person. S1E9: a woman is given the power against her will. Sexual threats against women who run for office are mentioned: it also talks about hundreds of sexyal assault threats per day to Hilary Clinton. A conversation about concentration camp is mentioned for an intersex teen who has the power. Rape against women is mentioned being down: it is mentioned that no rapes or murders against trans women and women of color have been reported.
The antagonist physically assaults one of the protagonists. The antagonist grabs one of the protagonists to brand them with a ring as a claim. It is later found out that the antagonist has raped and murdered previous partners. When the antagonist is dead, he comes back to haunt the protagonists and he possesses her on her bed and it is implied he is abusing her this way (maybe sexually). The protagonist drugs her boyfriend. Aunts cast a spell to make their niece fall in love.
A woman describes an incident where three warlords ordered a woman to clap and sing whilst her young teenage daughter was being raped. The daughter becomes pregnant as a result of this attack.
An on-screen gang-rape takes place in a prison (24:30-27:00): the victim, who was previously harassed by the perpetrators, kills himself in the next scene. The scene is violent, and the main character is pinned down and forced to watch.
Preacher (TV Show)
Throughout the series, there are frequent references to an abusive and violent sexual relationship between a couple as well as several off-screen rape scenes. In season 1, a man witnesses a woman being gang-raped as her son is forced to watch. There is also a character who confesses that he has fantasied about a girl on his school bus, but has not acted on it. As he speaks, he continues to place the blame on the child. A man is raped with a rifle.
Precious (Movie)
Throughout the film, there are quite a few scenes depicting incestuous rape. This is on-screen and highly upsetting. There are also some scenes that discuss this in detail.
During a confrontation with a street gang, a man and woman are told by a knife wielding gang member that he intends to rape the woman. However, when the gang member attacks, the woman injures him with a knife and he and his gang flee.
Presence (Movie)
In the middle of the film, a teenage boy attempts to drug a teenage girl’s orange juice but the cup is knocked over. Towards the end of the film, he successfully drugs a teenage girl: he touches her non-consensually but does not rape her. He speaks creepily to her about control while touching her. It is revealed that he has done this to at least two other girls, with the intention of hurting / killing them. It is not clear if he has also sexually assaulted them while they were drugged, or if he plans to sexually assault the teenage girl, but the scene may be distressing regardless.
Pretty Baby (Movie)
The film is about a child prostitute.
A relationship between a teacher and their student is an ongoing plot point in the show and is shown in a positive light. Throughout the show, teenagers are continually/groped/harassed/pursued by adult men. Most are viewed as positive encounters. S1E1: a high school student and a teacher have an affair. The teacher wants to stop and the student gets mad at him. A students mom has sex with a cop to get her out of trouble. A high school student has a thing for her sisters adult boyfriend. S1E2: this episode features a peeping Tom. S1E3: a girl's boyfriend tries to force her to have sex. He is stopped by another guy. S1E22: a step sister blackmails her brother into sleeping with her and threatens to say it was not consensual. S2E10: one character gives a main character a massage while she is naked. She does not know it is him.
Rape and sexual assault are common in the show: it is mentioned constantly and multiple characters are assaulted. An adult manager very clearly attempts to sleep with a high schooler who works with him. The main character's pregnancy is revealed to be the result of rape. A main character (teenage girl) has an ambiguous relationship with an unrelated middle aged man whose daughter has gone missing. While it does not seem overtly sexual, it has strong reminisce of grooming. S1E1: a police officer is shown in a car receiving fellatio from a young boy (this can only be seen from the waist up through the car windows). S1E2: it is implied that two underage teens have sex offscreen S1E4: in a conversation between characters, one describes a rape scene from the film “The Evil Dead.” A male exposes himself to girls in a changing room; his groin is not shown, but their reactions are. S1E5: this episode contains a couple of mild verbal sexual harassment scenes. A girl meets up with an older man who wants to pretend she’s his dead daughter - it is unclear whether he has a sexual motive for this. S1E6: this episode starts with a teenage girl recounting her experience of being drugged and raped at a party, which includes a flashback of her face during the rape. The scene ends at 02:30. 14 minutes and 40 seconds in, an initially consensual makeout scene between teenagers starts to become an assault. The boy says “you like it rough” and it seems like an attempted rape is about to happen, but the girl manages to de-escalate. 31 minutes in, a girl is asked out by a boy, and she imagines saying yes. The imagined evening ends with her making out with him, saying stop and he does not: the episode flips back in time to him asking and she says no. 39 minutes in, a conversation about someone who had been raped and committed suicide takes place.. 43 minutes in, a character talks about having been raped, but cannot recall any details. S1E7: 12 minutes and 30 seconds in, a teenage girl who has been raped before has an uncomfortable conversation with teenage boys. They claim that horror films showing graphic rape scenes is a ‘product of their times,’ and criticise her for not having ‘critical distance’ from them.
The lawyer friend of the main love interest tries to force the main character into sex, using her profession as an excuse.
One of the protagonists, a young girl, was conceived when a god raped her mother. Her mother has continual nightmares about this event and poor mental health as a result of no one taking her seriously. The god has a human form and lives in their village. The mother tells her daughter to never interact with the man. The daughter does end up interacting with him, and there is a scene that seems to be leading up to her getting raped as well, with him removing her clothing. However, rape does not occur, and that is not his intention. The daughter ends up seeing the man as a father figure and spending more time with him. Her mother finds out, and she assembles the village to stone him and shame her. Members of the crowd pull at her clothing, knock her down, and laugh at what she looks like naked.
The Price of Flesh (Video Game)
The protagonist is sold off at an auction to one of three characters. This game features graphic sexual assault, extreme gore, extreme sexual torture, and other dark and violent themes. It is playable without adult/sexual content.
Priest (Movie)
A large portion of plot is dedicated to a priest trying to save a 14 year old girl from her abusive father. Said father is defender of incest and holds no remorse for his actions.
Prima Facie (Movie)
Sexual assault and how victims are treated by the judicial system is the main point of this play. Although we see everything through the eyes and tells of one character, the scene is quite graphic and the play can easy get overwhelming (both because of the topic but also because of the very intense pacing of the play).
Primal Fear (Movie)
The film revolves around a court case where a teenager is accused of killing a priest, who is later revealed to have been sexually abusing and grooming him and other teenagers at the church. A video tape is discovered which shows the priest forcing the teenagers to have sex with one another.
Primeval (Movie)
The above mentioned material appears in chapters 1, 13, 15, 18-20.
The Princess (Movie)
The main character’s young sister is mentioned to be married to the bad guy instead of the main character, both obviously non consensual. About 52 minutes into the movie, a femal servant is pulled aside by several armed men who clearly intend to sexual assault her. She is heard crying out but the attempt is interrupted by the main character and cohort.
Princess Cyd (Movie)
A lesbian main character has sex with an older man (though it should be noted that she is 26) for the sake of continuing the royal lineage. She states that she feels nervous, and is uncomfortable with the idea, but she does so anyway. Later, she briefly mentions the dissociation she felt during the act. Two main characters have sex, and both verbally consent, however one of the characters was undergoing an extreme PTSD episode, and was not entirely in her right mind. A main character is coerced into kissing a main antagonist for knowledge. A main antagonist admits to raping her adult son whilst controlling his mind. Outside of this, there are a few consensual sex scenes and brief descriptions of masturbation.
Priscilla (Movie)
The film depicts the relationship between two characters who first meet when she is 14 and he is 24: the film takes place over a 10 year time period. The film is not gratuitous in its handling of the material, it handles this relationship with sensitivity; regardless, there are some scenes that might make viewers uncomfortable, as it is very clear that the man is grooming the woman. There is a scene at the end of the movie where he attempts to rape her during a few seconds. There are other scenes throughout the film of him being emotionally abusive and controlling over her.
Prison Break (TV Show)
A main character is in prison for the rape and murder of children, and there are implications that he was also raping his young cell mate. He is seen harassing young inmates. A man attempts to rape a man he plans to kill. During a riot, a group of inmates attempt to rape a female doctor. One character's mother was raped by her brother, implied to be his father. A flashback shows a boy being sexual abused by his father. Two characters, a brother and a sister, are implied to have previously had a sexual relationship. A woman is handcuffed to a rail and a man attempts to rape her. A man kisses a woman on the forehead after previously tying her to a chair, hitting her and covering her mouth with tape.
Prison Playbook (TV Show)
The first episode revolves around the main character going to jail for severe physical assault against a man who tried to sexually assault his younger sister. Nothing is mentioned specifically other than “attempted rape”. Towards the beginning of the series the viewers find out that one of the protagonist’s cell mates is in jail for rape and sexual assault. S1E4: the protagonist is victim of an attempted rape. A prison mate tries to touch his face, but when his hand is slapped away, the prison mate tells 2-3 others to hold him down, beginning to advance upon the protagonist. Before it can get any further the protagonist's friend, a prison guard, steps in and everyone is sent back to their cells.
Prison School (TV Show)
The premise of the show (eechi anime) is five boys who attend an otherwise all girls school. One female character has a dominatrix like persona and consensually and non consensually both sexually assaults and physically assaults the 5 main characters. Another female character also violently and sexually assaults the boys, and becomes fixated on one of them. She becomes obsessed with urination and clearly receives some sexual gratification from it. She forces this character in multiple instances to strip showing his genitals and exposes her own genitals to him. They engage in genital touching that is nonconsensual and eventually she decides that in revenge she is going to take away all the male character's "firsts" so that he cannot experience them with his love interest. During this scene she forcibly kisses him and again engages in naked genital touching, implying an attempted rape. In the first episode, the boys are sent to a "prison" within the school for getting caught peeping in the girl's bath. Worthy of note: a female character is repeatedly exposed to her father's pornographic collection and frequently interrupts him mastrubating at work.
The Prisoner (TV Show)
S1E14: the antagonist of this episode attempts to sexually assaults a woman several times, and ends up killing her.
Private Practice (TV Show)
S1E5: a patient discusses being sexually assaulted during a home invasion. S1E6: a woman seems scared to tell her husband she does not want kids, so she secretly uses birth control. It is not clear if the husband is coercive or not. S2E2: a brother and a sister want to have a baby. They do not know that they are siblings: they had the same sperm donor. S2E4: a woman talks about her sexual assault from months prior. As a result, she goes to a main character about 'returning her virginity'. S2E7: a main character testifies in a trial where the defendant is a pedophile. There is mention of pedophilia and images of children. S2E21: a woman commits statutory rape, giving a 17 year old boy an STD. S3E4: a character discusses her pregnancy, which was a product of rape. S4E3: during a flashback, a patient admits to being a pedophile when he believes he is dying. S4E6: at the end of the episode, a woman is raped on-screen The next episode opens showing the physical effects of the attack. The incident is discussed throughout the remainder of the series and becomes an integral component of the plot. Please be aware that there will often be flashbacks which can be sudden. S4E10: a patient discloses being sexually abused. S4E22: a patient is discovered to have been a victim of rape. S5E13: it is discovered that a man was sexually abused by his superior during his time in the military.
Procession (Movie)
The whole documentary revolves around the sexual assault of young boys by priests.
The Prodigies (Movie)
A child threatens to frame an adult for sexually abusing him and has a graphically detailed version of the story prepared.
Professor T (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman describes her sexual assault experience: her teacher at a boarding school groomed and then sexually assaulted her when she was a teenager. She is obviously visibly upset when recounting her experience for the camera.
Project A (Movie)
The protagonist tells a woman “do you know what would happen if those men caught you?” while they are being chased. He alsoO tells her to “take off her dress” so she will be disguised, but she does not understand and slaps him when he starts unbuttoning it for her. Several pirates are shown lifting up and carrying away women. A pirate captain grabs a woman and pulls her dress away from her breasts to look at them, lifts her up as a prize. A woman calls for help because a drunk man is following her, and the man who helps her is grabby. She is uncomfortable.
S1E9: a female character drugs another female character on screen. She then takes her to the bedroom, unzips her dress, and kisses her. It is implied that she raped and took photos of the woman for a mission.
In a flashback, a man threatens to assault a girl with plans to "break her in" so that he can pimp her out later. The scene ends, but it is confirmed later that she was raped.
A man covers a woman's mouth and pushes her off screen. After a scene cut, she is seen coming back into screen with her clothes bloody and torn.
A wp,am is killed by a man she is giving oral sex to: he kills her with his penis. Sexual assault is discussed.
The theme of rape is central in thie movie, which is a revenge thriller against a rapist (and everyone involved that in some way). There is discussions about rape throughout the movie. The long beginning scene contains an attempted rape. 8:45: cat calling. 14:30-20:40: a man takes advantage of a drunk woman, making her take cocaine. She asks him to call her a cab, but he insists that she stays and puts his hand up her skirt. 38:00: the main character gets a prior classmate drunk, then discusses past rape at school with another student, and tricks classmate into thinking she has been raped. 44:00-49:34: the main character tricks a woman into thinking her under aged daughter has been sexually assaulted/raped. 53:00: a guy at a bar picks the protagonist up to take her home when she is seemingly black out drunk. They are distracted and it does not go further. 56:20: the protagonist meets with a rapists lawyer, where he admits and details how the law firm helps rapists get away with their crimes by attacking the victim with slander. 1:14:26: a former classmate and the main character discuss past rape. 1:17:20: the protagonist watches a tape that is strongly implied to be the videotaping of a rape. 1:19:15 the tape is shown again to someone else off screen for 15 seconds. 1:24:37: the main Character shows up to bachelor party of abuser as a stripper. 1:29:30: the abuser discusses previous rape with main character, denying he did anything wrong.
The film's narrative is centered on dealing out retribution for a rape and multiple murders in 19th century colonial Australia. This inciting incident is mentioned continually throughout. The attack on screen is in penultimate scene of the movie.
A woman accuses her father of sexually abusing her as a child. The defense gives graphic arguments to support this claim. It is likely that she is making this up to prevent herself from going to jail, but it would be impossible to determine the truth since this is based on true crime.
Prospect (Movie)
The main character (a young girl) is suggested as a trade for medicine for another character. She would be used to “breed” with a young male character to continue this religious group’s existence.
Przesluchanie (Movie)
The protagonist is encouraged to get drunk until passed out, after which she is taken hostage, stripped naked and there is a graphic shot of someone just about to enter their fingers into her in order to „have a search”. Some of the tortures she endures as a political prisoner have sexual elements to them, most commonly getting naked, and rape is alluded to or threatened at various points of the film.
Psycho III (Movie)
After the attempt, the victim has to stay in the same place as her attempted rapist. He apologies and acts like it was no big deal. A man watches a woman undress without her consent. Worthy of note: a man behaves aggressively towards a woman whom he just had sex with, he kicks her out in just her underwear and does not give her clothes back until she asks.
It is implied that the villain had been molested as a child by his mom. Incest is mentioned. A boy watches his mother have sex twice without her consent.
Psycho-Pass (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is raped by a criminal. It is heavily implied that he has otherwise physically harmed her. Explicit scenes at 9:40-10:40 and 13:27-13:42.
The main character plies with alcohol and rejects advances of another character: an implied rape takes place off screen.
Pulp Fiction (Movie)
A key male character is taken to a backroom and is raped as punishment.
Two men attempt to rape a woman in the woods. They pin her down and begin tearing at her clothes, but she is able to run away from them.
Puppetmaster (Movie)
The Purge (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is rescued from a group of men who strongly imply they intend to rape her. S1E4: a woman is tackled to the ground by a man and forced to take a drug. Sexual assault is attempted but stopped before anything happens. S1E5: discussion of sexual assaults. S1E6: a woman is forced to consume a sedative by a man who catches her in the street. S1E7: women forcibly tied up and touched against their will. S1E16: an event is held where women are tied up and groped by men.
A man breaks into an apartment and threatens to rape the mother and daughter living there (01:14:12-01:13:25). It is heavily suggested that he was about to rape them before getting distracted. He is killed before he can do anything to them.
Purple Noon (Movie)
In the first sequence of the movie, one man pretends to be blind to approach a woman. He takes advantage of the situation to grope her. When the two are kissing (with consent), his friend also gropes the woman and kisses her, even after she rebuffs him a few times. A little bit later, the same man incapacitates his angry girlfriend and kiss her. At the end of the movie, a man impersonates his friend to kiss and grope his asleep girlfriend. Once she is awake, he threateningly touches and she seems very distressed. It is strongly implied that he pressurs her into having sex with him.
The author references rape of enslaved women, the sexualization of Black girls by their peers and teachers, police interactions with Black girls that constitute sexual assault or sexual harassment, the author's own experience with sexual abuse, and the targeting of Black girls for sex trafficking from as young as 11.
Putney Swope (Movie)
The film contains a mention of a man having sex with a 13 year old. Nothing is shown on screen.
Puzzle (2014) (Movie)
The rape scene takes place about 50 minutes into the movie.
Because of the involvement of sites like 2chan, 4chan, 8chan, and 8kun throughout the series, each episode contains moments of discussion surrounding child sex abuse, rape, sexual assault, and several characters being interviewed display sexual harassment behavior. It is not limited to any one episode.
Over several scenes, a teenager's ex-boyfriend pins her down as she struggles and tells him to stop. He tries to kiss her, when a cop comes in and kills him.
There are several instances of trading/requesting a woman as part of a business deal. There is a bried mention of past rape told by a woman who saw her mother raped when she was a child. A general has a woman bound and attempts to rape her in his hotel room: he is stopped before he is able to get her dress off.
A plot point revolves around an orphanage owner molesting and raping the young girls.
The titular character is 17 years old while her husband is 23. S1E1-3: a woman has continual uncomfortable sex that she does not desire but "consents" to as she is his wife/feels she must. This occurs multiple times over the course of the first three episodes until he, during intercourse, passes away. S1E1: throughout the episode, a woman is being raped by her husband. It is not forceable, but she has no opportunity to say no because of her situation and is clearly not interested in sex. She comments later that is bad enough when it happens and she has warning, but now she gets no warning. She takes baths after each rape and comments to others how she does not want it. S1E2: forced sex between a husband and his wife. S1E3: a wife mentions that her late husband only saw "girls" as suitable for breeding (it is unclear whether this means he cheated on her with minors or whether she is referring to her experiences within their marriage). Either way this comment is delivered in an emotional manner and may be upsetting for viewers. S1E4: a widow returns to the room where she and her husband used to sleep and when she touches the bed, she has flashbacks to the uncomfortable sex they continually had throughout the first three episodes.
S1E1: the main character is raped on screen (27:30).
Queen Sugar (TV Show)
S1E1: a basketball team is accused of gang-raping a woman. There is victim blaming. A main character's husband is accused of rape: the wife confronts him after there is video evidence. The video of right before the rape is shown on screen. The main character is sexually harassed by reporters asking about her husband. S1E3: the rape is mentioned again. The husband says that the woman was a hired escort. S1E4: the basketball player is suspended for "rape". The audience does not get to know if the incident in question was actually rape, or consensual sex with a sex worker. A rape kit is mentioned. Teenage "sexting" is mentioned. S1E5: the wife of the accused rapist goes to visit the victim. She refuses to believe her husband could be a rapist, just because the victim is a sex worker. The wife offers to pay off the victim: she says that she wants the player to admit what he did. S1E6: two radio hosts blame the rape victim. The accused player's wife is mad at her sister for calling her a victim. The rape victim meets with the basketball player: he told his friends that they could have sex with his callgirl. The wife finally realizes her husband is a rapist and leaves him. S1E9: the rape is mentioned again. S1E13: the rape is mentioned again. A white police officer forcefully grabs the bottom of a Black woman who wrote a critical article about the police force. S2E6: the sexual assault is mentioned again. S2E8: Donald Trump is quoted about illegal immigrants raping US citizens. S2E10: a woman is catcalled: S2E9: a woman is catcalled by a man from her past. Her fiance slut shames her for it. S2E16: a woman describes how she got pregnant (she was high and there was a group of guys and she does not remember). S4E1-3: the rape payoff is mentioned again several times. S4E4: sexual violence threats towards a 10 year old are mentioned. S4E5: a relationship between a college professor and a student is revealed. S4E10: while discussing a main characters past actions, the episode points out that women who are intoxicated cannot consent to sex. It also tackles spousal rape when a main character discusses her abusive husband. S5E10: the basketball players rape accusation is mentioned again. Throughout season 6, details of an attempted rape of an 18 year old by a 33 year old man are revealed. S6E1: another relationship between a college professor and her student is revealed. S6E3: a character reveals that she was raped when she was 18, and that she left town because everyone blamed her and no one believed her. She outed her friend to her father because she did not believe her about the rape. S6E6: the rape by the grown man against a teenage girl is mentioned again. S6E7: full details about the attempted rape of an 18 year old by a 33 year old man are revealed. S7E4: a main character's past rape is mentioned, as well as the fact that her rapist is running for Congress. Another side character's past attack is also mentioned. S7E5: a previous rape is mentioned in a flashback. A main characters rapist calls her and threatens her. S7E6: a main character is repeatedly threatened by her rapist. S7E7: a woman's rapist shows up looking for her. A woman's domestic abuser and another woman's rapist calls from hospice while he is dying. S7E8: the aftermath of the previous episode is discussed and shown. More is dealt with about the main character's rape too.
The female lead uses sex to cope with death of a loved one. She intends to murder second female lead for causing death of loved one, however, she tries gaining her trust via sexual favors to play "submissive" to get her guard down. She states she was 13 when signing a contract with a sex club owner stating she would get a large sum of money to keep her loved one alive. However, she was to return to the club at age 21 and work off her debt. The second female lead hints that her neices and nephews may be in sexually absuive relationships as they were forced into marriages, including a phone call to her sister, discussing the possibility of pregnancies and abuse. Several other discussions take place in the book that hint at possible sexual abuse/assaults in the past for characters. Wothy of note: There are heavy implications of cheating and the second female lead saying she is okay with it despite telling readers otherwise.
While the protagonist is an 8-year-old in orphanage, a fellow orphan who is 12 years old enters her bed one night. The 12-year-old touches the protagonist's genitals and attempts to get the protagonist to touch her also. The protagonist feels uncomfortable from the start and eventually shouts for the 12-year-old to stop. The 12-year-old's assault is never discussed after the fact, and the two have a friendly relationship years later. The 12-year-old later claims that she is having an affair with one of the adult workers at the orphanage. As an adult, she claims that she lied. When the protagonist is a teenager in high school, she takes a college class and hangs out with college students. One student initiates sex with her without getting clear consent.
Queer As Folk (TV Show)
Sexual violence is discussed multiple times throughout the book. Although most of the descriptions are not detailed, the sheer volume of mentions can be overwhelming and triggering. Topics covered include catcalling, rape statistics, anti-sodomy laws, rape as a tool of colonization, racist stereotypes of Black men wanting to rape white women and of Black women being hypersexual, sexual violence at the hands of law enforcement officers, rape in prison, LGBT people as both perpetrators and victims of sexual violence, rape apologia, and domestic violence.
The origin of the terms Sodomy and sodomizing are discussed, particularly in terms of same-sex rape. There is a passing mention of ancient Roman adults having sex with young boys. In the chapter on Josef Kohout, the author describes how he and other gay men during the Holocaust were coerced into giving sexual favors to authority figures in concentration camps for more lenient treatment. In the chapter on Silvia Rivera, there are a few passages about her fending off attempted rapists, including police officers. The Kristina Vasa and Eleanor Roosevelt chapters explain how both figures married cousins—in Roosevelt's case, a distant cousin.
Quicksand (2019) (TV Show)
The Quiet (Movie)
It is heavily implied throughout the movie that a teenage girl is being sexually abused by her father. Several scenes show them lying in bed together, and the girl describing some of their encounters with her cousin. Towards the end of the film, during an intense, emotional argument, he becomes increasingly aggressive towards her, violently slapping and shoving her, until he forces her onto the bed. He then climbs on top of her, unbuckling his belt, but is stopped and killed by the girl's cousin.
This book is largely concerned with adherents to the QAnon conspiracy theory, which is the unsubstantiated belief that certain politicians and celebrities traffic, rape, and drink the blood of children in Satanic rituals. Throughout the book, it is very clear that the author does not believe this conspiracy theory to be true, but she interviews people who do believe this or believed it in the past. There are also references to rape allegations against Brett Kavanaugh and Donald Trump.
Quills (Movie)
The film is about the Marquis de Sade, and sexual abuses/torture are thus recurring themes. It features two rape attempts and several scenes of sexual harassment from the very beginning of the movie until its end. In addition, it shows an old man who forces a teenage girl to be his wife, and it contains a martial rape scene, which is later parodied by a theatrical troupe. Finally, a dream sequence shows a man committing necrophilia with the corpse of a woman. There is also a scene of domestic violence (hitting, name calling, blaming).
Rabid (Movie)
The movie is about a zombie-like virus transmitted by a phallic appendix that grows out of a woman. There are various scenes in which she stings others with it are sexual in nature, and none of the people she infects are aware or consent to it.
The book opens with someone attempting to rape the protagonist. Although the would-be rapist is killed, the protagonist has traumatic nightmares and flashbacks of the event throughout the book. The protagonist also describes a scene where she heard a woman screaming, followed by sounds of men whooping and making lewd comments. It is left ambiguous what happened, since the protagonist technically did not witness anything, but it is strongly implied that it was rape.
The Radleys (TV Show)
S1E1: 12 minutes into the episode, a girl is stalked through the woods by a boy who attempts to rape her. She fights him off successfully.
Ragnarok (TV Show)
S1E4: on-screen rape, which is later mentioned by the characters. One teenaged character uses (questionably sexual) powers of persuasion to convince other to cooperate, including seducing or at least kissing a 3000+ year old character to change their grade. S2E6: one character uses illusion powers to trick another into thinking that they are having sex. The character did not consent and is visibly uncomfortable with it. In the illusion, the manipulator trades places with another character who seems uncomfortable with it. Additionnally, this scene is cut with a choking scene between different characters. A 3'000+ year old principal has sex with teenage students. Some characters are shown or implied to have a sexual relationship or feeling for each other: there are questions as to whether or not they are related.
The Raid 2 (Movie)
Prison rape is briefly mentioned. A crime boss forces an underling to undress in front of him to make sure he is not wearing a wire. In a karaoke room where the protagonist and the antagonist go with two prostitutes, the latter gets violent, threatens one of the women and forcefully sticks a microphone up her skirt. A scene takes place in a studio where a porn film is shot: a woman wearing a strapon is presumably raping a man behind a curtain.
The Rain (TV Show)
S1E2: sexual harassment (15:00-16:30). S1E5: it is implied that a teenage girl is raped, and the build up to and aftermath is shown in extreme detail (her drink is spiked, the effects of the drug are shown in graphic detail). The scene involves non-consensual filming and implies gang-rape. She is shown in the morning after the act, crying, as she is victim-blamed (24:00-28:00).
This serie contains very graphic sexual violence (S1E2+6 being the most graphic). The original manga is written from a semi-autobiographical perspective.
The description of an assault and attempted rape could be upsetting to read as they are described as it occurs (pp. 234-5).
Rambo (2008) (Movie)
Depictions, implications and mentions of sexual abuses and rapes are constant throughout the movie. It is heavily implied that the main bad guy likes to have sex with young boys. There is a scene where his soldiers bring a little boy to his room, he then pats the little boy on the head like a dog and leads him into his room. Rambo sees this and closes his eyes in disgust. Whilst attacking an enemy, Rambo screams that the enemy "would have raped them 50 times before cutting their heads off". A soldier drags a woman to his quarters and prepares to rape her but is stopped. Two soldiers assault a woman with one holding her down and the other tearing open her shirt. Her bare breasts are shown and then the camera cuts away. A woman is held down by one man while another man approaches, undoing his pants, and is interrupted.
A teenage girl is kidnapped and forced to work in a brothel. A man brings a woman to his truck before shoving her down a a seat, preparing to assault her but is stopped.
Raptoid (Video Game)
This game also features BDSM, sexual humiliation, and both consensual and non-consensual sex. Non-consensual sexual content is not presented in a serious or horrific way. Raptoids are captured by an unknown robotic faction that turns their species into sex slaves. The main character can be captured and sexually tortured by these robots. Upon freeing other captured raptoids, the main character can have sex with them.
This movie contains graphic and disturbing content related to sexual assault, harassment, and coercion. A central plot point involves a powerful man repeatedly pressuring and harassing a woman, disregarding her clear discomfort and consent. This character's behavior escalates to threats of violence, murder, and rape, including a disturbing musical number that glorifies non-consensual sex. The woman's own family members respond inadequately to her distress, with some even encouraging her to submit to the perpetrator out of fear. The movie's portrayal of coercive behavior, victim-blaming, and inadequate support systems may be triggering.
Rashomon (Movie)
The film's plot centres around the rape of a samurai's wife by a bandit.
Ratcatcher (Movie)
A teenage girl is repeatedly harassed by a group of teenage boys on-screen. It is implied that she is raped by them off-screen.
Ratched (TV Show)
Rape is mentioned several times throughout the show. One male recurring character makes several inappropriate comments and gestures towards female characters throughout. S1E4: it is mentioned that a woman had sex with her brother in the past. He briefly puts her hand on his crotch but she stops him, stating that it will never happen again. (It is revealed in S1E6 that they in fact are not biological siblings). S1E5: a woman suffering from trauma explains under hypnosis that she was kidnapped and beaten by a group of men, who locked her up naked for days. S1E6: the backstory of the protagonist is told through flashbacks and a puppet show. She was repeatedly abused by several foster families as a child. One of these families forced her to perform sexual acts with her "brother" in front of adult who paid to watch them.
Ravage (Movie)
It is implied that an unconscious woman is about to be raped by at least one man, if not more. A man's belt buckle is seen being undone and two men are seen standing over her in the background. No nudity and the act itself is not shown. Later, a man confirms the woman was raped by telling her that he 'had her good.'
Chapter 11 (pages 214-222): strongly implied rape scene. Rape mentioned throughout the series.
Raw Force (Movie)
Ray Donovan (TV Show)
Child molestation is discussed throughout the series, and PTSD is shown in many episodes.
Razorback (Movie)
One man attempts to rape a female character: she is also, goaded by another man (21:00). However, the act is interrupted before anything beyond physical assault can take place.
Razzia (Movie)
One of the main characters is raped by her boyfriend.
Re-Animator (Movie)
A woman is graphically raped by a disembodied head in the final stretch (01:08:13-01:12:44). The character herself was treated like an object for most of the movie.
S3E1: a comment is made about a teenage boy holding two children's hands being indecent. This is portrayed as a joke; nothing is happening between the three. The use of the word 'loli' regarding a character. A woman strokes a fearful child's face,: it is not necessarily portrayed as sexual but viewers still could find it disturbing S3E2: a woman licks a child's face while he cries and trembles in fear. S3E3: a man kidnaps a teenage girl to take her as his wife while she is unconscious. A character that looks like a young child announces her love to a teenager: she is actually the same age as him, and this is unreciprocated on his part. S3E4: in the after credit scene, a teenage girl wakes up after being kidnapped naked. Her kidnapper tell her that she will be his wife and asks if she is a virgin. S3E5: a girl is told she will be forcibly married. There are other girls who have also been forcibly married and could be interpreted to have been assaulted. S5E6-8: a major plot line explores the forced marriages. A female villain molests an unconscious woman.
Reacher (Movie)
S1E1: a prisoner is about to rape another prisoner but is stopped. There is an illegal strip search of a prisoner by a guard. A woman is sexually harassed. S1E2: a man is killed and his body displayed in a way that involves sexual violence. S1E3: a womanis sexually harassed. S1E4: a character describes how he saw children being raped. S1E5: a woman is non-consensually grabbed while working at a strip club. S3E3: sexual assault is briefly mentioned. S3E4: workplace sexual harassment. S3E6: human trafficking is mentioned. the main villain threatens to get his henchman to rape another man’s son (35:35-35:39). S3E7: a man talks about wanting to rape a female and "cut off her pretty pieces" (21:20-21:32). S3E8: more details are given about the same human trafficking. The victim is shown drugged on screen, but no actual sexual violence is shown. A man offers up a woman that was kidnapped and drugged, using her as a gift for his business partner (09:15-09:40). The business partner goes into the room of the drugged woman, with the intention of raping her (28:50-29:40). He is stopped before anything can happen.
This book is a coming of age story of Adele from the classic novel Jane Eyre. Adele becomes a vigilante against men who attempt to abuse or sexually assault women. As the child of a sex worker, her childhood was spent in a brothel, where she learned ways women protected themselves from men, especially with the understanding that the police would be unlikely to help them if they were in danger. Later, she interrupts a man attempting to assault her friend. While visiting another friend, she sees a painting depicting the Rape of Persephone, and this friend's father turns out to be an abuser. Towards the end of the book, the protagonist's father reveals that he had been posing as her penpal, a boy her own age living in another country. He argues that she fell in love with him and that he can take her as his wife, despite already being married. He forces a kiss on her, and then she fights him off.
Real Love (Movie)
One of the main characters is raped off screen but there are flashbacks. Throughout the rest of the movie, rape and sexual assault are discussed and handled well: the main character receives a lot of support.
The main character is first introduced to her lover by him molesting her. This same man later rapes another woman onscreen. The female protagonist sexually assaults a child, also onscreen and graphically, at one point. She also threatens to have her lover rape another woman.
The Reaping (Movie)
The scene is brief and not gratuitous, but enough to make clear what is happening.
Reasonable Doubt (TV Show)
Season 1: A rapist sexually abuses his employee (off-screen) and kills her after she wants to speak up on TV. A husband who is not living with his wife (relationship problems) puts a camera in her house which she knows about. One time, he spies on her, and another time, she has sex in front while he is looking.
A character in an asylum is known to be "handsy with the ladies." A character works to protect her cousin from sexual assault at the hands of her father, sexual assault that she herself has endured. This character blames herself for the assault and tries to deny that it happened. A character who can read minds taunts her about this experience. A character gives absinthe to the protagonist and her friends. He then gets the protagonist alone and tries to initiate sex with her when she does not know what is happening, but he is stopped.
A young girl is targeted for harassment by invading soldiers (all of whom are adults). Her mistreatment culminates in a scene (32:44-34:40) where she is picked up by soldiers who discuss a plan to rape her over the next few days in captivity while she is crying. At first, their leader seems like he is stopping the behaviour of the lower rank soldiers but instead he states that he wants to be the first to hurt her. She is eventually saved by a female character. One of the main characters is non-consensually touched by a person who is trying to "buy" him as a sex slave (50:09-50:20). In the director's cut, an attempted rape happens at 59:30: the agressors are stopped by the protagonist.
The main character, a "young" prince, must repopulate his kingdom with his six sisters, which is revealed to him at his "coming-of-age" ceremony. The game mentions that males rarely live past the age of 10, as well as the detail of the main character being of an extremely short stature compared to his sisters, talking childishly, and being referred to as "little brother" by his sisters. The age of the main character is never revealed officially, but can safely be assumed to be a child.
Reckless (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: it is revealed that a female police officer was drugged and raped by several other officers while incapacitated.
The Reckoning (Movie)
Red Beard (Movie)
A woman forcibly plants a kiss on a guy before attempting to kill him. This comes after she recalls being molested by several men as a child and teenager. These however are not depicted. Another character is a victim of child sexual slavery and her trauma plays a major role in a part of the movie. However, the abuse she suffered is also, not depicted.
Throughout the game, the protagonist is knocked out and incapacitated several times. During the "free parts" of the game, the protagonist can encounter women who are hogtied and shouting on the back of men's horses: the protagonist can choose to intervene or not. Early in the game, the protagonist has to save two women from men who try to sexually assault/rape them. One of the optional missions features a couple who drug and rob the protagonist, and their dialogue reveals that they are brother and sister. The protagonists threaten to cut a prisoner's testicles with wrenches in order to make him talk (they put his pants down and show him the pliers). While collecting a debt, the protagonist suggest a man to sell his wife to repay him. The protagonist can visit a cabin, which will lead to a cut scene in which he is knocked unconscious. Over a black screen the sound of a belt unbuckling can be heard, with a voice saying "you struggled and you lost" and calling the protagonist his "pet". The character later awakes in a clearing and walks in a bow-legged manner for a while. During the 'Rhodes' part (confrontation between two families), incest among one family is mentioned, as well as some members being depicted as 'slave fuckers'. In the final mission involving two lovers from these families later on, rape is mentioned. Soon after when the protagonist enters a town called Saint-Denis, he mentions that it is full of rapists. One mission in that city consists in freeing two men held captives by someone involved in slave trade. Anoter mission consists in saving a woman who was kidnapped by a group of men: sexual assault is highly suggested (the protagonist rescues her in a mansion where she is tied up and gagged). In a side mission of stagecoach robbery (during the Saint Denis part), sexual harassment/rape is discussed. In another side mission where the protagonist helps a man to escape from a town while being dressed as a woman, the latter is catcalled by men (which does not bother him), and he suddenly kisses the protagonist without his consent to hide from a (supposedly) antagonist character. The protagonist encounters twice the widow of a man he extorted, who became a prostitute to meet her financial needs. Eventually, he helps her during a side mission: she is shown being desperate, and about to have sex with a man for sex. During a mission consisting in killing people living in a cave, the protagonist encounters a female captive, deeply traumatized (sexual assault is implied). During another side mission consisting in helping a secluded woman who lost her husband, the widow warns the protagonist that she can defend herself against his potential bad intentions. During one of the last missions of the game, one female character mentions that the men who killed her husband and child "did something" to her (presumably sexual assault).
Red Dragon (Movie)
The plot of the movie revolves around catching a serial killer who rapes the women of the families he chooses to murder. It is briefly shown that the clothes of one victim gets ripped open (21:00). Another scene shows the perpetrator removing his gloves right in front of his victim's genital (impliying that he assaulted her). In one scene, a ,an lies about a serial killer molesting his male victims and having had a sexual relationship with a relative.
Red Light (TV Show)
The rape scene is clearly shot with the intention to titillate, and is never mentioned afterward.
This story is set in a dystopian future. The main characters are about 16, and are treated either as adults or as basically adults. Rape occurs in the context of these characters participating in an extended military training exercise where factions are created and pitted against each other in a long campaign. It happens 'off-screen' with mentions of screams. An attempted rape also happens in this context. These acts occur similarly to how they might in real life military conquest, and serve to demonstrate aspects of characterisation and the world/society. The characters mention and discuss these rapes, as well as hypothetical ones and ones that have happened in the past. In this story, there exists a class of people raised from birth to be sex slaves. This is not the focus of the book, and there exist otehr classes who are oppressed from birth (in different ways). There are no detailed descriptions of sexual violence in this book.
Red Sparrow (Movie)
Red Vs. Blue (TV Show)
One character states that he had multiple sexual harassment claims made against him while posing as a licensed military physician. He also admits to committing statutory rape as a girl lied about her age to him. Worthy of note: at the start of season 5, it is implied one of the characters was impregnated while sleeping.
Towards the end of the book, a senator character reveals that, prior to the events of the book, when he was an intern for an attorney general, the attorney general would offer mentorship and connections to interns if they would "just get a drink with him after work." There was "a strong implication that 'no' was unacceptable." Most of the people the attorney general targeted were young women, but the senator, then a young man, was also targeted. The senator recalls how the attorney general got him very drunk. It is heavily implied that the attorney general would have raped him if he had not gotten away. The attorney general threatened to reveal personal and family secrets if he ever told anyone what had happened. Over the course of this book, the attorney general becomes a senator and runs for president. He vows that as president, he would start a "Young Congress program." The senator who was his intern strongly believes that this presidential candidate would use such a program to continue targeting and raping young people, so he intervenes. Aside from this plot point, there are several allusions to in-breeding, specifically cousin marriages, in the history of the British royal family. These allusions are mostly played for laughs. One of the romantic leads mentions a time when he tried to defend his sister against a stranger who had touched her inappropriately in public. The two romantic leads often have sex while very drunk. This is not ever presented as a problem in the book. When the sexual relationship of the romantic leads is publicly revealed, the grandmother of one of the leads insist that he deny that he is gay, saying, "I can't imagine people would be as eager to welcome you into children's hospitals" where he had been volunteering prior. She is implying that others will assume he is a pedophile, when that is not the case.
A woman is kidnapped and raped.
The plot follows an Arkansas mother who takes her 11-year-old daughter to Illinois to obtain an abortion. After it is revealed the daughter is receiving the abortion, a flashback from the mother shows the police investigating their ransacked apartment, carrying away a pair of bloody underwear, and the daughter sitting in shock on her bed.
The film is about a woman who was forced into sex work as a young girl: there are several scenes featuring harassment. Her husband's brother claims that she owes him for a ride and the two of them have sex. There is a scene featuring forced abortion and sterilisation. The protagonist was abandoned by her father when she was a little girl; as an adult, she punishes him by having sex with him at the brothel. When he finds out he had sex with his daughter, he kills himself. Towards the end of the movie, there is a scene where the female lead is locked in a room; it is strongly implied that she is listening to a man assaulting two young girls. In the end she escapes with them both. Details: A young girl is sold into prostitution (33:13-37:00). It is revealed that a man unknowingly slept with his daughter (38:40-39:38). A young woman is held down while her pregnancy is terminated (1:17:20-1:17:50). A young woman is coerced to perform sex on a man as payment for a ride into town (1:21:20-1:23:14): she can be seen coughing and throwing up behind a tree after the fact. Children are heard being sexual abused in the next room (1:50:18-1:50:40). Even through this is off screen, the audio is disturbingly graphic.
The author explains in detail how her father's girlfriend's son groomed her and molested her for an extended period of time. The person who groomed her was also a minor, but was older. As the author transitioned in her early teens, she observed that men began catcalling her. There are also explicit discussions of the author and her peers participating in sex work prior to the age of 18 to save up for gender affirmation surgery.
Redo of Healer (TV Show)
The plot revolves around a 14 year old boy who was enslaved, then sexually physically and psychologically tortured for 4 years, before going back in time to go on a rape-filled rampage against the people that previously wronged him. Many rapes are shown on screen, and the main character is the perpetrator of most of them.
The novel is set in Florida during Jim Crow, focusing on the wrongful imprisonment and abuse of young Black boys. Antiblack violence, including sexual violence, is a central theme. In the backstory, a Black man was falsely accused of raping a white woman. Most people are aware she's lying to cover up her own husband's abuse of her, but due to the impossibility of a fair trial, the man was forced to flee the state. A Black teenaged girl is regularly sexually harassed by a white boy. At one point she is forced to go to him for help when her brother is wrongfully imprisoned. He demands a kiss in exchange for his help, and when she complies, he attempts to take it further by forcefully grabbing her and pushing her against a wall. She fights him off. An adult white man who runs a "reformatory school" (functionally a prison) for Black and lower-class white boys has raped and molested several of the boys under his authority, keeping photographs of them in his desk. When he first arrives at the reformatory, a 12-year-old Black boy is forced to strip and expose himself to the head of the school (ostensibly to prove he hasn't smuggled anything in). A police officer is mentioned to have raped several people (implicitly all or mostly Black people).
S1E2: a girl says there is a "creepy vibe" to an older teen boy. A couple of vampires are drugged into an orgy with two other vampires. One of the partners of the male couple is made to believe the other was murdered, but he is not. S1E3: it is revealed that one of the vampires in the relationship was there out of obligation. S1E5: a woman seduces a man so she can kill him. S2E7: a man kisses a woman without her consent.
Regression (Movie)
The movie follows a detective trying to solve a case where a 17 year old girl reports her father for sexually abusing her. This involves several graphic descriptions as well as flashbacks/hallucinations/dreams that include assaults or events surrounding assaults happening on screen. It is later revealed that the girl had been in a relationship with an older man and after he refused to leave with her, she made the story up.
Reign (TV Show)
S1E1: A man is ordered by another woman to rape the main character. S1E7: a group of men take the main character and her friends hostage and attempt to rape them. This is stopped when the men are killed, but it is mentioned that another character was raped by her guards when she was a child. It is revealed that half-siblings had a sexual past. The sister convinced her half-brother they did not share a father when, in fact, they do. S2E9: The female protagonist is raped during an invasion of the castle by enemy forces (during the final few minutes of the episode). Although not graphic, this scene is unambiguous and potentially upsetting. The aftermath of this attack is also dealt with. S4E16: two main characters are drugged and coerced into having sex with a witch who attempts to use magic to get herself pregnant against the man's will.
Reno 911! (TV Show)
S1E5: a female officer instructs a room full of children that they were all be raped and that it is inevitable. It is played for awkward laughs. S2E3: during a skit about graffiti, a cop mentions that something is "worse or better than rape". S3E2: a 5-minute sketch focuses on a videotape that cops make a rape victim watch. He has flashbacks and is very upset by seeing the tape. The rape is described in detail, but not shown. The whole thing is played for laughs. S3E4: a cop mentions that some children are "products of rape" during a children's show taping. S3E5: a group of cops sing to students about the dangers of prison including being raped. It is played for laughs. S3E7: halfway through the episode, a woman is sexually harassed on stage. She yells for help and another woman assists her. It is played for laughs. In the end credits, cops talk about the number of rapes in the holding cell being a typo and a female officer yells: "please don't rape, it's me". It is insinuated that she has been raped before and the whole thing is played for laughs. S4E1: a male and female officer discuss a "rape shield" product for roughly 2 minutes, giving scenarios including one where the woman in the conversation relates details of her rape. They both say that if someone is raped twice, then "shame on them" because it is their fault for not being prepared. It is played for laughs. S4E2: two officers discuss travel and one says that people from a certain country "will rape you in a heartbeat". It is played for laughs. S4E3: a woman screams "rape" to escape arrest, and a man says that their group is like a family that would kill and rape each other. Everything is played for laughs. S4E5: rape is discussed in a police context. S5E9: a man tells a woman that she will be raped in jail and a second woman says that it will be very bad. S5E13: a male 911 operator tells a woman "If you've been raped, you need a confirmation number." It is a different woman calling in, and is played for laughs.
One of the antagonists is stated to be a rapist, but only in the promotional materials. One antagonist mentions wanting to have sex with his sister. A side character says that she started 'turning tricks' at the age of 13. Worthy of note: a young woman, who is highly addicted to drugs, is engaged in a sexual relationship with a drug dealer.
The Report (Movie)
The film focuses on the abuses suffered by prisoners held by the CIA after 9/11: this includes forced nudity and forced enemas, both on screen.
A female main character discusses that because she has red hair, she has been the interest of slavers and ‘perverts.’ In a later chapter, the same female character explains that young girls with red hair are raped and violated on the grounds that their blood contains powers of blessing and can cure injuries on men’s genitals. The character says that she has been aware of this for the majority of her life, and she has dyed her hair as a result. A male side character (who is described to be around the age of twenty) expresses romantic and sexual interest in a female main character who is implied to be around the age of seventeen. Although there is no actual relationship or intercourse, the female character pretends to return his interest, and after his death, pretends that they had intercourse. A male side character has a POV chapter where he thinks sexually about a girl (17) who has no interest in him. In this chapter, he also expresses similar interest in another girl (implied to be around the same age as the first, though this isn't explicitly stated) and follows her to her room with plans to assault her. A female character is a victim of an attempted assault, which is described after the fact and in a few sentences. It is described that he choked her and tried to take her clothes off. This attempted assault is mentioned multiple times after it occurs, and the female character’s self defence is at one point, shamed by a much older man who tells her she should have let the man assault her and tried to enjoy it until he finished.
Repulsion (Movie)
The rape scenes approximately take place between 00:54 and 1:50. Worthy of note: The director of this film is a convicted child molester.
One plot of this film revolves around young women addicted to heroin who go into sex work in order to pay for drugs. A final scene shows the female protagonist forced to have sex in front of an audience and crying. This is an act of violence from her dealer, who knows that she will do anything, and who uses that power for money and sexual pleasure.
Reservation Dogs (TV Show)
S1E2: mention of a character's uncle being "the handsy one'. Nothing happens on screen. S2E7: pedophilia is mentioned. S2E8: two characters stumble upon a cult initiation in the woods in which the new members (all male) penetrate the corpses of catfish. The genitalia are blurred but everything else is shown (blood, sounds, etc.). S3E6: omeone calls a zombie a "diddler".
The Resident (TV Show)
This series discusses in season 4 and 5 a main character who was raped with she was 13 and gave a child up for adoption. It is handled well, lots of nuance and emotions. The adult child is also a character on the show. This is an ongoing character arc. S3E17: a man brings a girl (unknown age) who he says is his fiancé to the ER and one of her symptoms is bleeding “down there” (in her words). Two main characters discuss that they think she is being trafficked and may not even be 18, so they get her alone and she confirms their suspicions and talks in minor detail about what happened to her. In seasons 4 and 5, there is a character who is revealed to have been raped and impregnated by an adult neighbor when she was 13. This is discussed on occasion but is handled well.
Resident Alien (TV Show)
The main character pretends to be someone's husband (he is an alien who disguises himself as a human) and they repeatedly have sex. S2E3 explores a variety of consent issues in a thoughtful and important way: it shows how often women get sexually harassed and how terrifying it can be. A man tries to seduce a woman so he can break into her science lab. He is interrupted by a friend who knows he is not genuinely interested in the woman but is using the fact that she is sexually interested in him to gain her trust and swipe her key card. He then morphs into her body and later, she is sexually assaulted: the man beats up the person. An important discussion follows. In season 3, it is revealed that aliens are engaging in reproductive violence. S3E1: this episode contains an unsolicited dick pic played for laughs. Worthy of note: The female main character was involved in an extremely physically abusive relationship. Although the violence is not inherently sexual, some viewers may still find it upsetting.
A woman is tied down (10:04-10:50): a group of men and a woman hold her and call her slurs. One of the men slides a knife down her body, over her clothes, stopping at her crotch. She says he should not do that and he slaps her in the face. When he starts unbuttoning his pants, she kicks him in the chin, killing him instantly. The others knock her unconscious, and she wakes up in a cage (there is no implications that the other men abused her).
S1E1: a professor preys on a student (sending nude photographs, saying he is falling in love with her, inviting her for dinner, talking about penetrating her, etc.).
Respect (Movie)
This movie shows that the protagonist was a sexual assault survivor and that she got pregnant as a child by her abuser.
A sex scene, which is not violent or aggressive, involves a psychiatric patient, who cannot truly consent, a fact which is acknowledged in the book. This scene and the attempted rape scene are both handled sensitively, and written from the perspective of the man perpetuating. The whole book is about acknowledging the character's mistakes as he looks back at his life, so these two moments are not romantisized or justified. Neither scene is overly graphic, but quite psychological (i.e. describing complicated feelings and focusing on the feelings rather then the physical aspect.)
A man opens the door after raping a woman who sits naked covering her body. A naked man threatens a woman with a gun. A woman is raped on-screen. Rapists are not held accountable for their actions at the end.
Retaliation (Movie)
This movie is about an adult victim of childhood sexual abuse confronting his past.
Women are stalked and harassed. One woman's stalker seems to attempt to rape her in a motel room.
At 18:03, two suitors stare at a teenage looking girl in a predatory manner. She runs away when they are looking the other way. They instead proceed to harass the teenage looking boy instead. Around 18:38 to 19:31, they off-screen assault the boy, leaving his body motionless in the hut as they discuss how they will take as much as they can from the island, and leave their scar on it.
Very sudden, violent rape scene at the beginning of the film. The following scenes of her in the hospital having a rape kit taken are also shown. There is communication between the rapist and the woman throughout the film.
A man implies that he wants to not only kill a girl but rape her. Later on, the same man busts into a room to try to rape a girl but is stopped. A man licks a girl without consent. A adult woman reveals her breasts to a group of high school teenage boys.
Revelations (TV Show)
The movie is about a serial rapist. He abducted a girl after being released from prison for raping the detectives' sister in the past (shecommitted suicide afterwards).The religious childhood abuse and rape of the perpetrator are also discussed.
The Revenant (Movie)
A man grabs a woman and rapes her on-screen (1:42:55-1:44:52). She struggles against her attacker and then remains motionless, crying, teeth gritted whilst on screen during the assault. The protagonist eventually intervenes and stops the rapist by threatening him with a gun. The woman grabs a knife and threatens to cut off his testicles.
Revenge (TV Show)
Though the editing jumps around scenes while the sexual assault takes place, the entirety of the lead up is shown on screeen (forcing against the door, pulling down underwear), as well as several jump cuts that show the woman being raped through the door's glass (17:00-23:00).
A kid is bullied by someone saying that he is going to remove the kid's pants and cut his penis. He is stopped. The wife and daughter of the protagonist get brutally gang raped while the father has to watch.
A female character unknowingly has sex with a boy disguised as her boyfriend. The male protagonists install cameras to watch girls undressing. When trying to rent a home, a male character gets flirted with by an adult woman (25:55-26:07). When asked about if he has a date for an upcoming party, a college student responds: 'I've been out combing the high schools all day' (36:12-36:21). Nerds sell pies with unconsented nude photographs of female college students at the bottom of the tin (1:10:56-1:11:14).
Revolution (TV Show)
S1E1: two men attack the protagonists and imply that they are going to rape both girls (22:05-23:05). One tries to assault one of them, but he is killed.
Because this book is about intimate and domestic violence in all its forms, sexual violence is discussed in most of the essays. Forms of sexual harassment, sexual assault, and rape are described both in the abstract and in in-depth examples.
Portrayals of rape/incest in the show are nongraphic, mostly implied, and arguably shown in a negative light, but viewer discretion strongly advised. These themes appear in many episodes across the series, but episode 33 is particularly notable for its potentially disturbing statutory rape scene. The show uses surrealism to convey some events and themes, including sexual violence. In particular, cars are strongly linked to many of the implied assaults. Because of the way the series deals with same-sex attraction and relationships, there is also an element of corrective rape in some scenes which some viewers may find disturbing. There are explicit scenes in which an adult grooms a teenager. Among other things, the series is largely about overcoming abuse and breaking out of toxic gender norms.
Based off of the TV series Revolutionary Girl Utena, dealing with many of the same themes and potentially difficult elements. Additionally, adds backstory elements that were not shown in the original series for a particular character, involving sexual abuse as a young child. An explicit scene shows a man raping then stabbing his sister. It is implied that he had put something in her drink many times before, but this time it did'not work.
There is mention of child sexual abuse at Indian boarding schools. Towards the end, an antagonist character attempts to rape the protagonist. The antagonist is interrupted by another character and killed.
At the beginning of the movie, a woman is raped on-screen while her father is forced to watch.
Rick and Morty (TV Show)
S1E3: a theme park ride is described as being 'really rapey' and a character reveals that he was molested by his brother as a child. S1E2: a teenage girl is shown trying to seduce her grandfather and brother; this scene is the fantasy of one of the teachers at her school. S1E5: an underage boy is forced into a toilet cubicle, with the intention of raping him. His assailant is fought off, but it is revealed that this has happened on numerous occasions with other children. A grandad and his 14 year old grandson are on trial and the grandad makes a joke about prison rape. S1E6: a character deliriously asks for details regarding the genitalia of an underage boy. S1E7: the attempted rape of a teenage girl, but she is saved before she can be further assaulted. S1E8: a man has sex with an old woman's corpse that is being controlled by cats in a TV show they are watching. You see it happen in shadows. S1E11: there is an attempted rape of a man at gunpoint; however, he is saved before anything more happens. S2E9: one protagonist calls a group of men running at them during a purge night rapists. The implication is that anything is legal and they have probably done that. S3E9: a man reproduces with non-human creatures and commits incest with the offspring they produce. The creatures he reproduces with are also implied to all be children. S4E2: a 17 year old girl meets a 25 year old through an app and they "fall in love" while her mother disapproves and yells about statutory rape. They get a motel room together although details are not shown but it is implied they are doing it to sleep together. She is then matched with another older man, then again another older woman and finally another older man, these are short lived relationships though. S4E4: a form of soulbonding is introduced which is implied to resemble sex. This soulbonding once happens with a bigger grip that includes a child and his grandparent. S5E3: a young looking girl is about to be sold to an older man. S5E4: a teenage boy is restrained and forced to ejaculate into a machine. Worthy of note: in S1E1, one of the characters forces another to shove a huge seed in his rectum. In S1E4, a character has sex with a version of his wife who, unbeknownst to him, is a simulation. He is aroused by the fact that she is not moving. This is played out for laughs, as the intention is to highlight his disregard for female sexual pleasure, however, some audiences may find this distressing.
Ricochet (Movie)
The protagonist is raped by a woman after being drugged.
Riddick (Movie)
Prior to the events of the book, the main character ended a verbally and emotionally abusive relationship. Since they were coworkers at the time, her ex retaliated by attempting to force her out of her industry with a rumor. There is a point in the book where this ex visits the main character while she is alone in her bed room. It is clear in the narrative that he has come specifically to intimidate her, if not assault her. Someone else intervenes before anything happens. It is later revealed that the ex had harassed and assaulted other women.
Throughout the show a character is shown to have a distressing relationship with sex. S1E2: a male character says he needs to see a female character. Another character says it will not make him feel better to see her this way (both are in hospital). The male character says it will if he can get her to make him cum: The scene cuts to her completely immobile and unconscious in hospital bed. The other character says that she is "in no shape for whatever he is thinking about doing" and that she is 'fighting for her life'. The Male character says that she is his "girl" and he "can decide what she is in shape for" and slams door closing himself in room with her. The other character waits outside as watch. In S1E9, she describes to an ex (who she had formerly made uncomfortable by possibly pressuring him into sex) about her only former “boyfriend” (former college professor) who she raped. In season 2, a character creepily asks another character if they would fuck their brother if a gun was to her head, and says that her brothers want to fuck her. S2E6: several men threaten to rape another man. This is played for laughs. S2E9: it is discussed that a pastor is sexually abusing orphans. S3E4: molesting is mentioned. S4E8: it is implied that a man is raping his kidnappee and will do the same to the two new men he kidnapped.
Worthy of note: a woman reporting assault is brushed off and perceived as overreacting.
Rigor Mortis (Movie)
Two sisters are at their teacher's house to get tutoring. He rape one of them before being stabbed to death by the other. The scene is shown again two times as flashbacks.
The show contains rape and sexual torture scenes.
Ripper Street (TV Show)
The main character keeps two people inside a barn. During this time he repeatedly rapes the woman while making the man watch.
Riso Amaro (Movie)
Women are subject to sexual harassment at various points in the movie. One woman in particular is repeatedly harassed including being asked questions about her bust size, attempts to kiss her which she does not want, and being touched despite repeatedly saying that she doesn't want to be. At one point, this same woman is raped off-screen.
Rita (Movie)
Rivals (TV Show)
S1E5: a member of the Church suddenly assault a young woman (about 32 minutes into the movie). There is a discussion of the rape afterwards, outdated attitudes as in fitting with the time period.
Shortly after the middle of the film, the male hero attempts to rape the main female protagonist. He only stops when he hears his son shouting. This scene serves as an illustration for the poster of the movie. At the end of the film, the same man forcefully takes the woman as his wife.
River Wild (TV Show)
Late in the movie, it is implied that a woman was sexually assaulted by a man when she was a child. The same man grabbed another girl earlier in film (off screen).
Riverdale (TV Show)
A teenage character has a sexual relationship with his adult teacher. He insists that she cares about him but other characters point out that the relationship is unhealthy and later episodes show that she is a serial statutory rapist. S2E5: A teenage boy forcibly kisses a woman, who pushes him away. Later in the episode, he drugs another character and attempts to rape her, but is stopped just before he is able to do so. The victim faces scrutiny for bringing this to light but ops to press charges regardless. Another character is unnerved to realise that she went drinking and partying with him dozens of times and it's implied that he may have done something similar to her, or at least tried to. Two characters who are distant cousins unknowingly commit incest, even conceiving a child together. One side of the family thinks they're far enough apart genetically that it's not a big deal, but the other side is completely disgusted. One character's father tries to force her to have an abortion without her consent, and it's revealed that he also forced his wife to give up a child for adoption. One subplot addresses a cyber sexual harasser in the school. The character is punished but eventually returns. In one scene, a character punches a man in order to reject his aggressive sexual advances. S2E19: the teenage character kidnaps one of the main characters, blackmails his girlfriend into meeting up with him at a hotel for sex. However he does not succeeed because the girl roofies him before anything can happen. S4E2: a boy makes a prison rape joke. S4E10: during a meeting, a teen girl reveals that her uncle molested her as a child. She tells her mother, who does not believe her. A male teen tells a story of his father forcing him to be with a sex worker. S4E12: a main female character recounts the time a boy tried to rape her. Her girlfriend talks about how something similar happened to her, too. The boy is later drugged and filmed being tickled. In the same episode, it is revealed that a different boy has been filming teen couples having sex without their consent. Season 5 deals with a serial murderer, who is also possibly a rapist. S5E10: a main character makes a pass at his friend while high. S6E2 mentions an older teacher having inappropriate relations with male students. S6E6: a male character asks a main female character if her current boyfriend "satisfies" her like he once did. He says "you know you want it" and makes two physical advances on her. She pushes and then punches him away, and then he calls her crazy for doing so. S6E13: he statutory rapist is brought up again.
Rizzoli & Isles (TV Show)
This shows contains mentions of sexual violence throughout. S1E1: a man breaks into a woman's home and cuts (or rips) her pyjamas off. It is revealed that she is raped: this is mentioned multiple times in the episode. S1E2: mention of rape. S1E3: a detective is told to look up for any sex offenders or predators. There is also a mention of paedophiles. S1E4: some language used can be interpreted as sexual harrassement. There is also a mention of college professors soliciting college student sex workers (seemingly consensually). S1E6: it is determined that a woman was sexually assaulted, there is mention of rape and a hate crime. S1E7: the episode features some sexual harassment (which seems to be played for laughs). It is discovered that a shooting victim raped a 15-year-old girl. S1E8: discussions of domestic violence. A man threatens to rape one of the main characters. S2E3: mentions of rape. S2E4: mention of rape, captivity, and sexual assault. S2E6: mention of a professor raping his student. S2E14: while the main characters are doing a self defence class, it is mentioned that the techniques are important so that they are able to fight rapists. S3E7: a man believes that he is in love with the main character. There is unconsentual touching and kissing, and an attempted rape is implied. S3E8: mention of human trafficking and rape. S4E3: mention of rape and brief mention of sex offenders. S4E4: a titular character is believed to be drugged and raped. It turns out to be false. S4E7: a teacher has unconsensual sex with his students. Some of the encounters are described and briefly shown. S4E9: mention of child abuse and rape S4E11: mention of rape. S4E13: mention of child abuse and kidnapping. S4E14: non-consensual grabbing and harassment. S6E12: at the end of the episode, a title character is abducted. There is no rape/sexual assault, but the actions are disturbing and can be triggering. S6E13: thie episode is a continuation of the previous one. There is no sexual violence, but it can be very triggering.
Page 224: as part of a general discussion around the sexual liberties which Jim Jones felt free to take with his followers, it is mentioned that at least one surviving member of the temple has spoken about where he "crossed the line into rape." There is a description of her experience and of specific incidents in question. Page 225: discussion of the fact that Jim Jones was sexually involved with at least one teenage member of the temple. Page 299-300: description of an incident where Jim Jones was arrested for exposing himself to a police officer in a bathroom. Page 411-412: discussion of the fact that Jim Jones, when rebuffed by a teenage temple member he was sexually interested in, would routinely have her drugged in order to assault her.
Roar (TV Show)
S1E1: a 'Metoo scandal' is mentioned and a joke is made about it. S1E5: a woman entertains an abusive relationship with a sentient duck. There are no consent issues with the animal but he becomes abusive and keeps her from her family and life. S1E6: a detective makes a comment about a woman wearing bunny ears on when she is found dead (saying that it is "kinky"). She is in lingerie and tied to a tree, so they theorize it might be a sexually based thing. The woman's ghost is watching the detectives theorize and is disturbed. The male cops make a ton of sexist comments towards a female cop and the victim. The victim's ex (who is dating an 18 year old) is also sexist toward her and blames her.
Rob Roy (Movie)
The main heroine is nearly raped but is saved at the last moment by the hero.
A woman instructs a man to rape another woman, with the intention of making her pregnant. The man then pins the woman down and attempts to rape her: it lasts a couple of minutes.
Roblox (Video Game)
This game is a user-generated platform where players create their own games, characters, and more. Player interactions are not actively moderated, and inappropriate content may slip through the filters. Players may experience sexual harassment by other players through the chat or by "humping" another player's character, and other players may bypass the in-game chat filter to talk about inappropriate sexual content, although this type of behavior is banned. A 2018 news article claimed that a mother allegedly witnessed her 7-year-old girl's avatar being sexually assaulted on screen by two other players who inserted malicious code into the game's server, while Roblox responded and claimed they "have zero tolerance for this behavior". A 2020 lawsuit against Roblox also claims that the platform aided in a California girl's sexual exploitation.
RoboCop (Movie)
The film features an attempted rape scene. The offenders are stopped by the titular character before they can seriously harm the woman. The cop handles the situation very gracefully and offers the woman to direct her towards a rape crisis center.
Robots (2023) (Movie)
A female character is raped and treated as the guilty party while her rapist is the sympathetic victim.
Several characters are 'handsy' and their advances may be interpreted as assault, which includes removing clothing of unwilling participants. A man is born and then immediately is groped and chased. He later sleeps with his creator. A protagonist is tricked into sexual contact by a figure under the guise of being her husband. and then is coerced into sex despite screaming and refusing. He continues to force himself on her until she gives in. This is played for laughs and occurs behind a curtain (49:30-50:52). A man kisses his sister’s neck. A protagonist is tricked into sexual contact by a figure under the guise of being his wife. He does not consent verbally and screams, but it is implied that after some persisting and convincing that he consents. This is played for laughs and occurs behind a curtain (52:35-54:16). A protagonist is chased and groped. She escapes after injuring the assailant. She later is groped again until she screams. Four characters are turned to stone, which removes their clothing.
Roger Dodger (Movie)
The film revolves around a man trying to teach his teenage nephew how to get women to sleep with him, escalating to more violating and uncomfortable experiences. This includes putting him in situations where the teenage boy is drunk and being kissed by an adult woman, where he is left alone in a room with an unconscious woman and where he is taken to an underground brothel, from which he ends up fleeing in terror after a woman tries to take his trousers off.
When visiting a Japanese club, a woman with torn upper cloth leaves a room while crying. The men in the living room are laughing and one says when it was his turn. A naked woman is offered to a man.
Roh (Movie)
A female character implies that a man may have assaulted a child.
Rojst (TV Show)
S3E2: rape on-screen.
Rökkur (Movie)
A character describes his "first time" and reveals that when he was 17 he met up with an older man who, with a second man, gave him vodka and filmed while they both had sex with the teen boy. The character said he wanted to stop from pain but the men continued.
Role Models (Movie)
A woman is verbally harassed (~0:15:25). A woman suddenly gropes a man: he does not seem to mind (42:40). About a quarter through the movie, one of the male characters leans over to a female character and flirts with her. She says that she os engaged and he says he has a boner. She gets up and sits further away from him. A few minutes after, the same male character makes a joke to another male character about being raped. A child attempts to falsely accuse a man of touching him inappropriately. The man did not actually touch the child. This is played off as a funny scene.
Romance (Movie)
Romantic Killer (TV Show)
S1E10+11: one character invites a female character to his place to "study". When they get in his room, he pins her down and says that girls that accept to be alone with guys should expect as much. She hits him with a book, breaks free and flee however.
Rome (TV Show)
There are numerous instances of rape on screen in the series. S2E4: on-screen rape.
Romina (Movie)
A teenage girl is raped after purposely drawing the sexual attention of teenage boys, seemingly trying to tempt them into raping her so she can murder them in retaliation. The film is a confusing blend of victim blaming and a rape-revenge.
S1E2: two women are held captive in a basement. S1E7: a man is seen spiking a woman's drink at a party. He is caught and arrested. S1E8: a character mentions lethally shooting a rapist early in her career. S1E12: a woman becomes obsessed with a man after he saves her life. She proceeds to stalk him for the rest of the episode, including gaining access to his home through his friend and laying naked in his bed. S1E14: a man is caught secretly filming a teenage girl changing. He is revealed to be a registered sex offender. The operations of child abuse networks are briefly discussed. S2E5: a group of women is shown escaping from a human trafficking ring. Abuse is mentioned, but not described in detail. A young woman talks about being a victim of revenge porn in the past. The perpetrator was not punished for his actions. S2E10-11: a female character is abducted. This includes drugging, forced body modification (tattoo), and highly stressful situation (trapped in oil barrel and left to suffocate). S2E12: a woman discusses a night where she got too drunk with a fellow officer. It is implied that he assaulted her. S3E14: during a robbery, a woman is tied up and threatened by one of the perpetrators. He makes several threatening comments with sexual undertones towards her. S4E11: a formerly homeless young woman describes sleeping with men for a place to sleep when she was desperate. From context, she would likely have been a minor at the time of the events described. Another young woman is described as also doing this for a place to sleep. Worthy of note: A woman is tortured by her ex-boyfriend. S3E3: a woman of colour goes into labour. First the landlady of her airbnb calls the cops on her. Then, at the hospital she is subjected to misogyny by her male physician whose neglect endangers her life and her unborn child's. She also mentions earlier medical trauma surrounding a prior pregnancy. This is a theme of the entire episode and is handled in a sympathetic/informed manner. S4E10-11: a woman describes an abusive relationship, where she asked for help and was not believed. Her ex breaks into her house when she is not there and tries to ruin her career and life over the course of episodes 10. S5E11: domestic violence is mentioned, discussed, implied. A woman is briefly shown being choked up against a wall by her boyfriend.
Room 104 (TV Show)
Room (2015) (Movie)
A female character is raped repeatedly throughout the film; she has been kidnapped and is forced to raise her child in a confined space, under the dominion of her rapist.
Near the end of the movie, a child growns up unnaturally to his teenage years and takes the appearance of his father: he assaults and rapes his mother.
A woman kisses a man and then later expresses that she did not want to. A man is accused several times of being a paedophile because he hangs around with children. This does not seem to be true and no child sex abuse is shown on screen. A man harasses a woman and traps her in the room with him. She eventually escapes from him.
Roots (2016) (TV Show)
S1E1 Part 1: a main female character is brutally attacked and dragged to a slave ship captain's quarters to be raped. This happens twice. S1E2 Part 2: a plantation owner's daughter tells her friend, who is enslaved, that it is her right to see her private parts in a joking tone. Also, the slave master says it is time that a girl is "bred" when she is 15. The same character is later raped on screen and forced to carry the pregnancy that results from the rape to term. S1E3 Part 3: a slavemaster continues to rape a main female character into adulthood. S1E4 Part 4: a woman is violently raped by multiple slavemasters while her husband is forced to watch.
This is a revenge story: the main character is adopted and discovers that she was a child of rape after locating her birth mother. She also witnesses an attempted rape and stops it. There are some flashbacks on her mother's behalf, and eventually, she confronts her birth father who attempts to rape her.
The lead is drugged and raped by her husband as she falls in and out of consciousness (43:30-50:00). She is surrounded by people chanting ritualistically. She dreams she is being raped by a creature. When she wakes and notices the scratches left on her body he casually admits having sex with her while she was passed out. Worthy of note: the director of this film is a convicted child molester.
Throughout season 1, the characters mistakenly think an adult man had a relationship with a 19-year-old. This is not actually true and nothing bad happens. In flashbacks, a teenaged character stalks the 19-year-old character while possessing another character. This begins when the possessed character is 14, it is implied that the character was 17-19 year-old when he began possessing and stalking the 14-16 year-old. A character is lied to and manipulatied by another character he is in a romantic relationship with: his deception calls her consent to the relationship into question. S1E5: the phrase "rape murder, and steal our jobs," is used by a character to show he is right wing, nothing bad happens. S1E6: flashback to an attempted abduction/rape of a 14 year old girl by an older man. The scene is brief and we just see him trying to drag her away before she is rescued. S1E10: a character says her nail polish has a "date rape' detector sheen in it that changes colour. She used it to check to see if another character has been drugged for non-sexual purposes. Nothing bad happens. S1E12: the beginning of the attempted assault of S1E6 is shown again from a different perspective. It is a bit more detailed/graphic/upsetting the second time, showing a longer struggle and more screaming. It is also implied the character who later possesses her and seduces her under false pretences targeted her because of her trauma from that night that he witnessed due to them both being telepaths. It's also not totally clear what his age is, but he appears to be an adult man when he first becomes obsessed with her when she is 14. A character discovering she is has/been in a long-term relationship with a stalker/murderer is an overarching plot of the whole series, but mainly the first 2 seasons. S2E8: a character says she needs a rape kit after being found unconscious after being kidnapped, nothing bad actually happened to her while she was unconscious.
The whole story centers around a boy of about 12 and his family after his mother is very violently raped. It opens with him going with her to the hospital, and her recovery is chronicled in the book. She at one point gives a detailed description of the attack. The protagonist and his friends often sexualize other girls, and an underage character has sex with a girl in a church basement. He later confesses this to a priest who attacks him. The protagonist and his friends spy on a priest changing clothes. The protagonist blackmails his adult aunt, a former stripper, into performing a strip tease and dance routine for him, too, when she does one for his grandfather (her father-in-law) for his birthday. He also sexualizes her throughout the book and tries to subtly touch her chest at some opportunities. He ejaculates under a blanket while she rubs his feet without her knowing. There is a discussed and implied relationship between a teenage girl and the governor of her state when she is interning for him, and she has a child due to this relationship. She is another victim of the attack on the protagonist's mother.
Royal Jelly (Movie)
The main character, who is a high school student, is kidnapped by an older woman. At one point she is tied to a chair and a man kisses her and cuts open the bottom of her dress but does not rape her. The woman then comes in and threatens to have her bred many times. In a later scene, the same man attempts to rape the girl but she kills him before he is able.
An attempted rape occurs at 1:10:00.
Rucker (Movie)
In a brief flashback to her prom night, a woman narrates a letter to her absent father that he never received, where she vaguely implies that instead of taking her to prom, her date drove her to a secluded area and raped her in his truck. The 'vague implication' is only verbal however, as the girl struggling and quietly screaming under the narration she is giving are shown in a paper cutout style silhouetted inside a stylized car.
The fifteen year old protagonist is raped by a shape shifter pretending to be his step mother. Another character discusses details of her own rape in the context of helping the protagonist understand if he was raped. Sexual slavery is a prominent feature of the book's world.
Ruin Me (Movie)
Rule of Rose (Video Game)
Two teenage female characters are sexually abused by an adult male character.
Mentions of the history that two characters have in regards to their respective stories. The mentions are non-graphic.
A character is raped while blacked out at a party as someone films it, and the scene is shown in reverse as well.
The main character tries to force his girlfriend to touch him intimately. Later in the book the main character also has thoughts of raping his girlfriend.
The main character wakes up after a night of drinking in another character’s bed, not remembering what happened. When she learns, she is very upset. However, they still pursue a relationship. It is not addressed and the audience is expected to root for them as a couple.
The Runaways (Movie)
Men make crude remarks about the sexualities of the teenage protagonists. On multiple occasions, these teenage girls sleep with or are propositioned by grown men.
Runaways (TV Show)
S1E1: a teenage girl is drugged and her clothes removed in an attempted rape.
The film contains a subplot with two pedophiles. It is implied that they kidnap and rape children or force the children to perform sexual acts on each other, and then videotape all of it before killing them. We see video tapes in their home, implying that they videotaped themselves raping children, or the children performing sexual acts. All of this is heavily implied, but never shown. We see two kidnapped children dressed up and wearing adult make-up.
Rust Creek (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, two male characters corner a female character and grab her butt, strongly implying that they are going to rape her. She escapes, and the two male characters try to hunt her down.
Chapter 23: brief mention of two underage girls being raped and murdered as revenge for a mafia killing. Chapters 29+31: brief non-graphic mentions of human trafficking Chapter 35: a hitman threatens to rape the woman's body after he has killed her. Chapter 45: brief mention of a past instance of sexual harassment.
Ryan's Babe (Movie)
At the very beginning of the film, a woman is threatened with rape. The main character gets drugged by a rape victim and her friends with the plan of cutting off his penis and displaying it to him. However, this is interrupted after the woman recognises that he is not her rapist. Later on, the same man is drugged and raped off-screen by an older woman. This is not called/acknowledged as rape by any of the characters. A woman is assaulted and pinned to the ground by a man but escapes before a presumed rape.
Sabita Naifu (Movie)
The main character’s primary motivation in the film is the rape and subsequent suicide of his girlfriend. The rape is discussed throughout. The lead-up and parts of the rape are shown; none of the images are very graphic.
Sada (Movie)
The protagonist (14 years old) is raped at the beginning of the film while her mother is banging on and crying by the door. She is left bleeding profusely. Another man covers her up and performs a surgery on the spot for her internal wounds. The rape is discussed vaguely or alluded to visually at many points of the film. The protagonist becomes a geisha, then a sex worker. She is visibly uncomfortable and dissociating during her first series of encounters. After seeing one of them, a man with whom she had a brotherly bond forces himself on her. The same protagonist strangles a man to death (it is unclear if i is out of his or her will), cuts off his penis to carry it with her, and carves her name into his dead body.
This book follows a nineteen-year-old girl as she searches for the man who murdered her sister. The man in question also happens to be her perpetrator; early on, it is implied that Sadie experienced child sexual abuse at the hands of her sister's eventual murderer. Another character is revealed to have a hidden collection of photos depicting child sexual abuse. A 10-year-old girl is also present as the man's most recent victim.
There are multiple scenes where the main character engages in BDSM with other characters. These scenes are dubious and mostly consensual, but some involve force used by the main character and may be uncomfortable for some readers. For example, there is a scene where the main character forces a lesbian to have penetrative sex with a male character, neither consent to this. She also repeatedly molests a specific male character. There is a bisexual male character who makes repeated (some succesful) attempts to rape a straight male character, and later on engages in rough dubious BDSM scenes with another bisexual male character who occasionally asks him to stop, and complains to other characters about his forcefulness. Many sexually dubious scenes are passed off as consensual, but often resemble sexual assault and may be uncomfortable for some readers. It seems that the moral compass of the book twists itself inward simply to justify these things, even when it is obvious, borderline rape as with the ending involving the bisexual male character, and it's side story involving him and one of his victims. Said victim's abuse is seemingly justified by the conflict between him and the main female character. It is worth noting, however, that the graphic novel itself is basically porn.
The Sadness (Movie)
The film contains several gratuitous and violent rape scenes. 20:00: a man makes lewd gestures and threatens sexual assault against a man's girlfriend. 25:00: a man verbally harasses a woman on the train, makes unwanted comments. 31:00: a man is shown raping another man, another man forcibly licks a clearly underage girl's face and it is implied that she is raped, later shown with her clothing ripped off 37:00: the verbal harasser from train continues to make sexual remarks/lewd gestures while chasing women. 41:00: a man is shown after raping a presumably dead body. 45:30: a group of men genitally mutilate a man. 59:00: a woman is raped on-screen. 01:01:00: a man rapes a woman's eye socket on-screen (audio is graphic). 01:06:00: sex on screen, consent unclear but very gory. 01:10:00: the verbal harasser makes more comments for a few minutes. 01:25:00: very brief mention of child sex abuse. 01:28:00: more verbal sexual harassment.
Safe in Hell (Movie)
A woman is raped off-screen; this incident and its ramifications are central to the film's plot. The title also features scenes of sexual harassment and coercion.
Saint Maud (Movie)
A character is touched without consent and raped after pushing a man away and telling him no (50:00-51:10).
Saint X (TV Show)
Salem (TV Show)
S1E4: a prostitute is raped in a church.
The Salesman (Movie)
The whole film is based around an assault on a woman and her husband trying to figure out who hurt her.
The plot of the film involves young men and women taken prisoner and forced to perform various violent and distressing sexual acts over a long period of time. Extremely graphic scenes throughout.
Saloum (Movie)
A former child soldier confronts his former captor as an adult and says that he “defiled [him] every night” when he was 11 years old.
Saltburn (Movie)
This film contains voyeurism and sex with dubious consent. There are also jokes about molestation and incest. A boy breaks into another boy's room at night, climbs on top of him, and gives him a non-consensual handjob in order to try to force him to act a certain way. A boy says he accidentally fingered his cousin once. It is reference that a boy has had sexual relations with his past teachers.
Salvador (Movie)
The Salvation (Movie)
There is a character named "The Princess" that is a captive of the main villain. In one scene, we see him roll off her post-assault (the scene starts with him rolling off her, so the assault is not actually seen). He then discusses how he is glad they removed her tongue as "it is really good for him." The Princess turns her head revealing that she has recently been beaten. Later in the film, she is brought back to the villain after she attempts to runaway. One of his henchmen says that he should not kill her yet because "her body is still good." The villain then instructs that once his men all have a turn with her that they need to kill her. During the final battle, she is shown tied to a bed. She is completely clothed, but the implication could still be distressing. Around 0:11:00 in a stagecoach, a woman is touched without her consent and has lurid remarks made about her and is threatened with weapons. A few minutes later, it is implied that she was assaulted in the stagecoach offscreen. Later on in the film, it is verbally confirmed with no flashback sequences.
Sam Was Here (Movie)
It is implied that a child was molested and murdered.
Samurai Champloo (TV Show)
Throughout the show, there are heavy references to rape and characters in brothels, with sex work acting as a central theme in some episodes. Most of the sexual situations in this show are implied to a certain degree and relatively brief. The main female character is 15 years old, and is catcalled and sexually harassed by the other main characters (played for comedy most of the time) as well as others background characters. In episode 5, there are several sexual paintings whose subjects include the main female character. Another painting shows a character being raped.
The fictional Deportation Force in the book coerces women and girls into sexual favors in the hopes of preventing their detainment. One character who is supposed to be helping undocumented people get across a border to safety has multiple women drugged and tied up in rooms in his home for the entertainment of Deportation Force officers.
Sanctuary (TV) (TV Show)
S2E5: a character is grabbed, forcefully stripped and sprayed with water. This is not sexual in nature, but could be triggering. S3E6: a main character is sexually harassed by another main character. S4E8: a possessed character forcefully tries to kiss the boyfriend of the person she possesses.
The Sandman (TV Show)
S1E5: this episode revolves around a person who has a magical power making people tell the truth. It reveals some unbalanced work life power and sexual dynamics with six people. S1E6: it is mentioned that a woman was raped and impregnated by her cousin as a child. S1E7: woman who has woken up from a coma explains that she became pregnant and hand a child while in the coma. At the time of the reveal, one assumes she was raped. However, in later episodes it is revealed that she met a man in her dreams and had a relationship with him. Due to supernatural circumstances she became pregnant in real life. A man asks how old someone is: other people say '16, too old for you'. It is unclear if he wants to murder or rape young boys. S1E9: a rape joke is made. S1E9+10: an adult male serial killer displays a preference for attacking young children and talks about how he lures them away from their families. He attempts to do so to a young side character, who is quickly rescued. There is no confirmation that the serial killer rapes or sexually assaults his victims, however the hallmarks of pedophilia are present. S1E11: a man keeps a muse hostage and says force is the best way to get her to inspire him. A character is kept hostage and it is strongly implied that they are raped off-screen: the rapist is shown to have minor damage from the attack afterward.
"Tales in the Sand": a woman falls in love with a male character but runs away from him for fear of the repercussions that might result from them being together and mutilates herself in an attempt to drive him off. He touches her private parts without her consent to heal her, and they have sex. (While this sex is implied as being something they both want, no explicit consent is given.) When she later refuses to stay with him, he condemns her to Hell. "The Doll's House": a character reveals that they had partial responsibility for the events in the previous story. The main character meets her grandmother, who alludes to the fact that she had a child via rape while under a magical effect that kept her asleep for decades (though the fact that it was rape is not discussed). A nightmare who removes and eats people's eyes, is shown to have tied up a male sex worker in the bathroom before murdering him; the language used in this scene is sexually charged, though no acts are shown. "Moving In": a group of men harass the protagonist and threaten to rape her, though they are quickly fought off by another character. One character is shown to have murdered two more men, implied to be sex workers also. "Men of Good Fortune": it is mentioned in passing that rape has become increasingly common in a tavern conversation. "Collectors": this story centers around a convention of serial killers that collect trophies from their victims. The convention opens with a rape joke. Some of the killers have names such as "Hello Little Girl," though details are not given about their methods. One attendee reveals that his preferred victims are children, and while he explicitly says that he does not like language dealing with sexual things, his own tone and words imply an element of gratification from the murders. Another, murders transgender individuals who have not undergone gender-affirming surgery, and a brief depiction implies a sexual element to the murders. Another describes in detail the sexual gratification they get from stalking, murdering, and dismembering women. One attendee is not a murderer but expresses a belief that women are objects for male desire and is shown to write for a pornographic magazine with Nazi imagery. "Into the Night": a depiction of a character's dream, while ambiguous, could imply a nonconsensual sexual encounter. "Lost Hearts": it is revealed that a character was the one who raped another's grandmother as part of a plot to cause problems for another character.
"Calliope" : a muse is held captive by two men over the course of decades, and it is explicitly depicted that, to gain artistic inspiration, they rape her. She is depicted as nude in her captivity. "A Midsummer Night's Dream": elements of harassment present in the original Shakespeare play are present here. A queen is shown to be trying to lure a young boy away, though her intentions are never revealed. "Facade": a god grabs the main character while she is nude to grant her powers which she does not consent to. Nothing is shown of what happens next, but rape can be one interpretation.
"August": a vivid depiction of Julius Caesar raping his nephew is shown at the end and is alluded to throughout the story. "The Song of Orpheus: Chapter One" : a satyr attempts to rape a female character, resulting in her death from a snakebite as she flees. He tries to defend his actions and asks her if she wil tell anyone as she dies. "The Song of Orpheus: Chapter 4": a group of ritually frenzied women depicted as nude, come upon a male character and order him to celebrate with them, one of the things they compel him to do being to have sex with them. When he refuses, his body is gruesomely torn apart. One woman is depicted kissing his decapitated head as blood drips from his neck into the mouth of what appears to be a minor. "Ramadan" : a male character is depicted as having a harem filled with both adult women and underage boys (no exact age range is given, but they are described as having no hair on their chins). Both are described with sexually charged language.
A woman is followed through an airport by a stranger who will not stop staring at her after having openly read a pornographic magazine next to her on a flight. At this same airport, she is groped by a security official. This same woman later meets a grandparent who impregnated the woman's grandmother via rape, and this incident is discussed directly. Worth of note: in a tale told by another character, a man spies on a woman as she bathes nude and then steals her clothes, refusing to give them back unless she has sex with him. The woman says that she will not unless he agrees to certain conditions as well, which he agrees to while planning to find a way around them, and then they have sex. The coercive circumstances of this encounter may make some readers uncomfortable.
"Sleep of the Just": a woman who has been magically induced to sleep 24 hours a day is raped and gives birth to a baby, which is given away for adoption, all without her knowledge. When she wakes years later, she believes the baby was a dream. "A Hope in Hell": worthy of note: there are nude bodies depicted as dead or being tortured on the gates of Hell. "24 Hours": a man uses a magical ruby to control and manipulate people in a diner. At various points he causes a man to threaten to rape a woman, another woman to admit to having engaged in and enjoyed necrophilia, and forces two characters (likely the former man and woman, though who they are is obscured behind a counter) to rape each other.
A Prologue: a previous story in which elements of ambiguous or ungiven consent were present is alluded to. Chapter 5: a god harasses a goddess, and the woman from the story alluded to in the prologue, is shown bound and nude. Chapter 6 : an ambassador of a female character directly discusses having sex with a young boy; his exact age is unclear, but he is clearly a minor. The woman from the prologue is freed. Epilogue: two characters discuss the events that led to her imprisonment in Hell at his behest. Worthy of note: in chapters 1-4 and the epilogue, nude or partially nude bodies are depicted in scenes of torture, though none of these tortures appear sexual in nature.
Sanitarium (Movie)
The second segment implies that a man is sexually abusing his son.
The film is about a female drifter and the people she meets; two men discuss "having" her while she is alone on the beach, one man expects sexual favors in exchange for giving her a ride, and there is one scene where it is strongly implied she is going to be raped but it is not shown on-screen.
Santa Sangre (Movie)
A church (not officially recognized by residing Christian authorities) is formed around the patron saint Santa Sangre, a little girl who was brutally gang-raped after rapists cut off her arms for resisting the rape, then leaving her to die. Her story is depicted by a series of large, amateurish paintings hung around the church, in the absence of stained glass. The church has a pool of diluted red paint in the center to represent the blood she died in on the spot the church was built. The father of the main character overpowers and hypnotizes the mother, who is initially threatening him with a knife. The father says "My little child" and the mother repeatedly pleads "No" and "Don't do that" before falling fully under the spell. Clowns and musicians do nothing but look on and play music as this happens, following them until another clown disperses the crowd and says to "leave them alone." This is followed by a poorly hidden act of public rape (portrayed as loud passionate sex), which is viewed by the main character, a child at this part of the movie. This film deals heavily with gender identity and how it is affected by child abuse. During a funeral procession, the biologically male child main character is given a dress-like gown to wear by his mother (the leader of a cult). During the procession, he cries while leaning on his father, who tells him to "stop crying like a little girl" and telling him that "I'll give you a charm that'll make you a man." After the procession, the father takes him to a room alone, cuts the gown off of him, ties him to a chair, and brutally tattoos a hawk across his entire chest with a knife. At the end, he shows his son to a mirror and affirms "now you're a man, just like me." This traumatic event is one of several that plague the main character as an adult, especially as he struggles with his identity. The friend of the main character, a little girl unsupervised by her guardian, witnesses the main character's father walk outside completely naked, covering his bloodied crotch (dissolving from an acid attack). The father walks directly in front of the little girl as he rounds the corner of a building (less than two feet away from her). He then commits suicide in full view of his son, another minor. A pimp drugs four people with down syndrome (possibly implied to be minors) and helps them purchase a prostitute. The guardian of the deaf-mute girl (possibly still a minor even after a time skip) pimps her to a soldier with gigantism while she is sleeping. He walks into her room and picks her up in his arms. She wakes up, panics, resists, and succeeds in escaping before he can go through with it. She spends the rest of the night sleeping outside on top of a fire truck, but not before also being touched and grabbed inappropriately by a man who terrorizes her with his fake ear. A burlesque show is performed titled "Jane the Virgin" in which the dancer dresses as a schoolgirl in a children's classroom and strips for an audience full of excited men, who are also allowed to grope her and strip her during the show. A man also dances from the door of the classroom, singing a love song. The killer lures to his home and kills a trans woman athlete. It is not explicitly because she is trans, but the scene is horrific either way.
An adult man expresses interest in a young girl, which is reciprocated, and this is portrayed in a romantic, uncritical light.
Satanic Panic (Movie)
The main character is raped by a demon and gets pregnant.
Sausage Party (Movie)
There are numerous scenes involving approximations of rape, many of which are played for laughs.
Sauvage (Movie)
A male sex worker is raped with a large dildo by two male clients (42:00).
Savage Dawn (Movie)
This B-movie contains graphic sexual violence.
Savage Grace (Movie)
A mother has a threesome with her son (adult) and another man (only briefly shown/implied strongly). Later on, near the end of the film, the mother begins a sexual act with the son and he is apprehensive and briefly pulls away, but she continues and he allows her to do so (prolonged scene) This is based on a true story.
A long scene features the gang rape of a disabled woman. There is also a scene of sexual assault against another woman by a group of men.
Savages (Movie)
A rapist drugs his victim and takes a video of it to show her when she's conscious. The scenes are purely for shock value.
Chapter 10: brief, non-graphic mentions of rape and forced pregnancy as part of medical experiments done during WW2. In the early chapters, there are several mentions of one of the men in the group staring at one of the women. She mentions to another how it makes her uncomfortable. Chapter 12: the same man grabs her breast and twists her nipple Chapter 13: the same man rapes her. He is caught doing so by one of the other women who tries to get him to stop. When he tells her that he is going to do so again, they fight and she kills him.
Save Me (TV Show)
S1E4: short clips of child molestation videos. Worthy of note: rape and child pornography are implied and discussed throughout the series.
There are numerous mentions of the Myanmar army's practice of raping ethnic minority women and girls as a fear tactic and as a way to "assimilate" them. There is mention of women from villages being kidnapped for sex trafficking. A teenage boy reminisces about having groped a girl at a party.
Saving Hope (TV Show)
S2E1: a sex tape is shown of an abusive man having sex with a drunk woman. S2E15: it is revealed that a girl was kidnapped at age of 12. Now 27, she has Stockholm syndrome and calls the man her husband. S3E12: a patient asks a doctor for a sponge bath and hits on her. S4E5: a patient tells a doctor that her father molested her as a child. A main character is raped on screen by her boyfriend: this is discussed throughout the rest of the season and the perpetrator assaults another character. S4E16: a rape is shown in flashback. S5E4: a character says that her foster father sexually assaulted her. S5E14: a character talks about getting raped in college. S5E15: the rape from S5E4 is mentioned again. S5E15+16: a patient pursues a doctor and threatens her when she refuses to be with him.
Saving Zoe (Movie)
Savior (Movie)
Rape is mentioned and one of the main characters is a survivor. She is shamed in a few scenes for having being raped.
Saw IV (Movie)
A character is a rapist and surrounds himself with pictures and videos of himself raping and murdering women.
Saw X (Movie)
A man tries to rape a prostitute before being stopped. He violently shoves her into a car before climbing on top on her.
Scandal (TV Show)
S1E3: the premise of this episode is about a billionaire's son being accused of rape, and his mother employing the services of the team to clear his name. It turns out that the boy did not rape the girl in question but did rape another girl. S2E5: the episode opens with a distressing scene of a woman who has been rape, and followed by details including her describing the incident (quite graphic details). S3E7: a woman is harassed on-screen and raped on-creen by her father-in-law. She is then forced to suppress her feelings in order to assist her husband, the rapist's son. S4E21: the main character's client has been raped by a senior member of the military, resulting in pregnancy and abortion. No graphic details are mentioned: the discussion concerns the legal case and politics.
Scarecrow (Movie)
About 2/3 into the movie, a man tries to rape another man in prison: he resists and they fight. The scene ends while attacker is hitting the victim and it is ambiguous whether the rape happened off-screen or not. The two following scenes reference it.
This podcast explores reported stories of paranormal encounters. Many haunted locations have a history of true crime events that are thought to be connected to the haunting. It relates both the true crime event(s), including sexual crimes in many episodes, as well as the reported haunting.
Scarlet Maiden (Video Game)
The player can have an opportunity to have sex with a defeated enemy NPC for a reward, which the game's description labels these interactions as non-consensual sex, although these scenes are not disturbing in nature. This is also optional.
The film centres a lot around Jeffrey Epstein and describes his assault of teenage girls extensively. There is a scene where a woman is acting child-like and asks her boyfriend to pretend that she is 13 during sex. He is horrified by this and leaves the situation.
Scenes include the forced stripping of Jewish prisoners by Nazi guards. In one scene, a man kisses a woman who clearly does not want to be kissed. Plot also features a sexual relationship between a Nazi and a Jewish maid; troubling power dynamic (a strong implication that sex is coerced).
S1E9+10: a mentally unstable school girl is raped by another student who seems to think that rape equals love.
Scott & Bailey (TV Show)
S1E2: attempted rape and rape off-screen.
This movie is a horror comedy with many crass and sexually violent jokes. It features an explicit rape on screen played as a joke roughly halfway through the film: a zombified elderly woman sexually assaults a male teenager, who screams and tries to get away. At one point, a male character gropes a female zombie's breasts: the scene is played as a joke Later, there is another non-consensual sex scene involving a zombie.
A movie about a serial rapist and murderer who lets his victims write about their experiences before he kills them. The entire movie is about sexual violence and torture. A woman tries to seduce her younger brother.
Scream (1996) (Movie)
A reporter claims that a character's mother was raped by the killer; this turns out to be untrue. Still, the rape is referred to frequently and even used by the main character's boyfriend as a way to try to pressure her into sex (after she clearly expressed not being interested). He touches her beyond agreed boundaries and berates her for not consenting. He finally gains her 'consent' via lies and elaborate deception. Near the end of the film the second killer tells the final girl "I've always had a thing for you sid" while trying to kill her.
Scream Park (Movie)
There are a few jokes and references to the manager of a park being a pervert. One masked man catches a woman and tells her she has a pretty mouth. She tries to get away and he knocks her down, then rips open her shirt. She is next seen crawling away and looking beat up but it is not clear what happened. The same man pins another woman against a railing, and tells her that after he has done the other man will get a turn but he' i stopped before anything further happens.
A teenager has a sexual relationship with her highschool teacher. A teenager's first sexual encounter with her boyfriend is filmed without her knowledge and shared on the internet. Two teenage girls are recorded making out without their consent. The video is then leaked and comments are made about it to one of the girls throughout the series.
Scream VI (Movie)
In the party scene, a male character tells a female character to come upstairs with him while she is intoxicated: he has clear intentions of raping her. Near the end of the film, one of the male killers makes an inappropriate comment saying “i’ve always wanted to stick something in you” to which she replies “fuck you.”
Screamplay (Movie)
A woman forcibly has sex with a man in this movie: it is played jokingly/not seriously and does not last long. There is also some sexual harassment.
Scrubs (TV Show)
S1E3: an older doctor calls one of his interns (female) "sweetheart". A doctor slaps one of the interns (female) on the bottom. S5E17: during a flashback showing two characters going out to dinner with another couple, the latter roofie the drinks. After they pass out, the wife says: 'party time". S6E18: in the first minutes of the episode, the protagonist asks his neighbors if they were having sex or raping a baboon. A man admits to a woman that when they dated he took a picture of her butt when she was asleep. S8E18: after one character finishes singing, another character says that he feels like she raped his soul.
Scum (Movie)
Set in a Young Offender Institution, this film includes a graphic scene of a male inmate being gang raped by other male inmates, in a greenhouse, while a guard looks on. The victim later commits suicide.
Throughout the novel the protagonist references the love interest having had sexual relationships and makes alludes to not all of them having been consensual. Additionnally, the love interest sexually assaults the lead several times (e.g. tearing his clothes off, shoving him onto bed and threatening to rape him etc.). There is at least one instance in the extras where the lead is hurt and bleeding during a sex scene, yet the love interest does not stop even when he is asked to, suggests the lead says something he finds deeply uncomfortable for the love interest to stop, then demands the lead says it again several times and yet does not stop even after that. While the authorial intent is clearly to show that the lead is secretly enjoying the sex, it is not conveyed properly and the whole scene reads as marital rape. Also, the love interest manipulates the lead's emotions to pressure/coerce the lead into sex practices the lead is clearly uncomfortable with. There are several instances where the love interest directly disregards/ignores the lead's words when the lead says "I don't want to/I'm uncomfortable with that". A story is written by a female character depicting the two male leads in a romantic and sexual relationship. This can be particularly upsetting since at the original time of its publication the love interest was only around 15-17. This story is referenced multiple times throughout the novel and it used as a point of comedy. Other characters speculate that the lead had a sexual relationship with the love interest back when the love interest was a teenage and the lead was his teacher. This was untrue but still offhandedly mentioned a few times. A male side character is hit with an aphrodisiac in one of the extra chapters. Nothings comes of it and it is used for comedic effect. At the end of chapter 14 the love interest activity assaults the lead by pinning him down a threatening to rape him. Even as an empty threat it is quite uncomfortable to read. At the end of the novel there is a plot relevant sex scene that neither of the main characters consent to. The love interest is under the influence of an external source and is not fully conscious or aware of his actions, and while the lead does consent he truly didn’t have any other option considering it was either they have sex or the world ends. It’s quite uncomfortable to read and was not enjoyable for either of them. The scene can be easily skipped past. (Chapter 21) The extra chapters at the end of the novel contain multiple sex scenes that may be upsetting. Full consent is given but some people feel as though there’s manipulation at play since the love interest tends to play with emotions to get his way. All my with that the lead is an unreliable narrator who will often go out of his way to claim he isn’t enjoying something. Both of these things are again for comedic reasons but some people find them uncomfortable. (All of this information is based off the English publication by Seven Seas. Due to translation errors and culture differences there may be some context left out).
Se7En (Movie)
One of the victims is made clear to be a rapist. One man is forced at gunpoint to violently rape a sex worker, resulting in her death. This occurs off-screen but the circumstances are discussed in graphic detail. Pictures of a foreign object used in the rape are shown during this discussion.
Sea Fog (Movie)
Chapter 1: the main character is 14 and her mother is attempting to arrange a marriage for her. Chapter 4: the much older man that she is set to marry exposes her by pulling up her skirt to cane her. He threatens to penetrate her with the cane, then touches her after he beats her with it. He tries to rape her, but she kills him before he is able to. Chapter 17: now 21, the protagonist is taken captive by the navy and thrown into the hold with other pirates. The men hold her down, one fingering her and telling her that they will gang rape her. Before he rapes her, the navy captain shoots him and takes her out of the hold. Chapter 20: as punishment, the navy captain repeatedly slaps her vagina. Though he does not attempt to rape her, he does have an erection while this is happening.
When she was 10, the female main character was molested by a male friend of her mother's. This event (minimal detail) and her subsequent mental health struggles (in-depth) are referenced multiple times.
The one female lead is tricked into selling her virginity to pay off her lover's debt. While she is reassured by a friend who works at the "auction" that she can leave at any moment, she repeatedly tells him she is fine despite telling the reader she does not want to do this but feels as though she must. She is sold to her enemy (other female lead) who gets her for a week. She consistently tells the readers during the sexual acts that it feels wrong. Her lover (Male lead) is also "property" of the enemy, he, however, has fallen in love, and despite his debt being paid off stays with her, wanting the three of them to be lovers. The second female lead implies she has been sexually assaulted in the past. She also sort of holds the first female lead down during sexual acts, although the first female lead does have a safe word and does not say "no" or "stop" she is hesitant While everything here is "consensual" the first female lead expresses regret and hurt after losing her virginity, saying she wished it was on different terms. Worthy of note: The three end up being lovers.
A man watches a woman through a peephole to the showers while masturbating. A ghost touches a woman while pretending to be her boyfriend and she yells at him to stop. It is unclear exactly what happens offscreen. Characters discuss and are haunted by a man who used to sexually abuse and rape young girls before killing them.
A man makes suggestive comments about a female body in the morgue. While possessed, a man pins down a woman and pulls at her clothes but she is able to get away before anything further happens. Later he forcibly kisses her.
It is heavily implied that a young girl has been sexually assaulted by a priest (a secondary character). She is shown crying with blood and bruises on her body.
The movie takes place in a brothel in which captive women (some of which are potentially teenagers) are held as sex slaves. It features a violent on-screen rape.
Seberg (Movie)
There is a very brief depiction of actors shooting a scene involving an attempted rape. There is a consensual sex scene that is recorded and released to the public unconsensually by an outside party.
The story revolves around an underaged girl who is sexually abused by numerous older men, including her father.
One of the main characters was molested by his father as a child. A girl has sex with her step-brother.
S2E3: past sexual abuse of a child is mentioned.
Secret Smile (TV Show)
This miniseries shows the effects of an abusive man in the life of a woman. Throughout the episodes, he non-consensually touches and verbally harasses multiple female characters. He is also shown slapping/going to hit them a few times. E3: the main male protagonist rapes the main female character.
Very graphic.
The plot is centered around a FBI agent whose daughter is brutally sexually assaulted then murdered. The (brief and) graphic scene happens early in the film. This is discussed here and there throughout the film.
This show features sexual abuse.
S1E3: a tween or a teenager is sexually abused.
Secrets We Keep (TV Show)
The protagonist's husband is a convicted rapist and lawyer. Her neighbor's son (who is 14 years old) rapes their nanny and shares naked videos of her with his friends and tells the MC that he owns her so it is okay. It is implied the MC's husband also kept raping. The nanny gets killed by the rapist's mother to cover up his crimes. When the crime is taken to court, they instead try to twist it that the nanny was the violator here and took advantage of the rapist. There is no justice, and no remorse.
Secuestrados (Movie)
There is an intense on-screen rape near the end of the movie.
See (TV Show)
In the first season, an aunt and nephew conceive a child together, but the woman miscarries because of the lack of genetic diversity in the village. S1E1: a midwife says that women and children who remain in the village will be raped. S1E2: a queen character has a bell that she rings for a servant to come and sexually pleasure her. S1E6: the queen becomes a slove and one of the other slaves says that she is fed, sheltered and 'unmolested' there. She reveals that until the age of 9, she and her 5 siblings lived with her lustful father. The slave master feels around the queen's chest co cut ou an amulet. In the second season, a queen drugs her nephew to seduce him Because of this, the sex is not fully consensual (S2E5+6). S2E2: a woman's uncle ties her down so she can be raped. A man undresses and gets on top of her: he strangles her and begins to take off her clothes. She is rescued by a soldier. Later her uncle tells her father she will be raped for the rest of her life until she is no longer useful. S2E4: the aunt kisses her nephew. S2E8: previous incest is discussed. S3E7: an aunt forcefully kisses her nephew.
Seinfeld (TV Show)
S6E18: a man suspects his dentist and hygienist sexually assaulted him while he was unconscious. He is upset, and his suspicion is confirmed by an anonymous story submitted to a magazine. This all played for comedy.
Seirei Gensouki (TV Show)
S1E7: one character tries to rape two girls, who are saved by the protagonist (about 20 minutes in). The offender is brutally beaten and put in prison.
Self Defense (Movie)
Self Made (TV Show)
S1E1: mention of rape (~7:10). S1E2: attempted sexual assault (10:00). Flashes of a struggle are shown. S1E3: brief mention of past rape (~10:00). A man whistles at a woman in the street (~13:10).
S1E9: a woman is stalked by a man. He enters her apartment at night and holds her at her bed. She manages to struggle out of his grasp and is then rescued. S1E10: continuation of the previous stalking case where the victim tries to catch the stalker on the act on tape while puting herself at risk of being raped or assaulted. He hold sher on her bed, arms are locked by him, but gets rescued before anything happened.
A character experiences sexial violence.
Sense 8 (TV Show)
S1E1: a man says "women don't close things, they open them", to a woman. A man tells two other men that when they see something, their "dicks are gonna be shriveled". S1E2: a kid makes a joke about a cop being "hot for him". A woman is made fun of because of her fake breast. A woman coerces her way into a man's apartment and tries to have sex with him. S1E6-7: a character takes pictures of two main characters having sex. Her phone is stolen and the pictures are used for blackmail. S2E11: one character finds out that his mother was also his half-sister, who was sexually abused by her step-father.
Seoul Station (Movie)
A character tries to prostitute his girlfriend (08:20-11:30) and later another man tries to rape a woman (1:28:00-1:28:30).
Ex-pornographic actor creates extreme and illegal porn films depicting acts such as rape, child sexual abuse, necrophilia and bestiality.
A recurring group of antagonists are known for using rape as one of their tactics.
An abusive relationship is a central plot point.
Serpico (Movie)
The first day as a police officer, the main character encounters three men raping a woman and apprehends one of them. The scene is graphic.
Settlers (Movie)
A man knocks a teenage after having killed her parents: she wakes up tied to a bed, but is saved at the last minute by a robot who shoots her attempted rapist (1:20-1:30). Psychological abuse pervades the relationship between this female character and the man who controls her life.
Seuwiteuhom (TV Show)
Throughout the first season, a character is shown being mentally abusive to his wife: it is heavily implied that he is physically abusive off screen. S1E5: it is strongly implied that a character abused children in the past, though it is unclear if the abuse was actually sexual in nature. S1E9: attempted rape (30:00). S2E6: a girl wants to "own" a man and hugs him with a knife in her hand: he is visibly uncomfortable. She leaves after that and later watches him sleep while holding his hand.
Severance (TV Show)
S2E4: a man is raped by deception, since a woman pretends to be somebody else in order to have sex with him. The audience and characters do not find out until the end of the episode. The scene is not graphic and is portrayed as romantic. The man would not have consented if he knew the true identity of the woman. S2E7: it is implied that a woman's inner self is being raped off screen. A man tells her "maybe I've made you feel things even your husband hasn't" This is after many scenes of this man being in rooms she is forced to go in, where in he abuses her. She does not remember the abuse itself but feels the after effects. Worthy of note: there is self-harm and suicide-based content.
A woman (who also happens to be a living sex doll) forces sex on a man: her boyfriend victim-blames him and demands he pays up for having sex with her, then later kills him. Later, when a gang associated with the man comes to avenge his death, the woman forces sex on several of the gang members to obstruct them. This is played for laughs, and all sexual advances are cartoony and unrealistic.
Sex and the City (TV Show)
A character engages in consensual rape role play. The main character is continually involved in a subtly emotionally abusive relationship with a much older man. It is framed as though nothing is wrong with their relationship. S1E2: the protagonist's friend (a painter) mentions and shows his "real art" to her, which is videos of him having sex with women. When n being asked if they know, he replies “maybe!”.
Sex Doll (Movie)
Sex Education (TV Show)
The viewer regularly sees the naked body parts of characters (boobs, butts, penises). While the actors in the show are of age, the characters they play are teenagers, so this may be uncomfortable for some. In season 1, the main character is accused of having slept with her second cousin by bullies, and makes a referential remark to this fact. This is not true. S1E1: a student calls attention to himself in the cafeteria in order to flash his penis to all other students (obviously without the consent of the students he flashed). S1E5: a trans-presenting character is violently assaulted by a stranger. S2E3: a teenage girl is sexually harassed by a man on the bus, who masturbates while standing directly behind her in the crowded bus. She calls attention to the situation, but none of the other passengers appear to do anything. She flees the bus. Recounting the event later, she acts nonchalant about it and says it is not a big deal, making excuses for the man, saying he may just have been lonely. However, her friend convinces her to report the assault to the police. The event and the effect it had on the girl are discussed on numerous occasions throughout the rest of the season. She is shown to be paranoid about encountering the man again, avoiding the bus entirely and imagining seeing him in crowds. She has trouble being intimate with her boyfriend as well. S2E7: a group of girls in detention discuss their own encounters with men harassing them. One character recounts being followed home, another being groped by a man walking past her, yet another being flashed by a man at the pool when she was younger, etc. A girl has sex with a boy who is clearly being incapable of giving consent. He lost his viriginity with her and cannot remember it the next day. It is later revealed that she intentionally has sex with nerds when she is feeling down. She forces him to pay for the morning after pill. A teenage girl is accused of statutory rape because it turns out her boyfriend is only 15 years old. It is not entirely clear if he lied to her about his age or if she just assumed he was 16. The boy's family does not press charges against her. Season 4 deals with the sexual assault of a main character that happened in earlier seasons. S4E4: in the opening scene a middle-aged man is pushed onto a sofa by a female colleague who begins to have intercourse with him. He does not actively consent, is visibly uncomfortable and appears to have a freeze response. He experiences shame after the event, but the narrative does not treat this event as a sexual assault. S4E5: two protagonists are in an empty pool and one is very adamant about having sex. The other does not seem very comfortable. When he tells her to stop, they stop. S4E6: a girl gets catcalled by a group of men. She calls them out. S4E6-7: a boyfriend is being overjealous to his girlfriend. When her best friend talks with her about him being weird and intense she gets mad. In episode 7, he gets jealous for no reason again when she helped out someone before an exam. He accuses her of lying. He stops her from going by holding her arm tightly and hurting her. He says "Dont walk away from me". S4E7: during a flashback, an adult man touches a girl's leg in a sexual way. Her sister walks in because she got suspicious and notices it. The girl replies with "Don't be jealous'. A manipulative boyfriend holds his girlfriend's without her consent, being overjealous because she helped someone. He then suddenly changes behaviourt and later texts her that she is over reacting. S4E8: one (adult female) character talks about the abuse she experienced as a 12-year-old at the hands of her mother's boyfriend. Worthy of note: S3E6: the head teacher of a school forces a non binary person and bisexuals to wear signs around their neck to shame them. No other students are allowed to talk to them. The non binary student is consistently not allowed to express their gender identity.
Sex, Explained (TV Show)
Several scenes of rape from other TV shows are played during an educational discussion of rape fantasies.
A woman starts harassing and cat calling the main character's love interest: she then smacks her on the butt. She then calls to a large group of men who forcefully undress and rape the woman.
Shadow and Bone (TV Show)
Prostitution and child sexual assault are mentioned. Sexual assault and exploitation are discussed. A character discusses her past abuse from an authority figure (nothing is shown on screen). S1E3+4: both episodes contain brief mentions of the abuse that a character endured. S1E6: a character is asked to "come inside" by a man. When she refuses, his comrade attacks her: she escapes but is forced to flee). S1E7: a side character describes ongoing sexual abuse from an authority figure (31:00-32:00). S2E5: a woman is asked whether or not she was forced to have sex with an authority figure, which she confirms. At this point in the show, the audience already knows of the abuse. The abuse of a woman is described: she reveals to her abuser's wife how she poisoned him, ultimately leading to his death, by putting the poisonous substance on her skin so that every time he touched her, he was slowly killing himself. When questioned about the ongoing abuse that the woman endured as a child/woman, the wife of the abuser states that "she was a servant" (implying that the abuse did not matter).
Shady Grove (Movie)
A man who has been drugged goes to take a shower and a woman gets in behind him and begins touching him. When he gets out he realizes she is not his girlfriend, but she knocks him down and rapes him
Shameless (US) (TV Show)
An underage teenager has sexual relationships with several older men throughout the show before he turns 18. Throughout the show, there are many episodes in which adults are too drunk to consent and still sleep together. One female character lies to her boyfriend about being on the pill so he will have sex with her and she can baby trap him. S1E2: a woman rapes a man with a dildo. S1E11: a teenage girls rapes a drugged man, unable to fight back, but who verbally objects. She makes a video of it, which she sends to people without consent. Later, the man is victim-blamed by several characters, one of them urinates on him as a sort of punishment. During season 3, a gay character is having sex with his boyfriend when they are interrupted by his boyfriend's abusive father, who immediately resorts to physical violence. The boyfriend is forced to have sex with a female prostitute at gunpoint by his father, while the other man is forced to watch. It i mentioned that a young woman is pregnant as a result of her father raping her. A man has a relationship with sexual overtones with his daughter, during a period when she is not aware that they are related to one another. An adult man masturbates in front of a young teenage girl on a bus. A girl has sex with an older male friend while he is blacked out. S5E6: a character impulsively kisses her ex boyfriend and they start to have sex on the kitchen floor. She realizes that she has made a mistake and tries to get him to stop: he eventually does. Later, a mother meets with a couple who might adopt her baby: the wife goes back into the room with the surrogate mother. While this is happening, the adoptive father stays in the waiting room and the prostitute woman who brought the surrogate mother to the appointment seduces the adoptive father. She touches his body and his penis on the outside of his pants without his consent. Male sexual assault is played for laughs in the later seasons. A teenager lies about having sex with an adult and tries to convict her of statutory rape. The main gay couple begins with a physical fight before realizing they are attracted to one another. They stop fighting, have sex, and end up marrying each other. The same gay male enters prison and says he can handle "rape". A straight male brags about raping men in prison and this is again meant to be laughable. S9E5: a female character takes a 8 year old boy into a custodian closet at school and rapes him. He later tells his siblings that he had sex. S11E6: a character recalls that she married an adult man when she was 15. In the same episode, a man wants to use a condom, and his female partner does not: she puts him inside her and does not let him come. The show then has an actually quite good discussion with the victim saying he got raped. His dad says "he's lucky he got to rawdog her", but his sister is very clear that it was rape because he had an established boundary that she crossed. The victim goes to report it to the police, and the officer assumes it is a female victim. S11E7: the main male character who was raped by his girlfriend forcing him to not use a condom discusses the ethics and efficacy of slipping a morning after pill into her water, so he can avoid paying child support if she gets pregnant. He then takes her the morning after pill and says she needs to take it because she raped him and he is not going to get pregnant: she says that she does not need it because she is on birth control. She adds that she did not rape him because she is allergic to latex. He then tries to ask her out. This felt very dismissive of the seriousness of the action that happened. Later, he says "is it weird that I'm in love with my rapist?' to his family members, and one of them says "yes", while another says "you weren't raped." In this episode, the same character is forced to dress up in a mascot costume to educate kids about child abuse. He is traumatized and yells at the kids about his rape. S11E8: one of the main characters defends a politician who is a pedophile. This is played for laughs.
A man attempts to pursue a woman and she refuses. After that, men takes another woman to the man's chamber: it is strongly implied that he raped her. She then goes on to kill him a couple of scenes later.
The protagonist and her sister are forced into an arranged marriage. The protagonist describes having her virginity taken and bleeding. Later, the protagonist and her mother are raped by soldiers.
S1E5: Attempted rape between 21:50 - 23:25. S1E6: Rape or sexual assault mentioned, discussed or implied; attempted rape between 31:45 - 32:40. S1E9: Worthy of note; two characters are kissing but one doesn't know that the other is possessed by a demon. The possessed character then tries to kill the other character.
Share (Movie)
This film revolves around a teenage girl trying to work out if she was assaulted after she passes out and a video goes around of her unconscious and having her clothes removed. This is discussed throughout. At the end, we see a video of her being assaulted whilst very drunk however the screen is positioned so it is looking out the window so we only hear the sounds.
Sharp Objects (TV Show)
The main character has been sexually active since she was thirteen. She had several encounters with older boys that she viewed as consensual (if ill-advised), and is taken off-guard when another character refers to them as rape. She is in her mid-30s and has a sexual encounter with an 18-year-old boy. S1E1: about 10 minutes in, some explicit photos showing BDSM scenes are shown. S1E4: about 20-22 minutes in, there is a conversation about statutory rape. The explicit photos are shown again about 24 minutes in, and there is a flashback scene that it is implied preceded the rape of a young teenage girl. S1E5: 25 minutes in, a conversation about a man's child bride being gang raped by soldiers takes place.
Rape is a common occurrence for the protagonist. Several characters threaten rape or otherwise speak about it in an intimidating way.
S1E1: men catcall the main character and make aggressive movements towards her. They instantly get punished. S1E3: a woman impersonates Megan Thee Stallion to date and have sex with someone. Also sexual harassment is used as a joke. S1E7: it is revealed that a guy slept with the main character just to copy her phone and take body fluids. He also takes a picture of her naked. S1E8: it is revealed that someone taped the main character having sex (the video is shown). S1E9: it is revealed that the man the protagonist had sex with (without informed consent), was hired to steal her body fluids. What happened in S1E8 is adressed but not called rape.
She Will (Movie)
The main character is an actress who was sexually abused by a director when she was thirteen. Nothing is shown on-screen. Another main character is offered alcohol and drugs by a man, which she accepts, but when she tries to go home, he attempts to force herself on her against her protests. He is stopped before he can rape her and the scene is not graphic, but it could potentially be upsetting.
The Sheik (Movie)
A kidnapped woman is made to believe that she is about to be raped on several occasions and is forcibly kissed on those occasions. She eventually falls victim to Stockholm Syndrome. The titular character also considers raping the women he kidnapped, only to decide against it.
Shelley (Movie)
Sherlock (TV Show)
S3E3: a blackmailer talks about someone's husband receiving sexual letters and photos of a 15 years old. He also is into power plays and licks the wife's face. The way he talks about both the wife and the 15 years old is threatening and has sexual undertones. S4E3: a woman mentions that she raped one of the guards.
The rape scene is unnecessarily long and does not add anything to the plot.
Series opens with account of the street calling protagonist has been subject to; a large part of the storyline revolves around main character being violently grabbed by a catcaller in the street before she escapes. She makes resistant art about this experience but it is then vandalised with sexist language. The protagonist's love interests make 'victim blaming' style comments about various experiences she has had (it's clearly framed by the series that all of this is wrong and it is a feminist series but this is potentially distressing nonetheless). There is a minor subplot about deprived children who are likely victims of sexual assault and their teacher who admits she was 'pimped out' by her mother to adult men when she was a girl.
There is an unexpected attempted rape in this movie, which is handled sensitively and resolved quickly. It does not involve any undressing but it does involve violence. The film is about teen sex, withconsensual activity (but with peer pressure). However, there is also a bit of victim blaming here and there due.
Shetland (TV Show)
S3E5: the detective’s assistant, a main character, is strategically raped in order to send the main detective ‘a message.’ The rape is not onscreen at all, but the viewer is made aware of it by watching her go through evidence collection afterwards, including a speculum being brought out for swabs. In a subsequent scene, she discusses what happened (in vague, not explicit terms) with her boss, who is supportive. Later in the episode, another woman talks about her rape too.
The Shield (TV Show)
Shigofumi (TV Show)
An underage girl is called a sex model by her classmates. It is later revealed that her father forces her to undress and let other men take pictures of her. It is insinuated that other things happened as well. There are more instances of abuse throughout this series.
A girl repeatedly tries to force herself on a boy, touches him inappropriately and even tries to rape him. All of it is played for laughs. S1E12: a female character forces a male character to oral pleasure her he actively ries to escape but cannot due to her having super strength. He is visibly in distress during it and she then forces herself on him orally and the scene after implies she might have forced him into anal sex.
There are heavy discussion of sexual assault, but handled sensitively: the details of rape are not given, victims discuss their experiences with a heavy focus of post assault.
A woman is told that she is been brought on board so that she can have children with the men onboard the ship. At one point several of the men pin her down but are killed before anything can happen. A man in her group fights the leader of the pirates and when he loses the pirate forces him to bend over the table and begins to unbutton his own pants but the woman stops him before he goes any further.
Power and cycles of abuse are major themes of this trilogy and it comes to a head in this book. There is one graphic rape of a woman by a man. Another woman is repeatedly raped (fewer details on-screen) during captivity. A male character is coping, poorly, with memories of being physically and sexually abused as a child. And there is a woman (Etta) who continues to be happily in dysfunctional relationship with a man who views her more as a convenience and a possession than as a person. The author handles everything in a sensitive and appropriately serious way.
Shivers (Movie)
The child abuse above is only mentioned and not shown. The film does opened with a man attacking a teenage girl who could be assumed to a minor, but it is revealed that she is 19.
A main plot line revolves around fake incest between a married couple pretending to be siblings in order to get the husband in undercover to a psych ward. As such, incest is talked about throughout the movie. Additionally, a character is assaulted by a group of women who tear at his clothes and kiss him, but are stopped before they can do anything further.
The main character's female associate is held hostage. She is initially attacked in her home by a gunman, who holds his face intimately close to hers and calls her "baby". She is later (about 2/3 into the movie) seen bloodied and terrified on the floor, with her shirt removed. The intruder leans over her and says: "It's just you and me, baby." He then appears to sit or kneel on her legs, while she is crying and saying "no." The scene cuts away abruptly. In a later scene, the man has been shot and lies harmlessly on the ground, when she unprompted shoots him multiple times and then breaks down crying and does not answer when asked if she is okay. The implication of these scenes together appears to be that he raped her.
Short Term 12 (Movie)
The protagonist, who was sexually abused by her father, suspects that a teenage girl may also be a victim of abuse. About 56 minutes into the movie, the teenager tells her about the abuse through the story of an octopus and a shark. Later, because a counselor does not believe that the teenager is abused, he allows his father to pick her up. The protagonist then goes to her home and she discusses her own abuse with the teenager (about 80 minutes into the film): it encourages her to denounce her father.
Shot Caller (Movie)
A group of prisoners hold down a new inmate and are clearly about to gang-rape him. The camera cuts away to the main character who is sleeping nearby and can hear the rape happening in the background.
Near the end of the movie, a woman is lured into her idol's hotel room and she is gang raped by his bodyguards.
A child molester threatens to assault a child, and a possible past of CSA is mentioned briefly.
Three men drug, gang rape, and photograph a young woman who is in a relationship with one of them. SPOILERS: the plot revolves around a woman's ghost seeking vengeance against a group of her coworkers who sexually assaulted her, leading to her death. This American remake is far less brutal than the original Taiwanese film, but these intense themes may still be upsetting to some viewers.
Siberia (Movie)
A woman is flashed at her place of work. Girls are forced to give oral sex, verbally manipulated into doing so. You also see one of the girl’s reactions which is a sort of breakdown.
A women with a learning disability is assaulted, and left in a catatonic state.
The protagonist kisses his love interest without asking first and feels guilty and apologizes after the fact. There are non-specific references to the attempted rape that took place in the previous book. A side character mentions that a group of soldiers cornered her daughter, but does not go into detail. A professor and a group of soldiers have taken over a college campus and have forced the few international students still living there to work. It is revealed that the soldiers routinely rape these students as a "perk" of their position. The few soldiers who disagree with what is going on don't stop the others who are perpetrating this act. Part of the reason seems to be that they tried to stop them but were not able to do so, but part of it is that they do not want to go against a fellow cadet. The professor, who was a mentor to one of the romantic leads, appears to have been grooming him. The professor kisses him at one point, but the romantic lead was uninterested.
Silent Hill (Movie)
A girl hides in the bathroom from her bullies and is raped by the school's janitor, who is aware of her situation. A woman is forcibly stripped naked by a monster. Near the end of the film (1:49:07) the main antagonist - a woman who leads the town in persecuting innocent people on religious grounds - is forcefully and violently penetrated by the film's monster. This scene is very graphic and culminates in the woman's bloody death.
Silent Hill 2 (Video Game)
A female character is abused by her father and brother, she discloses this to the main character and when he tries to comfort her she reacts negatively and assumes he also wishes to harm her. The same female character also discloses the want to take her life due to the abuse and how her mother blames her for it. There is a depiction of her and her father in a questionable position as a mosnter in the game, it's achievement is "Childhood trauma" According to some sites, another monster is seen assaulting mannequinns, however it is speculated on if it could be considered assault.
There is one discussion of one character's experience of sexual abuse at school by a teacher.
During this film, a mother's shirt is ripped off by the killer: she is raped both on and off screen. Also during this film, a coworker of the main character is raped on screen. Throughout the film, it continuously cuts back to these shots.
A man watches a woman get changed through her window. A woman kisses another man and when her boyfriend comes out, she yells and pushes him away. When her boyfriend asks her about it, she lies and says that he repeatedly hits on her while at work and has made advances on her making her feel uncomfortable around him. There is a mention of a sex offender within an old newspaper article, who is the current owner of the place they are staying at. He is later confronted by one of the men in the group and it is implied that he assaulted him as a child.
One of the main characters is in a relationship with a teenage girl. SPOILERS: The character has raped and killed a girl before.
Silmido (Movie)
Two prisoners escape a camp and assault a nurse: they are punished immediately after.
Silver and Gold (TV Show)
S1E7: a young woman is manipulated by her ex boyfriend into playing poker and ends up losing a big sum of money. The ex boyfriend and his friends want her to pay by selling her body, amused by how distraught she is. They proceed to rape her onscreen and after the act they humiliate her further by making fun of her. It starts at 03:45 and ends at 04:52. Further sexual abuse is depicted at the end of the episode (20:50-22:15).
The rapes in this books are moderately detailed, and the surroundings of the rapes are especially disturbing. It happens several times during the: “Fjällbacka-then” chapters of the book. It is possible to avoid reading about these scenes if these pages are skipped. Note that there are many other sexual scenes during this book, but all of these other scenes are consensual and appropriate. Revenge is a big theme in this book, and might feel comforting to some.
The Simpsons (TV Show)
S12E5: a protagonist is sexually assaulted by a panda off-screen. This is played for comedy. S23E22: a character is kissed without her consent. Though it initially seems as she is upset, it is shown immediately afterward that she found it very pleasurable. S14E9: the male protagonist appears visibly scared of his wife, and repeatedly tries to communicate that he does not want to have sex with her (about 15 minutes into the episode). She then pins him down and says “I wasn’t asking”., before it cuts to a scene where he is sitting in the kitchen the next morning, too sore and tired to take care of his children. It is strongly implied that she raped and caused physical harm to his body. S27E1: while all a dream, the protagonist is told to not mix drugs with alcohol by his pharmacist. The said pharmacist then explicitly puts the drugs in his beer before they have sex. While the protagonist is dumb and even if it was not a dream, probably would not understand that he was just date raped, his horror that he “made the one drunken mistake that he’d never made: slept with someone else” can still be triggering. In a flashback, an older girl (one of the sisters in law who is revealed later to be a lesbian and hates the protagonist) grabs and forces a kiss on the protagonist (who is ten at this point) to prove a point that kissing does not matter. When he is crying and whimpering she is enjoying it.
The Sims 2 (Video Game)
There is a chance if your male sim is abducted by aliens they will become pregnant, which is implied to be non-consensual.
The Sims 3 (Video Game)
If the player has the Sim's 3: Seasons, there is a chance that if a male sim is abducted by aliens they will return pregnant, which is implied to be non-consensual.
The Sims 4 (Video Game)
If the player has The Sims 4: Get to Work, there is a 25% chance if a male sim is abducted by aliens they will return pregnant, which is implied to be non-consensual.
Sin Limites (TV Show)
Sin Nombre (Movie)
About 30 minutes into the movie, an antagonist forces the protagonist's girlfriend to come with him to an isolated place and attempts to rape her. As she tries to escape, he kills her. A couple of minutes later, the same man tries to rape another girl, but he is killed after having pinned her down. Near the end of the movie, the female protagonist is catcalled by men.
One of the circles of Hell for a female character is being a waitress in a canteen full of rude men. One of them calls her out for bringing him a burnt burger, and he begins touching her which leads into them fighting and the man getting the help of other men to pin her to a table. He begins throwing comments at her about raping her and we see a shot of him undoing the zipper in his pants. The fight is stopped by a higher command but it is kind of assumed that it isn’t what usually happens.
On top of the above, the film contains on-screen necrophilia.
A man attempts to rape a woman, but she manages to escape by punching him. A woman engages in oral sex with her twin sister's boyfriend, without him realising that she is a different woman.
Singularity (Movie)
A group of men catch a woman and surround her, with the suggestion that they might rape her. They begin to open her jacket.
The Sinner (TV Show)
The main character's sister is revealed to have lusted after her, and the two eventually have sex. It's unclear whether the main character truly consented, or only caved into pressure out of guilt for 'abandoning' her sister. The main character's flashbacks seem to be related to sexual assault. A male detective engages in intense BDSM throughout the series. Season 2 involves a boy raised in a cult with various forms of abuse, including sexual abuse. It is unclear if he was exposed to any of this or if his trauma symptoms are solely a result of other events in the series. S1E6: two sisters kiss. The younger one places the older's hand on her breast and then in her underwear. S1E7: a woman under the influence of cocaine believes she is having sex with her boyfriend, but she is actually being penetrated by another man. The situation was orchestrated by the boyfriend, who is also shown verbally abusing his ex-girlfriend. The two sisters are shown kissing again. S2E4: mention of a forced sterilization. S2E5: a woman is pinned to the floor while a man assaults her. Nothing is shown on screen, but the imagery and information revelead later suggest it could have occured. S2E6: mention of rape and a resulting pregnancy. S2E8: a teenage girl is raped by the father of one of her friends.
S1E1: this episode alks about child sexual abuse.
Siren (Movie)
A humanoid creature is held captive and forced to perform sexual acts for her captor's customers. When freed, she stalks and sexually assaults the man who rescued her.
Siren (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: the main female character is getting a ride from a man who stops in a secluded spot to try to rape her. She kills him.
About 3/4 of the way in, the protagonist's fiancé initiates sex with her. The premise of the book is that the protagonist was in an accident and lost her memories, including those of her fiancé. She asks him to take things slowly, meaning that she wants to stop, but he interprets that as her wanting to start with more foreplay. She seems to dissociate during the sex, thinking that she was not in her body and on a cloud somewhere. Throughout she feels that she should be happy that she is having sex with him because he is rich and handsome. At the end, she is disappointed that he does not check in with her to make sure she had an orgasm. This event is framed as bad sex, not as rape. Passing mention of strippers getting groped by clients and by managers.
Sisu (Movie)
A Nazi soldier in a truck full of women is seen buckling his pants back up, his most recent victim still lying on the floor and crying (11:44). A soldier uses the barrel of his machine gun to push at the knees of a female prisoner to force her legs apart: he then blows her a kiss (58:58).
The female protagonist was sold into child sexual slavery at one of the many brothels that exist in the fantasy world. Sexual slavery and slavery in general are common in this universe and frequently mentioned and referenced.
One of the queens is a victim of child sexual abuse and performs a song about her experience. The song documents her realisation that the men in her life have been using and abusing her and the subject is portrayed very sensitively. The choreography includes the other queens, who act as backup dancers, placing their hands on her, but it isn’t violent, except for during the final chorus when the lead singer is visibly flinching away from the others. Worthy of note: one of the male characters was historically accused of sleeping with her own brother, which resulted in charges of incest (only the adultery charges are mentioned in the show).
Verbal sexual harassment occurs on the school bus and at various other points over the course of the film. A character sells peeks at a 16-year-old girl's underwear to a group of boys without her permission. Towards the end of the film, characters plan to commit incapacitated assault during a conversation. Later, they act on this plan. More detail - SPOILERS - One excerpt from this conversation: Character 1: I have Caroline in the bedroom right now passed out cold, I could violate her in 10 different ways if I wanted to. Character 2: What are you waiting for? Later, the two characters come to an agreement: one will keep his incapacitated girlfriend's underwear and the other will take her home. Character 1: She's so blitzed she won't even know the difference. Character 2 throws the girl over the shoulder and places him in his car. Character 1 tells her that Character 2 is him, and says: She's totally gone, have fun. Character 2 and a group of his friends take pictures of the girl in and out of consciousness. The next morning, it is implied that they had intercourse which she does not remember. This is presented as a happy ending.
SKAM (TV Show)
A central plot of S2E8-E11 is that a main character blacks out at a house party and illicit pictures are taken of her and shared. She assumes she was raped, but doesn't remember.
SKAM NL (TV Show)
S1E1: graphic attempted rape scene (the woman is saved by the male protagonist).
Skins (TV Show)
In season one, a male teenager has a sexual relationship with a teacher. S1E8: a group of boys attempt to force a high school student to rape his unconscious/drugged sister, but it does not happen. S6E4: a rape is shown on-screen. A man visits a brothel and is implied to have had sex with an 11 year-old girl in the first scene. Two boys attack and rape a woman in an alleyway before she bites the penis of one of them.
It (2017) (Movie)
One main plot point is that a young girl's stepfather sexually abuses his daughter. He is shown to be extremely possessive and controlling throughout the film (going through her underwear drawer), and she is visibly frightened of him. He is shown climbing on top of her towards the end of the film and seems to be unbuckling his belt. During this scene, he threatens to prove that she is still his little girl. The girl kicks him and escapes. In the final scene of the movie, the antagonist briefly transforms into her father to frighten her. Worthy of note: A older man pharmacist flirts with a high school girl. She wears his glasses and tries to seduce him to help her friends steal from the store. There is quite a bit of sexual tension.
Child sexual abuse is very strongly implied (father sprays his deceased wife's perfume on his daughter and then hugs her/touches her while she is visibly distressed and uncomfortable). A scene shows an abusive husband hitting his wife and attempting to rape her. A woman is restrained and attacked by a zombie, who ends up putting his tongue inside her mouth.
One of the men attempts to rape the heroine but is killed just before or as it starts by the zombie that has been following her. It is fairly obvious this is going to happen and it is a brief scene with no blood or torn clothes.
The only main character in this book that is female often experiences nonconsensual touching. It also heavily implied that her father wanted to sexually abuse her when she was a child, although he never does. It is mentioned that she is abused sexually and physically by her partner as an adult, but there are no detailed descriptions of a rape scene. One male bullies rapes another male bully while the female protagonist watches. One of the more small and innocent boys in the book is raped by the antagonist in the form of a leper while walking home.
S1E1: two of the characters conspire to get another one of the characters drunk so that he will have a sexual encounter with a man and stop marketing their venue as a gay bar. S1E3: the bar becomes a 'safe haven' for underage drinkers; potentially concerning power dynamic between drunk, inexperienced teenagers and adults. S1E4: one of the characters tells women he has been diagnosed with cancer in order to get them to sleep with him. One character mentions that he previously had sex with another character that he considered non-consensual and describes how she ignored his refusals during the acts. S1E7: a key plot point in this episode is a former teacher getting arrested for molesting his students. Some of the characters whether one of one of their friends was a victim of this teacher and another character is jealous that he, too, wasn't molested. S2E1: a man uses the fact that he is in a wheelchair to get attention from some women who are strippers. The whole gang decides to fake disabilities in order to get attention and sympathy. S2E4: a man attempts to get a woman he has feelings for to sleep with him through the use of lies and deception. S2E8: a political attack advertisement is played on television that claims one of the main characters is a rapist and assaulted underage teens from his position as a camp councillor. S3E9: a key plot point in this episode is one of the main characters taking up a relationship with somebody who may have a mental disability. Another character pens a potentially disturbing song about being molested by a strange creature. S3E11: a key plot point in this episode is one of the main characters being mistaken by the community for a convicted sex offender who has been released from prison due to overcrowding. S3E13: a man's father compels him to sleep with older women for money in order to pay off the group's debts. S4E1: there are references that two characters have been "teabagging" a character since high school. A later scene has a character discover that he also got his shaved pubes glued onto his face while he was asleep. S4E4: two characters listen to two other characters having sex without their knowledge. S4E13: one of the characters attempts to write a musical based on a song he composed in an earlier episode about being molested by a strange creature. S5E4: a man attempts to seduce his former sister-in-law. S5E12: a character reveals his 'foolproof' system for seducing women, which is based largely on emotional manipulation and deception. S6E1: upon hearing that a transgender woman from an earlier episode is getting married, a character spends the entire episode protesting against gay marriage out of jealousy. S6E2: a character finds out that her partner is only with her in order to hurt his wife. S7E1: derogatory treatment of sex workers. One character pretends to be a millionaire in order to trick a woman into sleeping with one of his friends. S7E3: a character becomes involved in local beauty pageants and is terrified of being accused of paedophilia. S7E8: two characters stalk a man who shushed them in a bar. S8E7: a man (who is a sexual predator throughout the series) pretending to be someone he is not, is prepared to have sex with a teenager, assuming the teenager is there to have sex with him. However, this is stopped when the teenager is revealed to be a golf caddy. S11E4: two characters make a film about the man's rape by a librarian when he was in school. S11E5: evidence mounts that one of the main characters regularly sexually assaults women. S11E6: during a scene in POV perspective, a character gropes a woman's breasts twice and then 'motorboats' her all without her consent. In a later scene, one character explains that he is in trouble because he "got handsy with a pretty young thing [who] looked 18". S11E8: the cold open of the episode contains a joke about children being molested. S11E9: one character talks about a woman and another comments that "she looks 12 years old": he replies that he checked her age beforehand. In the same scene, one character talks about getting sexual with a man who backs out, and threatening him with a rape accusation, effectively coercing him into sex. A later seen has the character encounter the woman alone and comes across as rapey. S11E10: the cold open has a character state that his sin was a bit of lust but "my thing, not a rape". S12E2: a girl says to a man (who will become his partner in crime): "try to touch me and i'll scream "rape"" S12E3: one character makes jokes and references to pedophilia. He also touches another character on the back multiple time through the episode with them being clearly uncomfortable and telling him to get off. S12E4: there is a joke about the Catholic Church "banging kids". A later scene references a woman being harassed online with people calling her a bitch and her saying "pretty much everyone wanting to rape me". Two men try to promote their drink to women but end up harassing them about their bodies. Near the end of the episode, one character states: "turns out there are two things that can't be forgiven, raping children and disliking dogs". S12E5: one character says off-screen that a woman has a big bottom, with the woman responding "Fuck off, creep". S12E6: during the cold open, a man approaches a woman with mirrors on his shoes in order to try and look up the woman's skirt. A later scene implys a man waited for an underage girl to become of age to then have sex with her. A later scene repeats the joke about the man trying to look up the womans skirt. S12E7: the cold open contains a joke around "blowing kids" but it is actually in reference to a guy trying to give CPR to a child in a video game. A later scene references the rape of a character by an older women in a library when he was 14 (original joke in S11E4). Two characters play father and son for a strip show and a stripper is tricked into doing a lap dance on his own daughter, thrusting his penis near her face. She says that her finger touched his anus: the two are horrifyied when they recognise each other. S12E8: a character refers to another one as "rage-fuelled and rapey". S12E9: this episode has a very brief flashback to the tricked father daughter stripper incident as seen in S12E7. S13E4: this episode revolves around the group going to a sexual harassment seminar, as their pub has been labeled as unsafe, and so the entire episode is about sexual assault. A character being molested by their uncle is brought up again, as well as a new revelation that he was raped by another character off-screen and tried to say no but the other character put her hands in his mouth to get him to stop talking. She pretty much agrees that it was in fact rape. Another character accidentally exposes himself to a woman. S14E5: a dialogue exchange between two characters jokes about sex trafficking underage girls (09:20). S15E4: there is a reference that a monkey oral assaulted the mouths of 4 unconscious men off-screen (17:24). S15E5: a character mentions that he was on the Jeffrey Epstein island just for the snorkelling and did not know 'about the kid stuff' (8:16). The island is mention again, in a joke about a guy not being into kids but being into manatees which got sexual (12:31). A man sniffs a woman's hair without her concent and harasses her (14:12). S15E6: there is one mention of aforementioned characters 'alleged' invovlment in a 'sex-trafficking ring' (01:41). S15E7: a prieste that a character has been getting to know, turns out to be a pedophile (14:15). S16E4: there are references to a character alluded to be a pedophile, which tries to film kids for creepy purposes. Worthy of note: one of the main characters is a serial sexual predator who targets both men and women. Although the audience never witnesses any of his assaults, one of the show's running jokes is regarding this character's creepy behaviour. He videotapes the women who he has sex with without their consent. Despite being in his mid-to-late thirties, he tries to have sex with teenagers/coerce them into having sex with him. Other characters on the show explicitly refer to his actions as rape on multiple occasions. In addition to this, it is heavily implied that one of the main characters was molested by his uncle as a child and his trauma around this is repeatedly discussed. Another recurring plotline involving this character addresses his stalking/harassment of a woman he has known and been infatuated with since high school. There is a family of characters (the 'McPoyle Family') that is featured in many episodes. They are portrayed as being 'creepy' and are rumoured to be incestuous until later when they display incestuous behaviour between cousins and siblings (this is mostly implied, but is made unambiguous).
A couple calls each other brother and sister while they are having sex There are mentions of past child sexual assault from when a 14 year old girl was kidnapped and brought into the cult.
It's a Sin (TV Show)
S1E1: a man's boss makes him take his shirt off and shows him 'cleanliness' before getting interrupted. S1E2: the same boss character almost sexually assault him before seeing an AIDS magazine in his room. Later on, that man starts a sexual relationship with someone wich has questionable consent at first but we see later on that it was consentual although there is a strong power dynamic.
The premise of the movie is that individuals switch bodies with one another as part of a game, where people guess who is who. Characters sexually engage with each other, when their true identities are unknown. This includes a character (A) who does not clarify who they really are to another character (B) who initiates sex, the character (B) initiating sex incorrectly believes the person in charge of the other body (A) is someone else. Additionally, multiple characters have sex with one another while they are switched. None of the characters consent to their bodies having sex with other characters before or during this game. Therefore, the sexual encounters are not consensual for the bodies involved. A male character mentions he slept with a girl who was in high school (age unknown). A male character suddenly gets uncomfortable while being kissed and made sexual advances towards and the female character has to be pushed off to stop her.
Sky High (Movie)
A 14-year-old boy is manipulated into a relationship by a woman the same age as his parents (though she looks 17). They share an on-screen kiss.
Slasher (2016) (TV Show)
S2E4: there is a very graphic rape scene at the end of the episode.
In the first two stories, there is discussion of sexual assault and an adult man who repeatedly harasses young girls. The story The Girl Without a Face centers around a rape.
Flashbacks of a rape are shown on-screen. The whole film is very sexual and violent.
There are multiple mentions that a man was raped while he was in jail. A woman states that her father raped her when she was younger.
A demon-possessed boyfriend rapes his girlfriend on screen while she begs him to stop and take her home.
Sleep Tight (Movie)
A pedophile who works at a children's summer camp despite his coworkers knowing about his tendencies, tries to sexually assault a child but does not succeed: he is immediately punished and no longer part of the staff for the rest of the movie. It is implied that a killer inserts a hot curling wand into a victim: the scene is seen as a shadow. There are several instances of characters rejecting romantic or sexual advances and the other person reacting aggressively. A boy pulls his pants and underwear down while another boy has his eyes closed and then tells him to open his eyes and look.
A sex scene between a middle aged man and a teen begins between 23:00 and 26:00. A sexual harassment from a male camper on the protagonist is stopped (50:00). A man attempts to force himself on the villain: when it does not work, he claims "her type always wants it".
The film's plot revolves around the continuous sexual abuse and rape of a group of four teenage boys by guards at the correctional facility where they were sentenced to stay when one of their pranks went disastrously wrong.
There is an extended and graphic flashback of two high school friends being forced by other students to have sex. It is revealed that this happened on multiple occasions, and they are verbally and physically abused throughout the attack. One main character attempts to rape the other main character while claiming to do a medical exam. He verbally abuses him throughout, especially about his sexuality, and only stops when the survivor breaks out of the handcuffs and restrains his attacker.
The film revolves around a woman performing oral sex on her dog when she was in college and telling her current boyfriend about the act. It is not shown on-screen but it is discussed throughout, in a fairly respectful, non-graphic and measured way.
An on-screen rape scene between married couple could be, although consented, seen as forced because the woman is scared of getting beaten by her husband if she refuses. It is shown that she does not enjoy the sex at all. She shows PTSD symptoms when her date does not immediately stops the sexual initiation when she says stop.
Season 2: a woman agrees to live with the man she hates to protect the man she loves. She says she will grow to love the new man. People are frequently possessed, thus not being on control of their body People are lured by the pied piper. S2E7: a woman is impregnated by a demon through her nose. S2E8: this episode features a succubus. S3E11: a woman is about to be raped by a man on a first date. She is "rescued" by a creature/demon who then murders her. S3E11: a creature/demon knocks out a human to make her his wife.
Slimy Sextet (Video Game)
This game contains non-consensual sex with tentacle monsters, and themes of "mindbreak" and pregnancy.
This film contains a lot of sexual violence, including violence towards a foetus.
Slugs (Movie)
While at a party, a teenager and her boyfriend kiss. He tries to move things further a few times and she continuously tells him no, eventually leaving. While walking away, another guy knocks her over and pins her down. He tries to take off her underwear but she shoves him off and runs away.
It is implied that the villain was raped by his uncle when he was younger. Towards the end of the movie, a girl offers the villain that she will let him touch her if he doe not kill her. He partially undresses her, kisses her, and gropes her breasts, then kills her anyway.
A woman is forced into sex work.
Small Axe (Movie)
S1E2 (Lovers Rock): the sexual violence and harassment in this episode were handled sensitively and from a perspective that centred women's experiences.
There are references to non-consensual sex towards a drunken teenage girl. Near the climax of the film, a character is orally raped and blackmailed.
Smallville (TV Show)
S1E2: a teacher with the "superpower" to make anyone fall in love with her attempts to kiss (and possibly more) a fifteen-year-old boy. He turns down her advances and backs away from her and she does not actually kiss him, but she gets very close to it (17:28-19:10). The fact that what she is trying to do is illegal is never addressed. He tells a fellow student afterwards, who does not take it very seriously. He also tells his parents, and his mother responds with horror and tells him that a teacher seducing a teenage boy is against the law and that she will call the school board and have the teacher fired. The boy is blamed by the teacher's husband (who is implied to only be in love with her because of her powers and could not knowingly have given consent). S2E2: a teacher tries to kiss her 15 year-old student. S4E11: a girl gives the protagonist something that removes his inhibitions to get him to have sex with her. Once he is not under the influence anymore and realizes what happened, he is visibly very uncomfortable and expresses his lack of consent, saying he was “drugged” and it makes him do things he does not want to do. He is later lectured by his mother and victim-blamed. S5E6: the entire episode involves violence against strippers and the reveal that a strip club owner is invoked with human trafficking. A young girl (barely adult) is sold, but is saved at the last moment. S5E16: a woman magically hypnotizes the protagonist and makes out with him against his will multiple times throughout the episode. They almost have sex but are interrupted by his girlfriend. The incident is used as a plot device to break them up. S9E12: a witch uses a love spell to make the protagonist kiss her. He breaks out of the spell before it goes too far.
Smile Pretty (Movie)
This movie is about a girl who was abused as a child. She then goes on to have a relationship with an adult man, who convinces her to bring another teenage girl into their relationship. She stars in child pornography and ultimately, she helps the police put her "boyfriend" in jail. In her final conversation with the police officer, she accuses him of liking child pornography too because he chose a job that requires him to watch it. Childhood sexual abuse is mentioned and there is on-screen sexual abuse of a child.
The Smoke (TV Show)
There is a scene where a bunch of drunk women during a bachelorette party push a man onto the ground, take off his pants, and touch him. The women are called off before anything else happens, but the man is clearly distressed afterwards. It is handled well and not made to seem like a joke.
Smooth Talk (Movie)
The movie focuses on a 15 year old meeting a strange adult man. He uses verbal threats of violence (some direct some implied), stalks her, shows up at her home, and an implied off-screen rape.
The Snapper (Movie)
About halfway into the film, the twenty year-old protagonist stumbles out of a bar very drunk. She is greeted by a middle-aged neighbour, then the film cuts to him on top of her. During the encounter she is on the verge of unconsciousness and clearly unable to give consent, so drunk that she does not even recognise the man when he goes to leave. The scene is over quickly.
An antagonist is revealed to have raped a woman in the backstory, and is implied to have raped others. He also attempts to rape his step-niece while she's imprisoned, but she gets away before she can. It's revealed he 'watched' her while she was imprisoned. It is also heavily implied that the two antagonists are in an incestuous relationship.
Snowfall (TV Show)
S1E3: a man is raped by another man off-screen. S6E6: a main character is kidnapped and held by a group of men. It is heavily implied that she is going to be sexually assaulted and it is attempted. Although she is saved at the last minute.
Snowtown (Movie)
Thie movie is about a real homophobic serial killer who kidnapped, tortured and killed paedophiles (or presumed paedophiles) with some accomplices. Rape, incest and child sex abuse is discussed and hinted throughout. In the beginning of the film, one man is shown taking inappropriate pictures of young boys. One character rapes his brother (the protagonist) on-screen: this is implied to be hapenning on a regular basis.
Volume 8: in chapter 2, two drunkards harass White and grope her chest. A little after, Ariel also does it but it is more treated as a comedic moment than harassment. The incest part is one-sided, Sue has been often depicted as overprotective of her half-brother Schlain and was also implied to be in love with him. This all leads to volume 15 chapter S4 in which Sue drugs and attempts something with him before being stopped by Schlain’s party. (There is an illustration of a half naked Schlain underneath an annoyed Sue in the interlude narrated by Katia following this chapter.)
So-Won (Movie)
A little girl is kidnapped on her way to school, raped and beaten. This isn't seen, but talked about, and her recovery from the assault is the subject of the movie.
Sobibor (Movie)
Society (Movie)
A character hears an audio recording of their mother, father, and sister having sex. A character is forced into a body horror flesh orgy.
An ambiguous attempted rape scene shows a woman struggling against a rapist.
Soft & Quiet (Movie)
A woman is raped with foreign object by another woman: we only see the perpetrator move and hear the victim cry. Rape is mentioned at ~45 minutes. Sexual assault is mentioned at ~1 hour 10 minutes.
The book is about a 13-year-old girl whose stepfather sells her into sex slavery.
Near the end of the movie, there is an incredibly violent and graphic rape scene where the main male character rapes the main female character (1:15:10-1:17:15). It is revealed to be part of a larger role-playing event.
Somebody (TV Show)
S1E1: rape is mentioned several times: a) a police officer mentions murder and rape b) a woman tells a man that she would freeze if he attempted to rape her c) a man kills a woman while having sex with her. S1E4: a man attempts to rape a woman in the beginning of the episode. She is able to fight him off and runs away, but the aggressor proceeds to chase her together with several other men. She is found by one of them and she kills him when he attempts to rape her. After this, the other men flee and call themselves the victims of the situation. S1E7, 43:30-46:00: a man accidentally kills a woman while choking her during sex (both consensual: she repeatedly asks him to choke her harder, but he does not notices her suffocating.)
S1E1: marital rape (~14:00). Female prisoners are beaten and humiliated.
The entire film is centered around a rape survivor's attempts to begin anew after the (off-screen) attack. She is later coerced and held prisoner by another man in his apartment.
Son (Movie)
When talking about the past of the main female character, incest, child sex abuse and rape are discussed multiple times. The whole plot leads the viewers to believe that everything weird that is happening is the protagonist's PTSD after she and her friend experienced her father raping her and pimping her off to his friends. It turns out she was used as Lucifer's "mate"; he raped her and she got pregnant. There is no actual sexual violence shown on-screen, besides a motel owner that catcalls the protagonist and threatens her.
Son of a Gun (Movie)
During the start of the movie, the protagonist’s cellmate is implied to be repeatedly raped off-screen, but can be seen being harassed. Soon after, the protagonist suffers an attempt on him on-screen.
Some characters turn against the protagonist after coming to the false conclusion that she had a child out of wedlock. A character discusses abuse he received from his father, saying how he acted as a wife to his father by cooking and “in other ways” that he did not want to spell out. A character takes pleasure in grabbing the protagonist’s hair and neck. This is not for sexual reasons but still might be triggering since it is controlling behavior.
Son of Saul (Movie)
There are repeated and explicit scenes of Jewish prisoners forced to strip completely naked before being put into gas chambers. In one of the stripping scenes, it is strongly implied that there is an assault/attempted assault on one of the women. Two guys later on are explicitly discussing raping a woman, saying things such as 'she was so beautiful I couldn't resist' and 'she should have saw it coming'.
Sonatine (Movie)
A woman is taken by force to a beach at night, pinned down, and her clothes are ripped off while she is screaming and struggling against her assailant. The protagonist watches from afar and does nothing. He eventually shoots the rapist when the latter threatens him.
Women are taken captive when their villages are raided: they are “given” to the warriors as “bed slaves”. A main character saves another from being implied to be raped by the leader of an army. A woman is said to have been forced into marriage and raped several times by a man. Two teenage boys (main characters) are coerced into having sex with a girl; one of the scenes is described in detail, and is not treated as sexual assault by the author.
A character in the film is assaulted by the man keeping her prisoner and forcing her to be a house servant. The family allows it to happen.
The film is about children abuses. A boy is raped by a priest on-screen.
The first few pages of this book describe a character being gang raped.
The Song of Saya (Video Game)
This game contains multiple explicit scenes with violent and graphic sexual assault, including cannibalism and body horror that have sexual undertones. The protagonist is a man who, after a botched brain surgery, perceives every human as monstrous piles of flesh due to severe agnosia. The only thing he sees as a normal human is the deuteragonist, who is actually an alien monster, but appears to the protagonist as a young girl. Despite her childlike appearance, the man starts a romantic and sexual relationship with her. Throughout the game, she can further manipulate him and convince him to commit violent sexual assault on other people. A supporting character has his mind manipulated by the deuteragonist, afflicting him with the same severe agnosia as the protagonist's - after which the supporting character will kill his family and rape the deuteragonist. An optional route in the game depicts a female supporting character being kidnapped by the deuteragonist. The deuteragonist violently rapes her and slut-shames her, then encourages the protagonist to also rape her. The supporting character is brutally tortured to the point of feeling endless pain and becoming a sex slave, as well as being forced to help the deuteragonist procreate and reproduce more of her species.
Songbird (Movie)
A male character keeps a woman in a motel room in which he lured her before the start of the film. He forces her to maintain a sexual relationship with him against her will. In one scene she straddles him and he kisses her while she looks away, it is implied that he also had sex with her. Later, when she tries to end their arrangement, he states he owns her. She is able to escape him.
Sons of Anarchy (TV Show)
S1E1: two women are mentioned to have been forced to perform sexual acts on a group of men. S1E3: in the first 10 minutes of the episode, a 13 year old girl lies in the dirt, stripped with her pants down, impliying that she was raped. S1E7: a man is instructed to initiate sex with an unwilling woman. She successfully fends him off. S1E8: a man who stalked one female characters returns to town. He is violent and she has a restraining order against him. This culminates in him hiding in her house and attempting to rape her (approximately 38 minutes into the episode). There is also an episode revolving around a teenage girl getting sexually abused by a group of men. Season 2: one of the characters is raped as a means to humiliate her and her husband. S4E1: an inmate makes a pass at a MC member: nothing comes from it. S5E5: an insurance agent is drugged, and, while unconscious, posed with a prostitute for blackmail purposes. The poses involve much unconsensual touching. S5E6: a character forces two other characters to get naked and get in bed together at gunpoint (about 20 minutes in). S6E1: an MC member is shown being raped in prison by another inmate as a guard looks on (about 6 minutes into the episode). A girl is beaten by a group of men, who are forcing girls to have sex with them and brutally treat them (about 15 minutes into the episode). They record it on video to sell it afterwards. It is mentioned, that the girls did not know, that they have sex with a group and are brutally treated by the (about 24 minutes into the episode). S6E1: a character tells that she has been assaulted (about 21 minutes into the episode) S6E5: guards force a couple to have sex, threatning to rape the woman if they do not (about 45 minutes into the episode). S7E10: one character is raped in prison (during the opening sequence). S7E12: the same character is raped by a rival club member (about 16 minutes into the episode).
The Sopranos (TV Show)
Domestic violence against partners and violence against sex workers is commong throughout the whole show. S1E9: a subplot involves a high school girl practicing self-harm. It is revealed later in the episode that she had sex with her soccer coach (a celebrated figure in the episode). He ends up getting arrested. S1E11: a male character is pressured to undress in order to check for a wire, the character is clearly uncomfortable and is trying to leave the situation. S3E4: a woman is raped in a parking garage (17:30-19:34). The following scene shows her talking to detectives at the hospital. In the remainder of the episode, it is revealed that the cops messed up the case and that the rapist is allowed to walk free. The victim coincidentally sees that he is an employee at a restaurant nearby and fantasizes about the protagonist killing him. S3E6: this episode's plot is largely themed around sexual exploitation. Scenes involve a young stripper being made to perform a threesome she is clearly uncomfortable with by her abusive boyfriend, her employer physically assaulting her and making degrading sexual comments when she fails to show up for work (her boyfriend is unsympathetic and laughs at this). There are scenes where a bouncer at a strip club tells the strippers that they are required to perform sexual acts if they want entry to the VIP room, and a violent, fatal beating of a woman by her boyfriend which is not sexual in nature but is disturbing. S5E1: about 2/3 of the way through the episode, a man kisses a woman without her consent. S5E10: two men threaten to rape another man with an object if he does not give them information they seek. S6E12: a man is beaten to death and it is implied that he was raped with an object while this occurs. S6E19: a man verbally harasses a young woman. The harassment is mentioned again later in the episode.
Sorority Row (Movie)
The film begins with a 'date rape prank' where a group of women trick a man into 'drugging' one of their friends to make her easier to sleep with. The woman being 'roofied' is in on the prank and this is done in retaliation for him cheating her. This ends up being the instigating incident of the film. The prank is discussed throughout and jokes about date rape are also made. There is repeated sexual harassment of the women in the film. A teenage girl tells a woman that she slept with her boyfriend. This is not shown on screen and we only see the aftermath.
The perspective character grew up on a religious cult commune. When she was thirteen, a police officer coerced her into sex. A cult leader pressured her into marriage after, and by fifteen she was pregnant. The same teenaged character enters into a sexual relationship with a much older woman. Later it is revealed that the woman has been actively working to harm her in multiple ways. It is mentioned in passing that some men in the commune believe they have a right to sex with their wives, regardless of consent.
SPOILERS: This movie's plot revolves around a pedophile ring based in a local town, that physically and sexually abuse children and film it for the dark web.
Soul Plane (Movie)
A female airline agent forces a male passenger to strip and drop his pants, claiming she is attracted to him and saying she has the power to "violate every one of his civil rights". She puts on latex gloves and shouts "cavity search": he screams "no" while the screen goes black.
This movie is about child trafficking (for sexual exploitation essentially) and based on real events. A young teenager is raped, and her little brother is sexually abused and photographed for child pornography. The child also present PTSD symptoms.
S1E1: the underage lead is physically harrassed by her adult male employer, which is implied to be attempted rape/violence (47:45-49:45). She pushes him off, which leads to physical hostility as he threatens to call the police and accuses her of "using" his kindness for money. [Review in process]
South Park (TV Show)
The show is notorious for having insensitive jokes scattered throughout and being controversial in general. Most non-consensual scenes are short and played for laugh: however some are pretty graphic. S1E1: aliens anally probe a character. S3E6: the episode focuses on sexual harassment lawsuits. A 3rd grade class is informed of the subject by a man in a panda suit telling them that sexual harassment is not cool. S3E7: a young teenage girl is in a relationship with a young adult man. They make out and the man pressures the girl to have sex with him, but is rejected. S3E17: incest and rape are implied/mentioned. S4E5: a man is gang-raped by paedophiles off-screen after being mistaken for a child. The scene is played for laughs. S4E15: a young boy gives a man a blowjob in return for money off-screen. S4E16: children falsely accuse their parents of molestation. S5E2: a scout leader orders his scout boys to strip for naked photographs off-screen. S5E8: a character is mentioned to be experiencing date rape psychosis (this is an excuse for kids to play video games). S6E1: one character explains that he wants to give children ‘AIDS’. This is taken out of context, as he meant "aides". S6E8: the episode focuses on the Catholic church sexual abuse scandals. A counsellor asks the boys if they were molested. S6E10: several young boys become somewhat oddly obsessed with a young girl’s boobs. A young girl becomes envious to another girl who has developed boobs and decides to get a breast implant surgery. S6E11: a man lures in a child to his van, but nothing happens as the man gets arrested. S6E12: a man interviewed by news media repeatedly makes pedophilic jokes of raping young boys. S7E5: a child gives a handjob to a man and sleeps with him somewhat against the child’s will. S7E14: young girls dress in skimpy outfit and act flirtatious as waitresses in a restaurant. S8E5: a man asks a child in a robot costume if he can give the man sexual service. The child runs out quickly and the man is seen chasing after with his pants off. S8E6: a man sleeps with a couple of young children (without sexual intent). The children’s parents suspect that the man may be a pedophile and warns the children. S8E7: a big pile of men have orgy in public. By the end of the episode, three children join in, but nothing is shown. S8E10: a group of young teenagers ask younger children to take picture of one of the children’s naked mother. However, the younger children come up with other plans. S8E12: the episode revolves around Paris Hilton posing corruptive influence on young girls, in which girls start to objectify themselves and act like ‘whores’. S8E13: a serial killer murders several women but nothing is shown. In his house, there are cut-out pictures of naked women. It is implied that the killer had a sexually abusive mother. S9E7: a doctor asks a child to remove his shirt so they can make out, but his request is rejected. The same child has sex with an adult prostitute off-screen. S10E1: the entire plot of the episode revolves around the sexual abuse of children. It is constantly mentioned throughout the episode An investigator demonstrates to a fourth-grade class what paedophiles do to children with a featureless doll. A young boy says his uncle did that to him once, indicating that he was sexually abused. S10E10: a kindergarten teacher embarks on a sexual relationship with a student. One character reports it to the police but he is not taken seriously, because the perpetrator is a conventionally attractive woman, setting the episode’s conflict. S10E11: naked children on leash are seen held among a group of clergymen. Jeffrey Dahmer has visceral sex with a dead man’s internal organs. S11E2: a character takes a sordid photo of his so-called friend while he was sleeping to humiliate him. He reverses the positions to trick him into oral, only for his father to catch him and send him to a conversion camp. S11E8: a young boy lures in numerous pedophiles to a building with the promise of sex, but nothing happens as all the pedophiles soon commit suicide once entering the building. S11E10: a young boy loses a bet to another boy, which punishment is to suck the winner’s testicles. The loser is unwilling to do so while the winner continuously pressures the loser until the two next episodes. A child jokes about a stranger raping himself and his friends. S11E11: adult characters are raped off-screen. S11E12: evil wooden critters discuss hunting down people, killing them and sodomizing their corpses. S12E1: a young boy infects another boy with HIV via blood injection while the victim is asleep. People are under the impression that they had unprotected sex, but that is not the case. S12E8: Steven Spielberg and George Lucas rape Indiana Jones, as a jab to purists who claimed that they “raped their childhoods.” The characters who witnessed this are traumatized by it. S13E1: a couple of young girls are called in backstage to see a boys band, and they got the wrong idea that they are called to give the band a blowjob. S13E8: two male judges masturbate when pageant girls are performing on-stage. S13E9: multiple young girls sell themselves for kissing and hug services. A young boy harasses a couple of young girls while offering if he can pimp them out. S13E10: a wrestler places two children in a somewhat compromising position, this is not meant to be taken sexually and the children misunderstood the situation and soon bail out. S14E7: a boy is raped by a shark. S14E9: a rat monster rapes characters, only to be stopped by one of the protagonists. S14E8: a child falsely informs a man that his wife has been raped. S14E10: a teacher threatens to orally rape a young student. In a flashback, the said teacher was molested as a young child. S14E11: a child suggests that another child should pose naked with a man in a photograph so they can blackmail a third party. S15E1: a child ‘falsely portrays his mom as his molester’. This is done because of the child’s spoiled character after his wish is not fulfilled by his mother. S16E1: characters are inspected and surveilled thru CCTV camera when using the bathroom. A TSA agent who is surveilling people is seen masturbating. S16E8: a child sells his semen as bottled drink product. Various consumers drink the product, not knowing what is it. S17E5: a toddler tries to have sex with a woman behind a mascot suit. S17E8: a brother and sister news host team have sex in a Game of Thrones parody. S18E5: few children peep and take a picture of a naked unsuspecting woman via drone camera. The picture later got spread around town. S19E2: a character is pressured into raping a Canadian girl, only to befriend her instead. A man rapes the Canadian president to death. S21E7: the president rapes immigrants. This is viewed as horrifying. S22E2: churchgoers make jokes about the priest being a pedophile (which is false). Throughout the episode, the said priest is seen hanging out with a young boy constantly, leaving people somewhat concerned and confused. S24E1 (Pandemic Special): discussion and visuals of a bat and a pangolin being raped by a lead character. Repeated, graphic discussion of DNA (sperm) inside of these animals. The same character puts his sperm into a joint and forces another character to smoke it, also tricking a number of other characters into smoking/ingesting it unknowingly. S24E2: a man asks a child if he knows what pedophilia is, then offers to demonstrate as an explanation. Nothing happens as the child calls for his mom. S25E6: a young boy is jailed for sexual assault after pinching a young girl (his intention is not sexual). Saint Patrick gropes and caresses several women and men.
The titular vampire character rapes the protagonist's friend and threatens to kill the friend's family if she tells anyone what happened. The rape causes her to have a mysterious autoimmune disease from which she later dies. The vampire primarily targets and abducts children. Before she identifies him as a vampire, the protagonist believes him to be a child molester. He sucks blood from his victims' inner thighs, which adds to the quasi-sexual nature of his attacks. He specifically targets children in a poor Black neighborhood because he knows that the wider community won't defend or care about them. He later begins to target the children in the white community that he lives in. Towards the end of the book, the protagonist catches the vampire sucking blood from her teenage daughter. Almost everyone gaslights the protagonist when she suspects the vampire. The vampire in particular makes excuses for himself, saying that he has to suck people's blood to manage a health condition that he has. He also claims that his attacks on the protagonist's children are the protagonist's fault for suspecting him and trying to oust him from the community.
Soy Nevenka (Movie)
The whole film delves in the psychological abuse and portrays the effects on the victims psyche. It is a biography of the first case of sexual assault and abuse by a Spanish politician brought to justice. There is a sex scene with no physical violence, but strong insistence after her negatives. The on-screen rape scene is handled sensitively, focusing on her face and reaction, and not sexualizing it.
Spanish Princess (TV Show)
Due to a cultural misunderstanding, one of the main characters becomes a sex slave for a wealthy aristocrat. He is violently raped by him and his friends many times over the course of several months. It is worth noting that much of the book (and its sequel) focuses on this character’s experience with and recovery from PTSD. While the sexual violence is discussed many times, these discussions mostly focus on the survivor’s perspective.
Spartacus (2010) (TV Show)
The entirety of season 1 involves a pedophile who is raping and murdering children. While it happens mostly off screen, it is heavily implied that he is about to rape a child on screen before the main character stops him. The main character disguises himself in season 3 and tricks a woman into having sex with him.
Speak (Movie)
The film is about a teenage girl who is overcoming the effects of a rape. She is bullied by her peers for calling the police to break up the party where she was assaulted.
This adaptation follows the same plot as the traditional print version, in that the protagonist spends a school year recovering from a rape that took place before the events of the book. The illustrations related to the rape are stylized to portray the disgust and horror the protagonist feels, portraying the rapist as a monster or predator, but there are no nude or sexual depictions.
The book is centered around the protagonist recovering from being raped before the events of the book.
When characters' health points reach 0, their clothes become ripped off completely and can trigger a sex scene, which are presumably rapes. The game revolves around themes of defeat, sexual humiliation, and violation of the characters. This game also contains more niche fetishes that a mainstream audience would likely not enjoy, such as scat, urine, giving birth, vomit, excessive bodily harm, crucifixion, and more.
S1E1: a woman is hunted and grabbed by a group of militants who intend to execute her. At a debrief about this event a main female character mentions that this woman would likely have been sexually assaulted on film by a group if it had not been for her (MFC) intervention. S1E2: a woman is out for a run and is kidnapped by a group of men in black hoods. They spray her with a powerful hose which removes her underwear and she is left in a cell with no bottoms on. It is later revealed that this was a part of her training. A female main character alludes having been assaulted at her former job as a sex worker in order to "break" her. This information is then used by interviewers who also are trying to break her by forcing her to relive her experiences. This is presented as being good training for her career as a marine. Her trainers purposely keep her immersed in this position in order to "train" her. It also seems like the female trainer is doing this because she herself has unprocessed trauma from losing an asset. S1E3: a man forcibly tries to kiss and touch a woman. She asks him to stop and eventually hits him in the throat to make him stop. She returns to her room and locks the door. The man knocks insistently on her door until security leads him away. S1E4: the main character's drink is drugged. The man who drugged her takes her out into the woods and prepares to rape her, but her handler and other team members find her. They threaten the attacker and kick him in the genitals several times.
Species 2 (Movie)
Speechless (Movie)
This is a short film discussing sexual assault and rape amongst teenage boys. There is a discussion of a teenage boy's rape and a brief segment addressing the aftermath of this event.
Speed Grapher (TV Show)
A couple times it is implied that the main character (16 year old) has encountered creepy people/harassment or similar during her journey. None of that is described, just briefly mentioned. Chapter 12: this chapter contains two rape attempts: first, by the river and then when the protagonist is visited by someone. In the end, the main character gets in a relationship with an adult man whose age is unclear.
Spellcaster (Movie)
A woman's boss grabs her bottom while she is washing dishes: she is very uncomfortable but feels like she cannot respond. A woman attempting to take a bath is picked up by a man who is trying to rape her. She fights back and repeatedly yells, and is rescued eventually before the man gets the chance to.
Towards the end of the movie, it is implied that a mentally challenged character raped a woman, who wakes up having apparently enjoyed it. The whole scene is played for laughs.
Spiral (Movie)
Early on in the book, the headmaster of a school is implied to have sexually assaulted the teenage girls who attend it in the past. In Chapter 19, the headmaster attempts to gently pressure the main character (Silas) into admitting to misbehaviour. When Silas repeatedly denies the accusations, the headmaster gets incredibly aggressive, and it’s heavily implied that he raped and/or forced Silas into sexual acts. The main character is shown to dissociate after the events as one of the students comfort him, but the actual events are not described. Silas is a transgender male, but is perceived as female by everyone around him and is shamed through physical and sexual abuse into hiding it by the headmaster, which may be especially uncomfortable for some readers.
Splice (2009) (Movie)
A woman is raped and impregnated by a human hybrid. She is paid to keep the baby to full term. A human hybrid is strapped to a table and her clothes are cut off. There is a sex scene between a man and a human hybrid who is being raised as a child: it is unclear if she is an adult.
Split (2016) (Movie)
It is implied that a character has been sexually abused by her uncle since she was a child and that the abuse is still happening. A man orders a teenage girl to remove her clothes. The scene changes before anything is shown, but abuse is implied.
In the very beginning of the book, the narrator describes fearing recess as a child because of boys habitually chasing girls in order to touch them inappropriately. There is also mention of a teacher who fondles his girl students. Later on, the narrator describes a boy attempting to rape her.
The entire film has a heavy theme of sexual abuse/trauma with the main character. There are lots of talk that alludes to previous abuse or inappropriate behavior from the various foster homes she has been to and there are a few scenes throughout the movie where it shows either explicit unwanted advances from other characters, or her perception of the advances due to hallucinations from LSD. Her most recent foster father has a couple scenes that are heavily hinting at his sexual desire and need for her; there is one scene where he tries to coerce her into a sexual act when she comes home late, though she attacks him instead. In one scene, she is having consensual sex, and the man starts getting rough and choking her. She says she is into it, it just seems questionable whether she truly is or not. Overall it does depict the consequences of years of childhood sexual abuse pretty well, so it was portrayed accurately. It is very intense at times.
Spotless (TV Show)
A man has sex with a deceased person: we can see him on top of her and getting off doing up his trousers. It is discussed how taht same man had sex with his deceased wife to ‘love her back to life’. A niece tries to seduce her uncle. It is heavily implied that a teen girl going to be exploited to adult man, but is saved by her father before anything happens.
Spotlight (Movie)
Spring (Movie)
A man comes upon a woman in an alleyway and asks her how much for sex. When she does not answer he begins opening his pants, lifts her skirt, then she kills him. A woman jokes that a man would be raped if he gets put in jail.
Sprung (TV Show)
S1E1: sexual harassment is discussed. S1E3: a joke about a handsy uncle is made. A man is forced to show his penis. S1E4: during a robbery, thieves leave a picture of a penis at the scene and make it seem like a person ordered a dick pic online. Two characters look at each other through holes in a wall (flirting): they are conflicted about it. It is mentioned that a girl's father only filmed the other girls in a gymnastic competition.
The main characters are werewolves who hunt rapists or would-be rapists. They lure young men by using themselves or others as bait while they are in their human forms.
An artist attempts to rape a woman as part of a performance.
Squid Game (TV Show)
S1E5: a man claims that he and others had sex with a dead woman's body (37:00-38:00). S1E6: a sexual abuse by a father on her daughter is mentioned briefly. A character says that he and other men took turns assaulting a girl before they killed her. S1E7: a man tries to force another man into oral sex (40:20-42:20). He defends himself. Beforehand, the victim is told to take off his mask and show his face, the assaulter threatening to kill him if he does not. Since the victim is in disguise as a server, there is an extreme and inherent power imbalance. S2E1: two men are tied up by rope, held captive, and are kept silent using leather gags. They were beaten off screen then seen covered in blood. S2E5: two men break into a women's room and assault her whilst a third turns the woman's room's cameras off (21 minutes in). The two men threaten to physically harm and rape the woman.
A little boy smears his semen on multiple surfaces in school. An older professor tries to force his young female student into giving him oral sex and is stopped by his son opening the bedroom door (18:50).
Squidbillies (TV Show)
S1E2: a man in a church holds down a woman and is preparing to spank her against her will as he tells the woman's husband to watch. S2E1: a man calls himself “the rapist” because many people come into his office thinking he is a therapist. During a conversation he mentions that many woman “aren't into rape” and that he will not change his ways. S6E3: a man disguising himself as Jesus attempts to have sex with one of the side characters. it is very clear that she does not want to and she is very hesitant. A few seconds later it shows her running out of the house. S6E5: a man flirts and has obvious intentions of having sex with his son's girlfriend who is very obviously underage and touches her. She rejects his advances and walks out of the trailer.
St. Trinian's (Movie)
Stage Mother (Movie)
The film features a scene of date rape that happens to a lead female character. Detail is handled sensitively but the scene is quite shocking in an otherwise mostly comedic movie.
Stake Land (Movie)
A group of men attempt to rape a woman, but she escapes. A man motions towards a woman to 'join him' in his tent, which she does not want to do.
The chronic hyper-sexualization of black women is discussed at length. Drawings, writings, pictures, and video are all used to describe the various horrible sexual (and otherwise) crimes against black women throughout slavery and afterwards. The content is harsh and often racist, but is respectfully and informatively presented.
The Stand (TV Show)
Here are the references to rape and sexual assault present in the original edition of the book (1978). A female character is described as ‘morbidly afraid of rape’ and it’s described as ‘no great loss’ when she accidentally shoots herself while trying to shoot a man she believes to be a rapist. A pregnant female character fears she will be raped whilst travelling so carries a gun, along with her three male companions. A male character says ‘have fun getting raped and murdered’ to an older female character he was engaged in a sexual relationship with during an argument. A group of male antagonists establish a group of women they travel with which they call the ‘Zoo’. They drug the women with uppers and downers throughout the day and rape them multiple times per day, orally, vaginally and anally. When they find a younger or prettier woman, they execute the oldest female in the group to make room for the younger woman. It is implied the youngest girl they had in the ‘Zoo’ was 12. The women successfully escape and have vengeance. A male protagonist has sexual intercourse with a woman who is described as looking very young, potentially as young as 15, it is implied she could ‘appear old as you wanted her to be’. An adult woman engages in a sexual relationship with a teenage boy in order to corrupt him. A female character is raped repeatedly by the main protagonist until she becomes pregnant. She is unable to speak after this experience. This second summary concerns the 1990 uncut version of the book. Some of these scenes may or may not appear in the previous edition. In the backstory of a villain, it is told that he attempted to sexually assault a woman. A man approaches a male character and his female compantion, trying to purchase the woman. Later, these same men are in search of the woman, it is implied that if they were to find her, they would assault her. But they are unable to find her. When two groups of main characters meet up, a young man accuses an older one of wanting to "use" his female friend. Later on, the two men have a brief discussion about sexual assault. A male protagonist is seduced by, and has sex with a 17 year old. In a character's backstory, we learn he has been sexually assaulted in prison. The same character later mentions that he knows the result of war will be rape and murder, but he does not care. Later, a character rapes a vulnerable male character with the barrel of a gun and forces him to masturbate him, stating he will shoot if he does not continue. It is implied the vulnerable male character has been routinely abused before and is ‘used to it’. After being stalked, the main group gets ambushed by men who are revealed to keep women as sexual slaves, it is heavily implied that some of them were children. After a fight, women are rescued and talk about their experiences, traumatised. The main villain meets up with a woman. They begin to consentually touch. However the woman changes her mind before the act, but he brutally sexually assaults her. It is shown that she is pregnant and deeply traumatised after.
Star (TV Show)
Season 1: a woman is raped by her foster father. Season 3: an old woman is raped. It is revealed that a character was raped multiple times by her father when she was younger and got impregnated by him at a young age.
Star Trek (TV Show)
S1E3: a psychic teen becomes obsessed with a female crewmate, and grabs her forcefully while confessing his love to her. She slaps him, and he vaporizes her. S1E5 ('The Enemy Within'): a character gets split into a good half and an evil half of himself. His evil half attempts to sexually assault a woman. S1E8: a main character forces a female Android to kiss him, and she visibly tries to push away from him. Afterwards she says "no, not programmed for you". S1E9: a main character emotionally manipulates a teenage girl ( using language like calling her a "pretty young woman") to get her to help him and his team while on a planet. S2E11: the female protagonist continually asks not to be touched and is forcefully carried by the crew. A man touches her pregnant belly, and after being repeatedly slapped, he slaps her to comply. S2E16 ('The Gamesters of Triskellion'): a man forces himself into the prison cell of a protagonist, and she can be heard screaming off-screen for some amount of time. S2E19: a woman tries to bargain with a group of men from an opposing tribe: they attempt to rape her and she is killed by one of them. S3E10: several members of the crew are forced to kiss one another against their will. S3E11 ('Day of the Dove'): the protagonist threatens to rape another character and physically assaults her while he is under mind control. An invading alien continually kisses a main male character against his will: he forces her off (15:00). A woman is sexually assaulted off-screen by a man while under the influence of the hive-mind.
S1E19: a character discusses war crimes, including rape. S2E7: characters sexually harass and grope several crewmates throughout. It is played for laughs. S3E6: a 16 year old boy and a 20 year old woman have a romantic relationship: his father is not happy and flags it as inappropriate. S3E19: a main character sleeps with a side character who wrongly thinks he is her established partner. S6E17: in flashbacks, a main character discovers that her mother had been a 'comfort woman' to a main antagonist during a war. It is ambiguous whether she developed Stockholm Syndrome and came to love her captor, or if she did not resist solely out of fear for her life and the lives of her husband and children. S6E23: at the start of the episode, the bar owner blackmails an employee to read a book on sex acts for his race (ferengi) mentioning that he can fire her. In this episode a main character gets surgery to pose as a female in a meeting with a high ranking ferengi and gets invited back to the ferengi's quarters where he chases the character around and makes unwanted sexual advances. This is played for jokes. S7E9: a character refers to discoveries made in a previous episode where a character finds out that her mother had been a 'comfort woman' to a main antagonist during a war. It is ambiguous whether she developed Stockholm Syndrome and came to love her captor, or if she did not resist solely out of fear for her life and the lives of her husband and children. as well as this later in the episode it is discovered that two characters have had sex one getting the other pregnant it is left unclear and somewhat implied that this encounter was not consensual. after the conversation, the father of the child attempts to kill the mother (S6E17). S7E18: a man seduces a woman pretending to be a Bajoran messenger of the prophets, while actually being a Cardassian operative with ulterior motives.
Ongoing plot about a survivor of sexual assault and torture interacting with his abuser, including many flashback scenes of sexual abuse and torture. The survivor is presented as having enjoyed some of this abuse. The survivor goes on to coerce another character into sex at a later point in the series. SPOILERS: one character is in a relationship with another character and, during the course of this relationship, their physical and mental self is altered to the extent that they appear to be another person. However, this process is not perfect and there is some 'bleed through' - these memories are interpreted by the 'new' personality as rape and sexual abuse. The revelation of what is actually going on takes place throughout several episodes in the first season.
It may be taken as implied that a character is sexually assaulted off-screen; having been held captive, restrained, and tortured, he is asked how long it is been since he last had sex. He is kissed against his will and although he kisses his assailant back, it is clear that this is because he has been coerced. The scene cuts away. leaving a certain amount of ambiguity, but viewers connecting the dots can assume he is raped off-screen after the scene ends.
A protagonist is telepathically forced to experience her consensual sexual partner being replaced by another party forcing himself on her.
S1E3: a character's backstory involving rape is mentioned. S1E6: a character has a hallucination where she is back in her home colony being chased by a "rape gang". It lasts 15 seconds, during which the rapists are seen in her doorway. S2E1: a protagonist is telepathically impregnated without her consent. S3E6: a protagonist creates a simulation of another person on the and begins a romantic relationship with the simulation. S3E8: a visitor to the ship secretly uses telepathic powers to take advantage of other people, including starting a sexual relationship with a main character. S3E14: the episode revolves around a protagonist being accused of rape. The accusations are dismissed as a misinterpretation and the protagonists view the accusations as an injustice. S3E18: one female character states that she is not interested in pursuing a romantic relationship, but a male character presses on with music and dancing. She shares a kiss with him, but it is actually an alien masquerading as him. S3E21: a protagonist creates non-sentient simulations of coworkers for romantic and sexual relationships. S3E22: a protagonist is kidnapped and frequently gaslighted by his captor. The latter is revealed to also have enslaved a woman for 14 years, boasting of how 'naive' she was when he found her. He spills acid on his clothing in order to get him to change into clothing her prefers. In the same scene, he states "personally, I'd be delighted to see you go around naked". (21:33-22:59) It also might be of note that the captor could be interpreted as a queer-coded villain, thus reinforcing harmful stereotypes. When the protagonist attempts to escape, he murders her brutally. S3E24: a protagonist and her mother are kidnapped and stripped, though nothing in the episode implies this is for a sexual reason. S4E6: a character's backstory involving rape is discussed. S4E13: the female antagonist of the episode tells a male character that "by all rights, your body is already mine", then asks for him to give her his love "without resistance" if she wins a wager. S4E15: a protagonist is coerced into sex in exchange for protection. S4E16: this episode is a sequel to S3E6. A protagonist pursues a colleague, going so far as to set up a romantic dte under the guise of a professional meeting. The colleague finds out that the protagonist has previously simulated her and though she feels violated, she later apologizes for feeling uncomfortable for it. S5E12: a protagonist is telepathically assaulted and forced to experience a memory of another protagonist forcing himself on her. Rape is mentioned at 43:50.
Stargate SG-1 (TV Show)
*Because some sites combine the first two episodes of the series into one, any episode in the first series will not always be numbered in the same way.* S1E1: a female character is stripped naked and implanted with a parasite in a manner that is strongly reminiscent of sexual assault. S1E4: a main character is repeatedly kissed, touched, and threatened with rape throughout the episode as she is held prisoner after being "purchased". Her team disregards all of her fears beforehand and the trauma is not dealt with after. S1E5: an attempted rape occurs on screen. It is unclear how far the attempt gets before it is thwarted. The victim's clothes are ripped off below her waist, and she screams throughout the scene. This is witnessed by several main characters, one of whom wants to help but is commanded not to. Another main character burshes the incident off as normal behavior for the person who comitted it, due to him being from a less-evolved species. This character also states that all copulation was probably forced when humans were less-evolved. S1E9: a main character is drugged and discovers upon regaining consciousness that the woman who drugged him had sex with him. This is played as a joke. S1E14 + S2E22 + S3E1: the rape of a main character is not acknowledged as being coercive despite the perpetrator clearly and repeatedly drugging him with what is alluded to be a aphrodisiac, which allows the perpetrator to completely control the actions of her victims. It is only ever brought up later in a joking manner except when the perpetrator is in a later episode and sexually harasses the previously assaulted character. In season 1, she is about to rape another main character but at the last moment instead violently cuts the character’s stomach open. S3E12: a character experiences the memories of another (deceased) character's attempts to escape from an alien prison. These memories are shown to be extremely painful and upsetting for the character to recall, and it is eventually revealed that they are memories of how the deceased character escaped from the prison by entering into a sexual relationship with a guard. The way these memories are recalled and presented is strongly reminiscent of rape, but it is not referred to as such within the show. Some concern is also vaguely expressed by the characters that the person who currently holds these memories will be sexually assaulted by the guard in question, but this does not happen. S9E19: a female lead is impregnated against her will with an evil entity via scientific means. The character is extremely distressed by the forced pregnancy, wished to terminate it and is unable to due to the primitive conditions she is trapped in, and reveals in a later episode in season 10 that she 'could have put a stop to this' and that she regretted not killing herself to end the pregnancy. She is also coerced into entering into a marriage against her will because she worries would be killed for being unmarried and pregnant in the preindustrial village she is trapped in. S10E14: it is revealed that the same evil entity, now rapidly grown to an adult, sexually assaults a male lead by forcing him to have sex with her, the male character is spared consciously experiencing this because another character possesses him so he will not have to experience it.
Starry Eyes (Movie)
Startup (TV Show)
S1E1: a character gets intimate with another character. It is clear that one is not enjoying it and only doing it so to have a roof over the head. There is no choice to say no because the character has nowhere to go: no signs of direct force but also no consent either. S1E2: one character opens the shirt of someone without asking (around 31 minutes in). S2E8: during a meeting, a character is exposed to have done intimate pictures. It is also implied that another character showed them to a colleague without consent. In S3E5+6, we learn that a character (who insisted on being hurt during sex in season 2) was abused as a 15-year old by multiple business partners of their father. The character meets one abuser again and confronts them in a meeting. The abuser tries to gaslight and talk everything down. The father of the character admits, that he knew somehow wrong was going on but was not sure and he victim blames the character. No details are given but it is a big part of the plot.
Starve (Movie)
At one point, the antagonist becomes frustrated with the main protagonist's boyfriend and rips her shirt off, before impliying that he is going to assault her (1:20:15). She escapes, mostly clothed.
Chapter 3: a man gets injected and forces himself upon another man. It does not show upfront, but has the panicked sentences from the man on the pages. All genitalia (including nipples) are not shown. It is mainly implied, but not fully shown on page. Women beg to have intercourse with others, and this is due to a stimulant being injected into them. Sexual violences are not used in this manga to sexualize women,
Stateless (TV Show)
This series features sexual assault, PTSD, and child abuse.
Station 19 (TV Show)
A minor character mentions being raped. S3E2: someone jokingly says that someone else looks like a sex offender. S3E15: attempted rape off-screen. S3E16: the same sex offender joke is made again. S4E5: two girls who got kidnapped are asked by the police if they were sexuallty assaulted, who then question them about arson. S4E4-7: human trafficking storyline. S5E14: the end of the episode features an extremely violent/graphic attempted rape scene (the survivor fights off her attacker and escapes). S5E15: this episode deals with the aftermath of the attempted rape from S5E14 (the survivor is a main character).
The rape scene occurs approximately one hour into the film.
The antagonist is a rapist and serial killer.
Two boys attempts to rape a woman, but ends up unintentionally killing her instead.
Stoic (Movie)
Stoker (Movie)
A schoolgirl is harassed by a group of male classmates: they use mild innuendo and show her a crude drawing of a naked woman. They make verbal references to incest. At one stage, a teenage girl (18) and her uncle become sexually intimate, until the girl's mother intervenes. A teenage girl goes into a wooded area with a boy: they make out but the encounter soon turns violent and he attempts to rape her, however he is stopped and she exacts revenge on him (53:00-54:00).
The book contains a note by the author stating: "Dear Reader, I want to let you know that Stone Butch Blues is an anti-oppression/s novel. As a result, it contains scenes of rape and other violence. None of this violence is gratuitous or salacious". This book about LGBT life in 1970s America contains several graphic descriptions of rape, including a gang rape of a character who is a minor. Rape and sexual harassment, and the impact of such an event on one's life, is a central theme in this novel. It is accurate to the history of how women and sexual minorities were, and continue to be, treated. The second chapter contains a child on child sexual abuse.
A male doctor speaks to a group of students in a classroom about a female patient. She is brought into the room. She pleads that she is not "mad". The man says she will have an episode if her breasts, thighs, or ovaries are touched. She says, "Don't touch me" as he moves towards her. Then she has the episode of her body tensing up. It is said that a woman harmed her husband when defending herself from his sexual desires. A female patient talks about her and the other patients being tortured, stripped, and intimately examined by the staff. A male patient forcibly kisses a female patient. A character makes a joke about his father putting drugs in his drink when he was a child. He makes a vivid gesture showing his father sexually assaulting him.
Stonewall (Movie)
Stopmotion (Movie)
Although it is never explicitly said, it is heavily implied the protagonist is a survivor of childhood sexual assault. A monster touches the protagonist's face and feeds her a part of himself without her consent. Later in the movie the same monster eats a fictitious version of the woman, also without her consent. When the woman tries to change her film to not include these scenes, the child version of herself tells her "that's not how it happened"
Storm Cell (Movie)
The pushy male antagonist attempts to rape an unconscious woman in the last 20 minutes of the film.
The lead character is harassed, raped off-screen, then held hostage by her rapist.
Storytelling (Movie)
The first half hour of the film is about a professor who abuses his power to have sex with students.
Straightheads (Movie)
The protagonist is gang-raped on-screen in the beginning of the film whilst her boyfriend is beaten almost to death and unable to help her. The rest of the film revolves around her determination to find the perpetrators and exact revenge: the rape is thus discussed throughout, and shown again, in a longer and more graphic scene. One of the rapists has a teenage daughter, who the other men clearly intend to rape: the protagonist's boyfriend tries to rape her. The final scene shows the protagonist raping one of her attackers with a shotgun.
The Strain (TV Show)
S2E11: a woman escapes an attempted rape (31:30-32:50).
Strange Angel (TV Show)
S1E1: a cult is shown, which is about to sacrifice a virgin. S1E2: a priest tells a woman that she must try to get pregnant. S1E6: a woman seems hesitant to engage in a ritual threesome. S1E7: a priest seducing young girls is mentioned. The wife from S1E6 reveals that she does not want to be involved in the cult. S1E9+10: it is implied that a father has sexually assault both of his female children.
MAJOR SPOILERS FOR THE TWIST AT THE END OF THE MOVIE: A young woman is pregnant and believes that the father is her dead high school boyfriend. It is eventually revealed that the real father is the adult male with whom she is living and by whom she is employed; he is a former police officer and as a result, was able to steal Rohypnol from the evidence locker before he retired. Using these drugs he drugged and raped the protagonist, resulting in her pregnancy.
The plot involves the sexual torture and murders of numerous women. There are multiple graphic images of tied up women throughout the film.
About 30 mins in, a scene is presented at first as sexual violence/attempted rape against the female protagonist, but it turns out to be a consensual rape-fantasy, with a safe word, that the protagonist initiated and laid out the rules for in advance. However, because the film is told out of chronological order, we do not see that consent conversation until after the rape-fantasy is shown on screen. The rape-fantasy consists of the protagonist being handcuffed to a bed, choked, slapped, yelled at, and insulted. No nudity or genitalia are present, but the implication is that the character the man is playing will rape her, before she says the safe word. While the initial implication of the simulated consensual rapeplay is that the male lead is the assailant, this is quickly reversed and it turns out the female is actually a notorious serial killer who utilize sexual violence. She drugs him without consent, then ties him down and straddles him to enact extended physical violence before attempting to murder him. The film relies on preconceived gender roles and a disconnected narrative to intentionally mislead the audience about perpetrator and victim. Near the end of the film, two minor characters discuss a crime scene, and the assumption that the man could not have been the victim is stated, based on gender expectations.
Strange Days (Movie)
About midway through the film, a scene shows a man entering into a woman's hotel room, beating her, blindfolding and restraining her, cutting her clothes off, raping her and killing her. This is seen through the 'first person' point of view of the rapist (who is recording the crime on video), and experienced, in the film, through a VR device by another character. This is discussed and shown in flashbacks several times during the rest of the movie (one character even says that the tape is good film material). Near the end of the movie, a similar 'tape' is shown, with another woman being restrained, blindfolded, undressed and raped on-screen, but it is then revealed that it was staged and that the sexual relationship was consensual. One man tries to sell a kind of VR device to another man by making him experiencing 'being a 18 year old taking a shower': the footage he is shown is real. Throughout the movie, the male protagonist tries to get his ex-girlfriend back despite her clear disinterest. There is violence against women throughout the film.
Strange Empire (TV Show)
The premise of this show is that all of the men in a wagon party are killed, leaving the women and girls in the party to fend for themselves in the wilds of 19th century Alberta. Two young girls (13-15 years old) are trafficked as a result of being purchased by a man who intends to force them into sex work: they are saved from this fate by the female lead adopting them, but the man who bought/trafficked them continues to be a main character in the series. The same male antagonist tells the displaced women and girls that he will only offer them aid and shelter in exchange for them becoming sex workers in his brothel. The same male antagonist and his wife use the two previously mentioned child characters to force the female protagonist who adopted them into forced sex work: she escapes before actually being forced to do anything. Another character is forced into sex work against her will to support her children. A pregnant girl is later revealed to only be about 15 years old: she is only spared forced prostitution because she goes into labour. The girl then has her child taken from her against her will so that the brothel owner and his wife can pose him as their son. This same character, in a later episode, has a relationship with an intellectually disabled man in his 20s: this relationship is treated as a positive thing. Another female character is revealed to be 'married' to her adoptive father following her adoptive mother's death. The adoptive father's character is portrayed as having no interest in a sexual relationship with his adoptive child, however other characters try to push them to consummate their marriage and the female character is shown at one point to be willing to do so. A 15-year-old character gets her first period and several episodes later is put in an arranged engagement to a man in his 30s as a trade for the man investing in the town. It is later revealed that this man has been molesting his teenage niece for years and intended to keep both girls in a harem. A transgender male character is stripped in front of strangers and violently sexually assaulted and misgendered. The aggressor is shot in the head and mortally wounded; it is unclear whether the rape attempt is stopped in time or not.
The short is about an incestuous relationship between a father and son: the son is the aggressor in the relationship and the father is clearly uncomfortable and disturbed with the situation. There is one especially difficult scene where the father is taking a bath with the door closed and the son breaks in and then the camera switches to the mother, who is in the room next door and can hear the father screaming. She turns up the volume on her TV and pretends not to hear it, but it is still audible.
On-screen rape and sexual assault feature throughout the film. A woman is raped by her ex-boyfriend. Immediately after this, the same woman is raped by another man. Both scenes are relatively graphic. On another occasion, a man attempts to rape a woman, ripping open her shirt.
A woman is raped by two men in a row. The second attack is substantially more violent than the first, although for the most part only sounds are heard. Flashbacks to these attacks occur at various points throughout the film.
Strawberry Panic (TV Show)
The series contains groping and attempted rape.
Street Trash (Movie)
Sexual violence takes up a large portion of the movie.
The lead character is raped off-screen by her brother-in-law. The main character's sister is implied to have been fired due to sleeping with one of her teenage students. She also kisses and flirts with a rather young-looking actor who is implied to be "young".
Stridulum (Movie)
This film contains rape flashbacks throughout.
Submarino (Movie)
Subservience (Movie)
Succession (TV Show)
The dismissal and cover-up of rape and sexual harassment by people in positions of power, including many of the main characters of the show, is a major theme throughout the series. As they do with many sensitive topics, the characters often discuss these issues in a joking and insensitive manner, but it is not presented as something the audience is supposed to agree with. A recurring plotline (introduced in season 1, but starts featuring heavily in the plot in season 2) involves several characters becoming aware of a decades-long scheme to bury rape and sexual assault cases brought against the company's cruise line division. These activities included blackmailing, bribing, and intimidating victims into not reporting their assault or dropping charges against the company. This situation is made public in season 2 and is frequently discussed as a problem the company is trying to "solve" (i.e., make it go away again). One character involved in the scandal – who dies offscreen without ever being physically introduced – is referred to with a nickname based on the word "molester;" it is also vaguely implied that he was a pedophile. S1E3: a father mistakes his daughter for his wife and puts her hand on his crotch She is very upset. S2E9: several characters are called to testify about their knowledge of the company's cover-up of the sexual assault cases. Towards the beginning of the episode, the characters are seen watching (and mocking) a news report which reveals additional disturbing details about the scandal, specifically the company's policy of labeling cases where the victim was a sex worker or worked in a foreign port as "no real person involved." Later, a female character is sent to persuade a woman not to testify about her assault; she does this by convincing the woman that speaking up is not worth the public scrutiny, as well as offering her money and promising that she will personally deal with those responsible for the assault from inside the company. She successfully coerces the woman into staying silent, and the people responsible ultimately face little retribution. In season 3, it is implied that a character is in a sexual relationship with his much younger assistant (he is 80 and she is likely in her 20s or 30s). A main character frequently jokes about child sexual abuse, the jokes often featuring himself as a victim. It is never stated explicitly, but a popular fan theory is that this character is in fact a survivor of child sexual assault/abuse.
To cope with being institutionalized, the protagonist imagines she's in a fantasy-world brothel and that she and the other patients are sex slaves. In the fantasy sequences, the girls are passed between customers and there are three on-screen attempted rapes. It's also heavily implied that the protagonist was institutionalized in the first place because she was raped, and her attacker got her committed so she wouldn't be believed.
The Suckling (Movie)
A catatonic woman is raped in a mental hospital. It is played as a joke.
The protagonist walks in on an adult man aggressively kissing and shoving a pre-teen girl. The protagonist runs away immediately, before anything explicit happens, but the abuse of the girl is referenced several times by the man to intimidate the protagonist.
The book is a historical fiction account of being forced to attend an Indian boarding school. The priest in charge of the school raped the protagonist and several other characters. The assaults are not depicted or described in detail. The story focuses on the trauma of those interactions.
Suicide Club (Movie)
Two women are kidnapped and are forced to watch as a man rapes and kills a woman (01:06:30). The assault is mostly obscured by a white sheet with a non-realistic assault scene shown through a silhouette in the sheet.
It is repeatedly implied and partially shown that some women get raped in orgies. Volume 6, chapter 59 : a main character describes her childhood, mentioning the sexual abuse done to her by her adoptive father. Volume 11, chapter 101 : a trans woman is naked, it is implied that she very recently got raped. The implied rapist claims that she consented. Volume 15, chapters 144 - 146 : a few women are verbally forced to strip naked ; they get to dress again during chapter 146.
The whole plot is based off a 16-year-old girl with special needs (mentally younger) being groomed by a 50-year-old-man which leads to him getting her pregnant. The girl is then killed made to look like a suicide to cover up the sexual abuse/rape that occured seeing as the girl was still in the mindset of a child.
Much of the film revolves around body swapping and there is a scene where a man swaps bodies with a woman and then has sex with that woman's husband without her consent.
A rape scene occurs onscreen.
Summer's Moon (Movie)
Two teenagers have sex and it's later revealed that they're half-siblings. When the teenage boy takes the teenage girl captive, he attempts to force feed her and kisses her against her will. The same boy also forces his mother down on the table and kisses her. Eventually, the teenage girl fakes a relationship with the teenage boy in an attempt to get him to trust her and they have sex, though she only does this in an attempt to escape. It's also hinted that the teenage boy and his mother may have had sex. Finally, the teenage girl is forced to go with her father and he puts his hand on her thigh and it's understood that he's going to try to have sex with her.
Vampires mention their thralls are people who have committed crimes, including rapists. The abusive courtier from the first novel attempts to rape the female lead. The scene is graphic. He tells her she will be given to his guards, next.
There is a reference to a man having sex with a 17 year old girl. There is a mention of possible human trafficking in the past.
Sunset (Movie)
Supacell (TV Show)
S1E3: this episode contains an attempted rape, which gets punished.
Super (Movie)
Super Deluxe (Movie)
A trans woman is forced perform sexual favors for a police chief in order for her and her son to be released unscathed (1:34:17-1:40:14). The power dynamic is clearly being exploited and the lack of consent is made abundantly clear by the woman’s crying and reluctance to comply.
Superjail! (TV Show)
Supernatural (TV Show)
S1E1: a character is held down and straddled against his will. There is an implied orgy with triplets. S1E7: a man and a woman make out, and when the man tries to touch her breast, the woman clearly says 'no'. He treis again afterwards anyway. S1E6: two men are tied down and molested. S1E8: a Native American man mentions that American cavalry raped and killed his ancestors. A man mistakes the protagonists for a romantic couple rather than brothers. They correct him. However, shortly afterward, another character makes the same assumption, and this time the brothers do not correct it. Instead, they play into the misunderstanding: one brother calls the other “honey” and slaps him on the butt as he walks away. This moment is presented as comedic, but it contains incestuous implications, especially when viewed without later context. S1E9: a man attempts to assault a teenage girl. He is stopped before anything happens. S1E11: prostitutes are implied to be forced into the job or at least are not given as much choice as they should be. S1E20: a woman is tied down and forced to watch another woman and a man kiss. The other woman then kisses her without her consent. S2E5: a character who can control people by giying them voice commands, touches a girl while she is crying, telling her to stop. He then commands her to slowly undress and implies that he is going to have sex with her (27:35-30:00). S2E13: a man attacks a girl and assaults her. S2E14: the main character is possessed by a demon and assaults a young (possibly teen) friend of his. It only has sexual undertones and the character is stopped. S2E15: a teacher invites his university student to his room and kisses her, intending to do more. A university student gets probed by fake aliens: they then make him slow dance with them (it is very handsy). A demi god creates fake women with his mind for sexual reasons. S2E20: a creature smells and rubs his face on a drugged, tied up, semi unconscious young woman and groans liks it is enjoying it. Season 3: one character arc towards the end of this season involves a woman who was raped by her father at the age of 14. S3E6: one of the main characters gets groped by an older woman and tries to push her off multiple times. S3E16: a demon who was a 10 year old child, possesses a woman and physically restrains a man, kissing him while still acting like a child. S4E3: during a time travel sequence, a character comments on how his mother is attractive. In the same episode, a man is possessed and kisses his daughter. S4E4: a man begins kissing his wife and becomes aggressive as he is changing into a flesh eating monster (22:20-22:50)- She starts screaming to stop it, but he continues enacting sexual violence. S4E8: a woman is 'drugged' with magic by a man who wants her to love him. S4E10: a character recounts his experiences in hell and alludes to sexual violence. S4E11: a girl is impregnated by her father and kills herself after the child is born. The child is the main villain of the episode, and the details around her conception are directly discussed by the protagonists. S4E18: it is retroactively revealed that almost all events up to this point, including dialogue and behavior, were influenced by an in-universe prophet (later revealed to be God), who controlled the narrative of the brothers’ lives without their consent. This adds a layer of dubious consent to earlier character actions, including those with incestuous overtones, raising concerns about autonomy and manipulation. S5E11: a man is tied down while a female creature moves her finger over his head and licks it (her intention is to drink his brain). A female character kisses a main male character without asking for his consent: he is visibly uncomfortable and unwilling (20:50). S5E12: the episode premise is about a teenage boy swapping bodies with an adult man. He has sex in the man’s body with a grown woman without her knowledge that he is actually a teenager. S5E14: three characters are hugged and held by a naked man (13:00). They express discomfort about it, and one says no multiple times, but the man still hugs them all. S6E5: a character describes a scene as rapey (08:40). A main character is hit on by a man in an alleyway. He turns him down and is then thrown and pushed against a dumpster and turned into a vampire (14:14-15:53). The interaction has sexual undertones and can easily be read as a metaphorical rape, especially because the vampire continues to make sexual comments toward him later in the episode that are framed as predatory. S6E6: a man who is being compelled to tell his darkest secrets implied to his friend that when his daughters was spending the night at his house with his own daughter, he raped her and knew he would not be caught. It is not explicity stated that it was not consensual, but presumably, the girl was underage and therefore not able to consent. S6E8: a character expressedshesitation to hand another character over to their boss saying that it will be a lifetime of demon rape for them. S6E9: multiple suggestions of off-screen sexual violence, alluded to as part of an alien/fairy abduction. S6E10: the female character from S1E16 ties up and molests a main male character and sexually assaults another main male character to grab his sword. The assault is retaliated against in similar form by the male character, to her surprise, while she is envesseled. It is strongly implied that a demon's "host" body was sexually assaulted in her past, and that the demon is currently being genitally and/or anally penetrated with a knife as a form of sexual torture. S6E16: the episode is centered around disappearances from a small town. It is found out that the people being abducted are being taken by faeries. A woman says that they will all be forced to have sex with the faerie king. At least one of the people abducted is a teenage boy. A trucker helps a young girl and she kisses him till he pushes her off him. She then forces him to kill his family. S6E18: the creature that the main characters are hunting talks about the attempted rape of his wife, which lead to the creature being accused of murdering his wife (33:20-33:40). S7E1: sexual violence is alluded to. S7E8: someone is drugged to manipulate them into falling in love. S7E13: a non human woman has consensual sex with the main character. However, it is a trick to get pregnant with a baby that grows up fast and who is sent to kill the character. S8E14: a man made a deal with a crossroads demon for a woman to fall in love with him. They have been together for ten years. S9E3: a male character meets a woman who gives him food and shelter for a day. They later end up having sex. In the morning, the man finds out she is a Reaper who is here to get information from him. The Reaper is then killed by the man’s friends who there to rescue him. S10E2: the main character (a demon) touches a stripper who tells him not to: he then drops some money on the ground, telling her to pick it up (04:12-05:27). She starts to leave but he grabs her before security stops him. S10E7: demons are forcing women into prostitution. The women are forced to offer their bodies in exchange for the client’s soul. S10E9: a female teenager is offered as a trade to a male loan shark by her unofficial male caregiver. The loan shark touches her unconsensually and attempts to assault her, while she is visibly distressed and tries to push away. The assault is stopped short by another male character. The assaulter then tries to attack another male character who was there to rescue the girl, but then the assaulter gets killed violently. A main character recounts a time that he was underaged and was drugged by adults who likely planned to sexually assault him (29:05-32:04). The assault was stopped presumably before it started. His recounting is not explicit and he does not go into specific details. S11E7: a vengeful ghost ist accused of crossing the line with two male kids, which lead to his death (26:00). S11E9: past rape is strongly implied and used to taunt a character. This ends with the character being trapped with their abused, being told they will be raped and beginning to cry while backing away in fear. Throughout the last half of season 11, the character is forced to work with their abuser. S11E19: thie episode's monsters possesse a dozen of people and have orgies with each other before dying and becoming pregnant. A 16 year old boy is one of the possessed. S12E2: a character is drugged and raped while being held captive, and is subsequently taunted regarding this. S12E8: a woman is tricked into becoming pregnant after having sex with a man she did not know was possessed by a different entity. She then dies carrying the baby to term. S12E13: a female ghost talks about being raped by multiple crew members while none of the passengers did anything to help. The ghost also talks about their teacher saying they deserved what happened to them (30:05-30:20). A man stabs a woman's hand into a table and kisses her hair while she is begging him not to kill her. He also appears to get off on 'eating' psychics, hearing them scream and one of the victims who is saved is a teenager. S13E2: a man attempts to rape a female before being killed (25:50-26:10). S13E12: two sister witches use a spell to make multiple men fall in love with them. The second victim was made to kiss one of them. It’ i also said that they’ve been extremely popular with men, implying that they most likely used their love spell on a lot more people than what was seen in this episode. S13E16: two main male adult characters show attraction to and eventually assault two teenage girl cartoon characters. No one treats it as anything out of the ordinary. In an episode, a character paralyses people by kissing them and then murder them: he does it several times. Additionnally, a child is turned into a dog and has his temperature taken anally off-screen (14:14). Worthy of note: characters commonly make jokes alluding to rape or sexual assault throughout the series. The theme of supernatural possession frequently appears in several episodes. Many have interpreted this to be an allegory for rape, as characters are coerced into acts they did not consent to.
The male protagonist grabs the female protagonist's breast and tries to kiss her despite her asking him to stop. She later explains that she was surprised but would agree to have sex with him. Shortly after, he tries again to kiss her but she rebuffs him. At approximately 1:15:00 into the movie, a man attemps to rape the female lead after she got drunk in a club. The male lead eventually rescues her. Throughout the movie, the female lead is repeatedly grabbed against her will, pushed against wall and so on by different men.
There is unconsensual grabbing and touching throughout the film. Someone watches another person undress through a peephole. Multiple sex scenes that lack explicit verbal consent or expressions of pleasure. This film contains heavy themes and depictions of incest between siblings, both unknowingly and knowingly. At 43 minutes into the movie, rough sex is initiated without explicit consent or foreplay, while another character is waking up.
The author describes being raped in college: a male friend invited her to his apartment and ignored her when she said she wanted to leave and forced her on the bed. At one point, a roommate pokes the author's breasts to see if they are real.
It is mentioned in passing on several occasions that the code of behaviour adopted by the Khmer Rouge forbade rape and sexual assault (i.e. pages 120-121). Page 266: a woman's corpse is violently penetrated with a foreign object following her death by torture. Soldiers look on and laugh while this occurs. Pages 314-315: it is described how the Khmer Rouge would regulate sexual and romantic relationships between 'war slaves' by forcing them to seek permission in order to marry and by forcing some couples to live as married couples against their wills. Page 365: it is mentioned in passing that men stealing vegetables metaphorically 'raped' the gardens. Page 366-367: it is mentioned that a woman who had complained about the regime was gang-raped and murderd in her home. Pages 408-409: refugee women attempting to flee Cambodia are raped and robbed. Page 413: it is mentioned that some Thai civilians and soldiers raped and robbed Cambodian refugees who had crossed the border and were living in aid camps. Page 418: the young daughter of a refugee family descibes fleeing Vietnam by boat, and the refugees' abuses by Thai pirates; the author comments that she doesn't mention any sexual violence, but that its having occurred was evident from her demeanour. Page 439: rapists are mentioned in passing. Page 450: the author mentions that the refugee camp he was living and working in was unsafe, with robberies and rapes occuring at night.
The author discusses Jeffrey Epstein's trafficking sex crimes against women and girls.
As the film takes place in a post-apocalyptic world, the female protagonist offers to have sex with the male protagonist in exchange for food and shelter early in the movie: he agrees. At some point, because he thinks she is taking a blade to kill him, he violently pins her to a wall naked. They two eventually become lovers. Later, another man surprises the woman, points a gun to her head and gropes her. She is saved from rape by the former man. Toward the end of the movie, the male protagonist explains that his brother tried to rape a woman, but was forced to flee because she screamed.
The Suspect (TV) (TV Show)
The sex trade is a theme in this series, with women in the trade being murdered. S1E1: we learn through dialogue that a main character has historically been accused of sexual assault. S1E2: a woman clearly feels violated and that she hasnot given fully informed consent when she realises that her husband, by cheating on her without protection, has put her at risk of contracting an STD. S1E3: a woman who has a history in the sex trade mentions an occasion in her past when she was raped by six men, and further traumatised by the police reaction (the rape is not described in any further detail). S1E5: two men in the series are revealed to be brothers. When they were children, their mother regularly sold both of them to be sexually abused by a paedophile ring. There are some flashbacks but not of the actual sexual abuse, which is never shown onscreen.
Suspect Zero (Movie)
Approximately halfway through the film, a man kidnaps a woman by shoving her into his vehicle and driving away to a secluded spot. She defends herself, which results in the assailant beating her head and face senseless against the dashboard until she is catatonic. He then proceeds to sexually assault her.
Early chapters have brief mentions of drunk tourists making sexual comments directly at or in reference to the underage girls working at Swamplandia Chapter 19: an adult male rapes a 13 year old girl .
S.W.A.T. (TV Show)
S1E6: there is a discussion of whether a teenage girl was raped in a home invasion and later on a female character describes a violence she suffered as a teenager, but does not clearly say if she was sexually assaulted, though it could be interpreted as such. Worthy of note: the episode also features sextorsion. S2E9: the main character’s sister gets drugged at a bar but escapes a man who is revealed to be a serial rapist. His crimes are discussed for the rest of the episodes as they look for him. S3E9: the team tracks down a child sex trafficking ring. S4E17: the team tracks down a sex trafficking ring that operates at truck stops. S6E18: the team chases a child sex trafficking ring and one of the victims. One of the child victims fell in love with her trafficker. S6E19: the episode is about a prison guard who rapes female inmates. Nothing is shown but it is talked about in detail from one of the victims.
Sweatshop (Movie)
In the opening scene, a woman wakes up naked in the factory and is chased by the people living there. A drunk man comes across one of the women who has been tied up and tortured. He attempts to rape her but is killed before he can. They find the severed penis of one of their friends while searching for them.
The antagonist rapes the protagonist's wife in a flashback, and what is shown is a crowd of people mocking her. He then raises her daughter as his own and grows to lust after her when she is a teenager, secretly spying on her in her room, and attempting to force her to marry him.
The plot heavily revolves around incest (a father abuses his young daughter) and rape (nothing overtly graphic happens on-screen).
A character's father sexually assaulted her in the past and has begun sexually assaulting her young cousin. The character knows she cannot say anything against her father because he is a well respected man and no one would believe her. The instances of sexual assault are never described, only referenced.
A father sexually abuses his teenage daughter. A scene shows them lying together and kissing.
Sweet Home (TV Show)
A man tries to rape a woman but is interrupted. A man frequently abuses and beats his wife.
One of the opening scenes of the film is of a young boy being raped by an adult woman. This scene is explicit and a few minutes long. The film does not portray this act in a negative way and it is never discussed by any of the characters, but it is important in understanding the main character's backstory. The young boy in this scene was played by the director's 13-year-old son.
Sweet Thing (Movie)
White soldiers raped Indian women during mass forced displacement. Their experiences are told with limited (though potent) detail, amongst a litany of oppression and survival in the main character's family history. The main character gets entangled with a family with a long history of domestic abuse of various kinds.
The Swimmers (Movie)
Switch (1991) (Movie)
Switchback (Movie)
In the opening scene, a woman is held hostage and the male murderer holds a knife up to her genitals under her dress. Off screen, he stabs her to death.
This show includes a relationship between a teenager/high school-aged girl and an adult man. S4E4: a main character wakes up in bed with her ex-boyfriend and cannot remember what happened the night before. S4E5: this episode deals with the fall-out of the previous one. The main character wonders whether she has cheated on her long-distance boyfriend and cannot remember if she consented to sleep with her ex at all. She tries to piece together the events of the night before. From this point, the series features frequent discussions of rape and some instances of victim-blaming (some discussions are potentially very affirming and generally handled well, but others may be more difficult to watch). S5E9: this episode has a plotline where a character deals with childhood sexual abuse that was previously mentioned in the show. - A character goes to dinner to be surprised that a family member who sexually abused him is present (9:15-11:20). The character is visibly uncomfortable, particularly when the family member hugs the character. The character tells his girlfriend what happened. She wants to leave but he insists on staying for dinner to reconcile with his mom. - The family dinner continues, with the character continuing to look uncomfortable and not eating (12:20-13:00). The family member mentions wanting to attend the character's baseball game. There is a tense scene where the family member pulls at his tie and drinks wine. The character's mother praises the family member and reminds the character of specific times and locations that the abuse happened. - The character's girlfriend rants about the family dinner and tries to convince the character to tell his mother (16:30-18:30). At the end, the character smashes a lamp. - The character's girlfriend tells the character that his mother came to see her, realizing something was wrong (30:35-31:50). The girlfriend confronts the character about anger issues present through the series. - The character confronts his mother about the abuse (34:00-37:00:) The conversation starts immediately after disclosure and is very tense and emotional. At first she doesn't believe him and accuses him of remembering it wrong. The character's deafness and the language barrier between him and his mother leading to the abuse is a prominent theme of the conversation. - The character and his girlfriend have a follow-up conversation about his relationship with his mother after the disclosure (39:50-40:50).
Sword Art Online (TV Show)
The second half of season one introduces an arc villain who kidnaps the protagonist's girlfriend, consistently sexually harasses and threatens her, and attempts to rape her; this is played for fanservice visually even as the narrative condemns it. The same arc also introduces the protagonist's sister (biologically his cousin), who has unrequited feelings for him, similarly played for fanservice that undermines the story's condemnation. The sister remains in the story after this arc but stops pursuing her brother. S3E10: a student is sexually harassed by her mentor off-screen. There is one fairly graphic scene including the attempted rape of two girls.
"The Bounds of Reason": a king admits to raping and then marrying a woman to take control of her kingdom. A woman's clothes are ripped open, and a soldier threatens to rape her while groping her. Another character stares at her despite her request for him to stop. A mentally handicapped character is said to be the product of his mother being gang raped by soldiers. "A Shard of Ice": the main character sees a tavern keeper groping a 12-year-old. His only reaction is annoyance. (It has been established in another book that he doesn't intervene in such situations, even if he find them abhorrent.) "Eternal Fire": a character restrains a woman during a fight scene and does so by deliberately putting his hands on her chest. "Sword of Destiny" : a man is held captive by dryads so that he can be used for the purposes of inducing pregnancies. While he seems happy with (or at least okay with) the situation, it is still a choice where he either does this or is executed. Some humans also threaten to rape said dryads after burning their forest. Mention is made of the potential for incest among royal heirs. "Something More": a character is afraid that the protagonist wants to rape his wife (though this worry is unfounded). A sorceress is mentioned to have enchanted a man with the intention of having sex with him, though this never ends up happening. The stories are set in a medieval-style fantasy universe where sexism and sexual violence are common; passing mention of such topics are present throughout the book.
The rape of a side character happens explicitly in one scene of this book with text that heavily implies the act in its description, but is not outwardly graphic or vivid. Details: A female side character is found by the main character being raped by an enemy soldier during a raid. The side character deals with the emotional aftermath in a few scenes following for the rest of the book, and also discovers she is pregnant as a result. Ultimately the rape and pregnancy devastates this character into committing suicide.
Swordfish (Movie)
During the movie one character is asked to hack into a government data base while restrained and given a blowjob by a woman. Once he is unrestrained, he tries to push the woman off, and has a gun pointed at his head. The woman tries to kiss him and he pushes her away.
Sybil (1976) (Movie)
The film's plot is centred around the psychological effects of childhood physical and sexual abuse. It is worth noting that the story told by this movie, based on real accounts of psychiatric treatment, was later subjected to controversies.
Sylvester (TV Show)
The Sympathizer (TV Show)
A historical black comedy miniseries based on Viet Thanh Nguyen's book of the same name, The Sympathizer, about the Vietnam War. Although general themes like war and violence are portrayed in a dark comedy fashion, sexual assault specifically is handled seriously. S1E4: an attempted rape is acted ou for a film. S1E7: sexual harassment in strip club. Off-screen rape in a flashback, symbolized by forcefully inserting object in victim's mouth.
The book deals with themes such as identity, war, and otherization: sexual violence (extremely graphic) is intended to shed light on the brutality of the Vietnam War.
A man walks into a room where another man had just been having sex with a woman who is either dead or under anesthesia. There is another scene in which a man licks a woman’s ears suggestively before attaching jumper cables to them.
Szamanka (Movie)
Taboo (2017) (TV Show)
The show features an incest plotline, which is evident from the first episode. It is explicitly revealed in S1E3 that this is the nature of the relationship. The show subsequently includes very graphic scenes of incestuous sex between these characters (brother and sister). A woman is forced to have sex with her husband multiple times. S1E4: a woman is taken into custody and her top is removed as part of an attempt to get her to cooperate. It is then heavily and uncomfortably implied that if she does not cooperate she will be raped. It does not happen.
Tailbound (Video Game)
Attendees at a game convention are drugged with a mind-controlling gas that causes extreme sexual arousal. The main character is immune to the effects of this gas and ventures throughout the convention building to find the antidote for the gas. At the beginning of the game, two males attempt to sexually assault the main character, but he escapes. After this scene, another scene is triggered where two monsters rip off the main character's clothes and begin to rape him, although the main character seems to not mind and is shown as being sexually aroused. Throughout the game, the player can choose to have sex with multiple monster enemies to "defeat" them. After defeating a boss, the player can choose to have sex with the defeated boss, which is presumably non-consensual. This game also features sex with non-sentient animals and monsters.
An older female protagonist, while blindfolded, places a paper in a young male characters lap and points emphatically to several places, making him very uncomfortable with her proximity and physical touching over his crotch which borders on groping. This can be read as accidental or intentional teasing. The male protagonist is subject to an attempted seduction in which magic is used to coerce him into sexual activity with a sex worker who flashes him at the behest of a third party. He does not want to participate in any sexual activity but the magic makes it difficult to resist, however he is able to escape.
The Take (TV Show)
Taken (2008) (Movie)
The main character’s daughter is abducted and transported into an underground underage sex ring where girls are auctioned off to wealthy men for sexual abuse. Several drug dens and brothels are shown with men violating drugged/drunk girls and women.
The Tale (Movie)
Based on the writer-director's real experiences, the film is about a 13 year old girl's sexual abuse at the hands of two adults.
A rape scene is described in full detail from the point of view of the perpetrator, who up to this point is mostly a trusted character when it comes to this stuff in the story.
A man forces a female character onto a bed and pins her down with his knee in between her legs. Rape is strongly implied here.
In the beginning of the movie (~22:40), slave traders attempt to rape a teenage girl. Before they can do anything, they are stopped by the main male character who fights them (until ~25:25).
The first part of the movie is about a coerced pregnancy. The third section depicts men who drug and rape women while attempting to film the act.
Talk to Her (Movie)
A nurse rapes and impregnates a woman in a coma.
A girl gets pushed to the ground and a man holds her down with ill intentions before the man gets hit in the head in a slapstick kinda way.
A man attacks a woman and holds her against her will. She fights back and stabs him with a scissor to get away.
A female mouse character is locked in a bird cage only in her underwear by a much bigger male character and routinely sexually abused. photos of her in sexual and compromising abusive acts are plastered on the wall. She later manages to escape. The same male character chases the female protagonist in what appears to be a rape scene.
A man makes lewd comments about having sex in an elevator to the protagonist when they are stuck in it together, but nothing further happens (24:49). The protagonist's now husband throws her on the bed to force himself on her, then she tells him to get on with it - but after snarling at each other, he gets off her and says he can not do it, and she protests, indicating the sex was actually consensual in nature (1:01:10).
Tanin No Kao (Movie)
A man suddenly pounces on his wife but immediately stops when she does not reciprocate. He does complain about her "refusing him". There are two very brief on-screen scenes which depict attacks which might be attempted rape but in both cases the victim escapes quickly and easily. There is an off-screen incestuous sex scene between two consenting adults.
Tank Girl (Movie)
The sexual violence in this movie was always from non-heroic characters, and Tank Girl (Lori Petty) always either physically defends the victim or convinces the assaulter to leave, sometimes using their own homophobia against them. Attempted rape/child sexual abuse: occurs shortly after Tank's imprisonment at Water and Power and an attempted rape occurs at the Liquid Silver Club.
Tannod (Movie)
A father sexually abuses and rapes his daughter.
The documentary discusses various incidents of sexual assault experienced by the women featured in the film. It covers rape when the women were minors and being in a relationship with a man that has raped multiple girls. This man is the stepfather of one of the women.
In one of the last episodes, a male haracter explains how he tricked women into Russian parties, which they think are just to dance, but end up raped by the entire platoon.
Taxi Driver (Movie)
A young girl, roughly 12 years old, is a sex worker. An ongoing theme of the film is the protagonist's obsessive stalking of a woman.
Taxidermia (Movie)
A man looks through a window to watch two women bathe. He later masturbates while secretly watching them playing outside. The same man fantasizes about tricking a little girl into touching him. Worthy of note: the same man has sex with a disemboweled pig corpse while fantasizing about the two women from earlier.
Team America (Movie)
One character jokes about forcing another character to perform oral sex on him. Later on in the movie, he actually forces him to perform oral sex in order to “prove his loyalty to the team and the cause”. Another man hates actors because he was raped as a child by the cast of Cats. All of these incidents are played for laughs.
The story is about war and genocide, and gives a very raw depiction of what happens.
The movie is about Ted Bundy, notorious serial killer and rapist. His crimes are mentioned throughout, and in one scene, he tells a woman he is going to strangle, then rape her. A main female character discusses an event where her sister was brutally raped and left for dead.
Teen Spirit (Movie)
At a party, an adult, takes advantage of a drunk teenage girl. There are also mentions of rape and hints of sexual violence in other unrelated scenes.
Teen Wolf (TV Show)
One of the main characters is continually abused by a male character, who tries to rape another female character (it is heavily implied verbally). The show ends up redeeming him. There are a few moments where one of the main male characters is sexually assaulted by two female characters, and this is viewed as romantic. S1E6: a male teacher verbally sexually harasses a male student saying something about how he bets he visits porn sites every night. S1E8: a werewolf's supernatural powers basically make him in heat and he makes out with a girl he was not previously interested in. S1E10: the alpha wolf dates the main character's mom just to blackmail the main character. S1E11: a female main character licks the abs of a male main character she is holding captive and talks about how she seduced him in the past in order to get close to him and kill his family. S2E3: a teen is seduced into being a werewolf. A teen girl's ex boyfriend physically intimidates her. S2E4: a teenage girls who has been turned into a werewolf makes out with the adult man werewolf, who says that he already has a mate in mind for her. S2E5: a teenage girl werewolf sexually assaults a teenage boy werewolf. She slides her hand up with thigh, and then does the same thing with his girlfriend, but in a more threatening way. S2E6: rape is mentioned. A man tries to convince a girl to kiss him: she refuses. He then keeps badgering her, whih is played off as flirting. S2E7: a naked possessed teenage boy intimidates a female teen main character after she surprised him in the locker room: it is vaguely sexual, but mostly violent and threatening. He does not know what he is doing and is surprised when he comes to his senses on top of her. He is then beat up by the protagonist. A mom tells another mom that their teenagers are having sex. One female character jokingly tells another that he is using rapey language. S2E8: a teacher is seen with a girl who appears to be a teen at a rave. He says "she's 21", but it is doubtful. S2E9: a stalker is featured. S2E10: homicidal teenager boy tells a girl he would not have tried to kill her if she gave him a chance. S2E11: the stalker (who is then dead) is revealed to have photoshopped himself into photos with a main female character. Throughout season 3, a woman kills people. The man she is sleeping with doe not know that she is a murderer. S3E2: a teacher makes a joke about the size of a student's penis. S3E3: this episode features the ritual sacrifice of virgins and burying of homosexuals. S3E6: the main character seems to be possessed and creepily walks in on his ex girlfriend in the shower and tries to get physically close with he. He snaps out of it and does not remember what happened. S3E9: two people have a sexual encounter under the influence of magic - this could be interpreted as rape. S3E22: several people have sexual encounters with people under the influence of magic. S4E2: an adult woman turns her former lover into a teenage version of himself. He has the mind and memories of his teenage self. This adult woman murdered most of his family, but when they were teens, they had a sexual relationship before she killed his family. She turns him into a version of himself who does not know, and then seduces him so he will give her a magical item. S5E7: two characters who have sexual chemistry are either actually making out or think they are making oit and have hallucinations that are super disturbing. This is the first time these two characters have kissed. Its unclear if they are actually in control of what is happening, or if it is all just a hallucination. S5E20: a antagonist makes out with a person whom he had resurrected, pretends to be into her, and then kills her while she is straddling him. One main character (17 years old) had an off-screen, pre-series relationship with an adult woman as a teenager. This relationship could have included sexual abuse. The same woman makes numerous sexual and suggestive comments towards multiple teenagers and young adults later in the show, without their consent/reciprocation.
S1E1: in the first scenes of the episode, a man explicitly states that he is religious and thinks that he and his girlfriend should save themselves for marriage. He starts to pray and the girl ignores what he wants and gets on top of him and has sex with him. After that, he keeps asking if what they did was ok. At some point, a main character says that her friend's dad said that she was 'developing nicely' when she was a younger teen. Additionnally, during this episode, the two main characters chase a man who has beatn up a sex worker.
Teeth (2007) (Movie)
The protagonist is touched by her brother when she is a child. The protagonist is knocked out while attempting to fight off a rapist and he continues. A doctor inserts his hand in the protagonists vagina. At the end of the movie the protagonist has sex with her step brother. The protagonist's boyfriend attempts to rape her. A man fondles the breasts of the protagonist while she is unconscious. It is implied at the end of the film that a middle aged man wants to have sex with the teenage protagonist. Worthy of note: The whole premise of the story is a woman who is predated on by various men, but she gradually uses her unique anatomy to take revenge.
The protagonist has a consensual sexual encounter with his older brother. The two later go see a movie where a character was a victim of incest at the hands of her father. One of the protagonist's love interests discusses her experiences of rape and incest. The book takes place in the first half of the 20th century in the United States. While the protagonist, a black man, and his love interest, a white woman, are walking along a street in a small town, a bunch of white men proposition her and make suggestive gestures at her.
Two main characters have scars from being mutilated during rape.
Tell Me Lies (TV Show)
S1E1: a joke is made that a certain frat is "rapey." The woman making the joke then elaborates that she thinks the men in the frat "rape people." S2E2: a female character is found passed out half-naked on a bed in a room with a male character. Although he is only in the room and not near/on top of her. It is important to note that there were towels on the ground that made the door more difficult to open. S2E3: the aforementioned female character says she can not remember the previous night or aforementioned incident, but is visibly uncomfortable around the male character afterwards. S2E5: the aforemtioned male character is accused of rape, and in response, his sister begins victim-blaming and invalidating the accuser.
The two men featured in this documentary were sexually abused by their mother and pimped out to her friends as children. One man has no recollection of his childhood, and having learned only a few details, his brother finally discusses the full extent of their abuse with him. The subject matter, the main focus of the documentary, is handled sensitively.
The documentary is about a woman having a sexual relationship with a nonverbal disabled man who she did communication work with. She claims that he was able to communicate and consented to their relationship, but his family and another communication expert disagree.
38 minutes into the movie, a male character attempts to rape a woman after smoking together. There is unconsentual groping and kissing. The scene lasts a couple of minutes until her boyfriend intervenes. There is a struggle over a firearm and the female character gets shot and killed. Her boyfriend gets knocked out and wakes up believing he shot her in a jealous rage.
Chapter 2: the main character is held down and sexually assaulted by her step mother and sisters as a form of punishment because she was caught examining her own body.
During the first half of the movie, there are multiple implied sexual harassement and rape from masters on women slaves. The main plot also involves a forced marriage with heavy hints of marital rape. During the last 15 minutes of the film, during an orgy scene, several woman are seen harassed and tied by men and it is implied that they are raped.
There are many sexually violent scenes in this book. The main plot (a factory farm of humans) is described in vivid detail, including the horrific rapes used to inseminate the women in the farm. These women are only described, never given an active role in the plot. Their trauma is not discussed, and they are never granted freedom or justice. In another scene, the main character rapes a woman on-screen in vivid detail. This is not really described as rape, but her discomfort and his forceful actions are described. This is a pretty long scene with lots of sexual imagery. The main character also has sex and impregnates one of the women raised on a factory farm, despite her not being able to speak or understand language. She has been treated like a farm animal her whole life, so she has no education and lacks the ability to consent. The book ends with the main character hitting this woman, and it is implied that he will kill her. This book can thus be extremely triggering to anyone who is sensitive to themes of sexual assault. It is not a hopeful or positive book at all, and it does not explore any trauma left by these scenes. The point of this book is to be horrifying rather than to handle these topics with sensitivity.
In the beginning of the book, it is mentioned that the main character's father sexually assaults her on a regular basis, leaving her pregnant several times at a young age. Later, she (still underage) is gang raped. A festival takes place in a village where men are encouraged to chase women, and several women force the men to touch them inappropriately. A young woman is molested by a man in the form of a bear. Several men are anally raped with a hot poker as an act of revenge for her mother's assault.
Tenebrae (Movie)
A woman is grabbed by a man who intends to assault her, but escapes. He later appears, having followed her home, while she is being murdered.
S1E12: one character assaults another character and psychologically tortures them about who they are (about 20 minutes in). A woman is hooked up to a monster half naked. There is thus non-consensual touching, and it is heavily implied that it continues into rape off-screen. Nothing was sexualized, and while the show contained plenty of near-nudity beforehand, in this case we are only shown legs, back, shoulders, and face of the victim, while the aggressor is largely clothed or shown from the rear. S1E13: a man says that the characters from the previous episode have been too noisy, confirming that said rape has happened. It is said to have been going on for two days.
Tenjho Tenge (TV Show)
A protagonist's girlfriend is assaulted offscreen (in the manga version, she is raped). The said assault is only used for shock value and is never mentioned again. The same victim later molests a female protagonist in hot springs. A character is implied to have romantic feelings for his sister but no sexual interaction occurs. A male protagonist tries to peek on a female character on his shower: the scene is played for comedy. There is also offhand homophobic comment made about an effeminate male character.
The book is about a teenage girl who is raped by a peer and her recovery after the fact.
A character has flashbacks to being sexually abused as a child.
Terra Formars (TV Show)
In the first OVA prior to the first season, there is a scene that implies a sexual assault/attempted rape happened: a young teenage boy is hitting a man after saving a girl who is on the floor with her her close ripped off her body (her bra is exposed).
Terri (Movie)
One recurring storyline of the movie is about a teenage girl who got pressured to perform sexual acts by a boy during a class (digital penetration). The boy is shown being very pushy, and other students witness the act, which causes the boy to get fired and the girl to get publicly shamed. The coercion and the act are referred to several times throughout the rest of the film. In one of the final scenes of the film, the three protagonist (teenagers) are intoxicated and one of them acts threateningly and ends up asking the girl to perform oral sex on him: she laughs him off and mocks him, making him leaves. After that, she ends up undressing in front of the titular character and asking him to join her on the floor: he is visibly distressed and refuses, so she eventually stops.
Terriers (TV Show)
S1E6: a drunk character says no to a man trying to put her in his car. A few scenes later she wakes up in the same man’s bed without her clothes on, implying that the man raped her.
Terrifier 3 (Movie)
A character takes a weapon and brutality violates another character with it until death. A man is briefly sodomized with a chainsaw before being sawed in half. A villain masturbates with a piece of glass while watching the main villain kill a man. Near the end of the film the main character grabs the main villain's genitals.
The Terror (TV Show)
Worthy of note: in season 1, an Eskimo girl (the only woman of the show) is frequently threatened to be left unprotected among the whole crew of a ship, who thinks she is responsible for the deaths of several of them. In episode 8, a man tells a story about a family being attacked by Indians, and mentions that the mother was later found with her skirt ripped. S2E1: mentions of domestic abuse. At some point, a group of men (one of whom is the protagonist) go to a brothel. S2E3: the female antagonist (an evil spirit incarnated in a woman) kills a blind man by getting on top of him and biting his tongue off. S2E6: the episode opens with a scene showing the honeymoon night of a married couple from a forced marriage. The woman seems visibly distressed, but the man eventually kicks her out of the room and does not assault her. S2E7: a major in the army, who entertains an unequal relationship with a woman who is forced to be his secretary, makes threatening advances to her when they are alone (and after killing her boyfriend). The woman complies because she is recording their encounter in order to get him fired. S2E8: the major from the previous episode, who learned about having been taped, drugs the woman, kidnaps her and breaks one of her finger. It is heavily implied that he is planning on sexually assaulting her. She eventually manages to escape and kill him.
Test Pattern (Movie)
A woman rapes a man with a metal pipe attached to her body. A cyborg tries to rape a girl, but she manages to escape.
A sheriff briefly fondles a dead woman’s breast and makes a crude comment. A male captor caresses a female protagonist’s face. A man touches a woman’s butt without her permission. It is implied that one of the cannibals molests his female victims.
It is implied that one of the cannibals molests his female victims. A woman asks the family if they fuck all their cousins. A man talks about how to bring a horse to orgasm and even says that "he wouldn't mind doing it". One of the cannibals kisses a unconscious woman.
It is mentioned that a woman's boyfriends are always hitting on her teenage daughter. A man forcibly kisses a teenage girl that he has kidnapped. Another man licks the teenage girl's face multiple times. A man implies that he wants to not only kill a girl but rape her. The same man also attempts to rape a girl. A adult woman flashes her breasts at high school teen boys.
Texhnolyze (TV Show)
The main character is implied to be coerced into sex multiple times in the series starting in the first episode and other times during the series. There also happens to be a scene where a female side-character is threatened with implications of possible rape.
A man starts to feel up a woman and she tells him to stop, but then she starts doing it back. A drunk man belligerently tries to get his girlfriend to have sex with him and she pushes him off a couple of times, but then she begrudgingly has sex with him. There are a few abstract scenes where it is unclear if something sexual is happening or not, including one scene where an unconscious woman is either being operated on or being raped.
ThanksKilling (Movie)
A woman is raped by a turkey puppet.
TharnType (TV Show)
Sexual assault in this show includes, but is not limited to: A main character was kidnapped and sexually assaulted as a child. He is still very much dealing with the trauma. Another character was the victim of a gang rape and is heavily traumatized by that. One of the main characters kisses/leaves hickeys all over the chest of the other main character while he is asleep. One of the main characters initiates kisses and sex despite the other telling him to get off of him/let him go. A character does whatever it takes to ensure that he is the only stable presence in the object of his affection's life, including arranging the gang rape of another character, as he was dating the man he is obsessed with at the time. He continues to use this against him by using a tape of the gang rape to blackmail him into helping him with his plans. A side character is heavily implied to be in love with his stepbrother.
That '70S Show (TV Show)
S1E8: rape joke involving a record. S2E2 (Red's Last Day): a teenage girl gets into a teenage boy's van, comes onto him, straddles him, kisses him, shuts the van's door, and sex is implied, with the van rocking back and forth. While it is established that the teenage boy is attracted to the teenage girl (they kissed twice in a previous episode, and prior to her getting into his van, he was daydreaming about having more than one girlfriend). However, before this incident, he'd already told her that he was still dating someone, and after the van door is closed he is heard saying 'don't,' 'stop,' 'hey, those are my pants,' and 'no.' This scene occurs around the 13:44 minute mark. Following this, he says yes, but this verbal consent is only granted after the teenage girl has already ignored multiple protestations on his part. Later in the episode. he excitedly says, 'I totally did it with her!' His initial resistance is not addressed. S2E8: a girl mentions her boyfriend nagging her for hours for sex until she caves. S3E2: a boy ignores multiple complaints from a girl and keeps his hand on her bottom (16:25-16:37). S3E5: a teenage boy debates in his head whether or not to take advantage of a drunk girl. S4E6: a boy grabs a stranger's bottom. S4E14: a boy insinuates that he had a sexual past with an adult woman. S5E8: a 17 year old takes his math teacher on a date. Afterward, he mentions "doing it with his teacher". S6E5: a boy gropes a girl without consent. S6E17: a joke about a boy “ sexually assaulting himself” through masturbation is made. S7E22: a plan to commit rape by deception is made.
A king character forces himself onto one of the titular female characters after she said she would not have sed with him until she is queen/his wife.
The main character was conceived through the statutory rape of his father (a teenager at the time) by his high school teacher; this is the basis of the plot (00:00-08:30). The incident is played for laughs and never acknowledged to be rape. SPOILER: The love interest has an incestual relationship with her brother (01:35:00-01:50:00).
In Their Skin (Movie)
A couple is forced to have sex at gunpoint. One of the home invaders watching this is a child/young teen. There is a creepy behavior from a captor to a captive (touching, innuendo, victim blaming). One of the captors forces a victim to perform sex on them and forces their partner to watch: this is cut short. There is a described past of a teenager "falling in love" with their adult captor.
A man attempts to rape a woman until another woman intervenes, stripping her of her clothes. The attack is violent; he hits her and insults her repeatedly. The woman is obviously upset and begs him to stop. The scene is relatively graphic and some may find it disturbing; it occurs near the beginning of the movie.
Them (TV Show)
S1E4: it is strongly implied that a woman was previously sexually abused by her father. They have a discussion about her needing money and her father says he will write the check after supper but first she must take a bath. The woman is clearly upset scared and tearing up she ends up fleeing the house after sitting in front of the bathroom watching her father start the bath. S1E5: on-screen rape (18:08-22:18).
Roughly the last half-hour of the film centers around child sex abuse (the rest of the film does not talk about sexual abuse). There are graphic first-hand accounts.
The protagonist encounters two men kidnapping a young girl, planning to rape her. He kills them and saves her.
In general, there is a lot of discussion about the rape of slaves by their masters. One character, an adult woman, initiates a sexual affair with a teenager whom she employs to do yard work. This relationship continues until the woman dies decades later. The person with whom she is having an affair abducts three little girls and takes them into the woods. There is no evidence in the plot that there was child sexual abuse, but it is in general a very ambiguous situation because the abduction and the subsequent events are framed in terms of magical realism.
There are several graphic sequences of sexual assault. Many of these are dreams or hallucinations, but are still potentially upsetting. Obsession and abuse play major roles in the story.
One character - an adult during the movie - is strongly implied to have engaged in a sexual relationship with an adult whilst a teenager and to have been a victim of childhood sexual abuse.
The premise of the book is that one of the protagonist’s is a serial killer of men who abuse or sexually assault women. The protagonist and several other characters have experienced sexual assault themselves. Several professors in the university where this book takes place have sexual relationships with their students. One of the main characters is drugged and assaulted. Aside from the trauma of sexual assault itself, there is also a great deal of rape apologia in the book. This apologia clearly identified as morally wrong, but it could still be hard to hear for some audiences.
They Remain (Movie)
They-Them (Movie)
A camp counselor (older man) leers at the teenage girls attending the camp and watches a monitor of them showering without their consent. At some point, he feels up a camper (teenager). Camp counselors look at the phones of campers without their consent: this inclued lewd photos. An adult woman aggressively flirts with a teenage girl, who is visibly uncomfortable. She touches her hand and arm, and seems amused that she is uncomfortable: the teenage eventually runs away. Around 1:50:00 into the movie, a man seduces another man with the intent to trap him. The victim is forced to undergo aversion therapy.
The author references the following: receiving street harassment, getting hit on at a bar, her suspicion that her mother was sexually abused as a child, sexual violence in slavery, rape apologism, the #MeToo movement, adultification of Black girls, general statistics on sexual violence in families; and sexual assault allegations against R. Kelly, Charlemagne Tha God, and Bill Cosby. Although these topics come up throughout the book, the chapter that focuses most on sexual violence is “Black Girlhood, Interrupted.”
S1E1: girls are raped by a group of men (between the 22:00-25:00 minute marks). Young women are hunted down and raped by a group of men. Another rape takes place in a brothel. S1E5: some female prostitutes in a brothel are visited by a group of men who touch them even though the women seem distressed. Later, it is implied that the same men attempt to rape these women (43:00-45:30). S1E9: two women are successively raped on-screen.
Thirst (Movie)
A character says that women should not allow themselves to be sedated at hospitals because doctors might take them. The attempted rape scene takes place towards the end of the movie. A man accidentally walks in on a woman while she is changing.
Thirteen (Movie)
The main character and her best friend, both thirteen years old, attempt to seduce a grown man. He is uncomfortable and tells them to leave. Several older teenage boys make passes at them as well. A character reveals she was molested by her uncle when she was younger.
This Boy's Life (TV Show)
In the beginning of the movie, a woman's ex-boyfriend who has been stalking her tries to engage sex multiple times despite her protests, and acts increasingly threatening. On their wedding night, the antagonist and the protagonist's mother engage in consensual sex. At some point, she asks him to "do it face-to-face' but he violently puts her head down and rapes her. Teenagers joke about wanting to have sex with a woman tied down against her will in a tv show.
At 45:45- 48:40, a female character enters their home and she go upstairs to get some rest. For an unknown reason, the other male characters start talking about who is most likely to rape her and starts accusing each other of who would be. She overhears this and leaves. At 1:07:10 -1:08:31, a man gets ready to go to sleep when a demon creature enters the room and takes the covers off of him. He then wakes up, realizes that it is not a dream and protests. The creature supposedly succeeds in raping him: the scene cuts away before it happens. The rape is then mentioned several times throughout.
A 15-year-old girl kisses a 12-year-old boy, and asks if he wants to 'suck her tits' This is not seen on-screen, and whether he complies is unclear. An older man talks about his past sexual relationship with a teenager. Several pornographic posters (breasts and rear visible) are displayed in a lengthy scene with a child present. A character describes how they believe the country is being 'raped' by immigration.
S1E2: child abuse is discussed S1E3+4: explicit on-screen rape and attempted rape.
Near the end of the film, the main female character is attacked by a man that she had tricked earlier: he threatens her with a knife and then throws her to the ground and attempts to rape her, but she headbutts him and escapes.
This War of Mine (Video Game)
A woman is raped by a soldier unless the player intervenes. The player cannot see what is happening, but they can hear it. A different woman will be at that location the next night and will discuss the outcome of the assault. Other members of the player’s group will discuss whether or not they felt the player should have intervened. A woman warns the player about groups of bandits breaking in to houses and raping people at night. The player can rescue women being sexually trafficked in a brothel. A child playable character talks about an older teen who would do “adult things” to the younger children in the orphanage.
Several implications of a lesbian character being raped are mentioned throughout the book, it is later confirmed by this character saying she in fact was raped but never reported it. There also scenes of the same guy making several sexual advances on the lady knowing she is a lesbian, including groping and unwanted kissing during a junior prom. It is mentioned with her brother describing the events after the assault/rape There are warnings for the book as it describes the event of a school shooting, however, not any warnings for the actual sexual assault.
The Quiet Room: mention of rape within a myth. The Screams of Dragons: a boy forcibly kisses a girl twice. Little Miss Queen of Darkness: news headline about a man charged with dozens of counts of rape. The Female Factory: brief mention of a male boss having sex with a female employee so she can earn favor/advance. Mothers lock up your Daughters: a high school girl is coerced into a sexual relationship by her adopted brother. Children of the Fang: past accusation of rape. Madame Damnable's Sewing Circle: girls who are likely underage being kidnapped into prostitution.
S1E1: this episode includes the early attempts of a rape. The rapist is killed, but then the two young girls are taken as slaves. S1E2: this episode includes men groping a woman they are trying to rob.
A Thousand Blows (TV Show)
S1E1: there is a sudden violence sexual threat from a man against ta woman using a weapon.
Threads (1984) (TV Show)
A girl and boy physically wrestle over food. The film cuts to a different shot, but the audience can still hear their grunts, implying that the boy rapes the girl. In the next scene, the girl is visibly pregnant.
The film focuses on the mother of a young girl who was raped and murdered and the lack of progress made on the case by the local police. The mother buys three billboards in order to shame the police chief. The first billboard says 'RAPED WHILE DYING'. The mother reflects on the day her daughter died. Her daughter got angry about not being allowed to borrow the car and yelled that she would just walk and said she hoped she would get raped. The mother, in her anger, yelled that she also hoped her daughter would get raped. Later in the film, a man mocks and tries to intimidate the mother by claiming to have committed the rape, subsequently denying these claims.
The main character has sex with a woman who he has taken hostage, and she is visibly uncomfortable throughout.
First segment (Dumplings): a teenage girl gets an abortion and it is revealed that her father is the one who impregnated her. Third segment (The Box): a man is very close with a 10-year-old girl and it is hinted that their relationship may have had a sexual aspect. This same man gropes a woman later on in the story.
There are plural mentions and scenes of rape and child abuse. This film features multiple scenes where an old husband has sex with one of his wives, who is underage. Worthy of note: there is also a lot of fatphobia.
The female main character reveals the man courting her (not the male main character) raped her repeatedly.
There is a rape scene half-way through that goes on half-way through. A man gropes a woman's bottom and is mentioned as being a peeping tom. We are shown an erotic comic graphically depicting an act of incest. A woman is implied to be engaging in bestiality with a rabbit.
Thunderball (Movie)
After attempting to force himself on a woman, the main male character blackmails her into having sex with him. His victim is later shown to have enjoyed it. Later, the villain ties a woman up on her bed and threatens to torture her with ice cubes and a lit cigarette before being interrupted. His intentions are not sexual, but it is quite reminiscent of an attempted rape, and leads another character to assume that this is what was happening.
Thursday (Movie)
A woman rapes a man who is tied to a chair: the scene goes on for quite some time and is graphic.
Tides (Movie)
While searching a woman's room, a man makes suggestive comments towards her: when she does not respond, he pins her back against the wall and begins kissing her and tearing at her clothes. When he becomes distracted, she is able to get away from him. She then kisses him to proceed to kill him. SPOILERS: It is revealed that one man orchestrates the kidnapping of young girls and indoctrinates them into his way of thinking. By doing this, he is planning for them to breed with "his people" when they are women. Howver, there is no harassment/assault of the children within the story. We also learn that this man's supposed wife and child are those of another man, whom he had arrested and imprisoned. Considering that he is in a power position, the relationship is presumably unconsensual, even if no coercition or violence is shown on-screen.
The film is about a woman who is kidnapped, then ends up falling in love with her captor.
Tiger King (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman explains that she was raped when she was 14. Worthy of note: it is implied that two men were coerced into or otherwise unhappy in their relationships with another man, who was able to exert a degree of control over them through various means. Another man lives with a number of women, with all of whom he is sexually involved. It is discussed that these women usually became involved with this man when they were very young and that he exerts a high degree of control over their lives (including having them work for him, provide all of their income and dictate what they should wear). S2E2: a character is revealed to be going to Costa Rica regularly to hire trafficked children as prostitutes.
The male main character is subjected to ongoing physical abuse from his wife. Most, but not all, occurs offscreen before the start of the story. S1E14: the male main character is drugged and participates in implied sexual activity with the female main character. This is treated as being owed to the other character and not addressed as nonconsensual. This is previously mentioned in S1E7.
Timbuktu (Movie)
A 10-year-old African American girl is attacked and raped by two white adult men. When the girl is found, her father remembers another racially-motivated attack against an African American girl in a nearby town, for which her four assailants were acquitted. The rest of the film's plot revolves around his attempt to bring his daughter's attackers to justice.
S1E3: strongly implied rape of a female character (age 16). We see the events leading up to it, vaguely the act, and when the victim admits that she was raped as well as the aftermath of the harm from the rape (discussion of the trauma).
A major male character was physically and sexually abused by a male sadist in a position of significant power over him. For five years, he deliberately drew the brunt of the abuse to protect other would-be victims. Little detail is given of his ordeal, but the circumstances and political consequences of his abuser’s death (before series start) are discussed frequently.
Timewasters (TV Show)
Sexual harassment is common throughout the series. A main character is very naive and often taken advantage of: he also sexually harasses people. The entirety of season 1 features intoxicated sex acts. Season 2 features lots of sexual harassment. S1E2: a black man is kidnapped by a white supremacist sex cult for breeding. S1E6: a woman lies to a man about being a virgin, and hides being a prostitute. S2E2: dancers are trated like property and harassed. S2E5: Bill Cosby is mentioned and a main character does not believe he is guilty.
A relationship between a student and their principal is shown on screen in many sex scenes. Two characters are dosed with a commonly used date rape drug: this is mentioned multiple times. Throughout the whole show, the main characters aged 16-17 are having relationships with adults in their 20's. This is never addressed. A school offers donors access to underage girls in exchange for donations. S1E5: an underage character kisses her choregrapher that is in his 30's. He kisses her back but it is not taken any further (her age does not play a role in this decision). S1E6: an underage female character is groped by an older male client whilst at work after being pushed into a swimming pool. Later in the episode, the man blackmails her to stop her from speaking out about it (most relevant scene occurs between the 25:00-25:30 minute marks). A character implied that his former student has only gotten her career because she slept with him. S1E7: a female character reveals that she was raped at her work. This becomes a recurring plot point throughout the remainder of the season, and is repeatedly referenced. A 16 year old reveals that he used to hook up with strangers prior to the show's events who would "pick (him) up and do their worst", it is not further discussed even though it is portrayed as a sensitive thing. S1E9: it is implied that a woman who keeps justifying an assault does so because she had to once overcome being raped. A man forces another man to cup his penis. There is a scene later on when the characters try to confront the rapist, that results in scenes of violent screaming and groping, before other people come in to help. Worthy mention: a character in his 30's reveals that when he was very young, he lost his virginity to someone 20 years older than him.
This book is set in Victorian London with the sexism of the era. The perspective character (a butch woman strongly implied as genderqueer) faces casual sexual harassment at times when dressed as a woman. She works as a gay male prostitute for a middle section of the book and is afraid of discovery and assault from clients, though those fears are not realized. She spends a substantial middle section of the book as the live-in hired escort of a rich and powerful woman. This woman becomes threatening and violent when the protagonist tries to say no to sex or otherwise resists her mistress's wishes.
Titans (TV Show)
S1E1: there are evidence photos of a little girl’s face and a non explicit photo of her nude lower half, bruised. Later on in the episode, explicit reference is made to this abuse while the perpetrator is being attacked. S1E9: child sexual abuse off-screen and a legal discussion of it.
TNT Jackson (Movie)
There are two attempted rape scenes (5:30-6:18 and 43:20-45:04), used as a vehicle to see breasts on screen and establish characters/environments as dangerous, immoral. There is violence against women and general misogyny throughout the film.
Together With Me (TV Show)
S1E9: a character comes out as gay to and breaks up with his girlfriend. She then drugs him with viagra and tries to get him to sleep with her to show that he "can like sex with a woman" and not break up with her. He kicks her away from him. S1E11: a character presents his boyfriend with a surprise foursome. His boyfriend becomes uncomfortable, asks him to stop, and leaves.
Tokyo Ghoul (TV Show)
The series contains a lot of sexual violent themes (i.e. characters appearing to derive sexual pleasure from eating people or being hurt). Both the manga and the anime contain implied child sex abuse and rape. S1E5: a male character states that he was 'into' a female character when she was 14 and he was 18. She says that she finds the way he is talking to her creepy. This all occurs whilst they are fighting and the woman stands up for herself easily.
Tokyo Revengers (TV Show)
S1E5: it is discussed that one of the gang's member girlfriend got beaten and raped in front of him by rival gang. You only see a gang standing in a circle at night, implying that the rape happend within that circle. S2E21: a teen kisses his sleeping friend.
Chapter 11 (Reburn): the gang rape of a teen girl in front of her boyfriend is shown in detail in one panel. Other characters discuss the assault. Chapter 12 (Remind): the teen girl from chapter 11's injuries are discussed and non-graphically shown. Chapter Extra (Zero): a sex worker asks a 10 or 11-year-old boy if he wants oral sex. It iss unclear if she is teasing him or being serious. Chapter 47 (Level With): the same panel that shows the rape in chapter 11 is shown again, and characters briefly and vaguely discuss the events surrounding the assault. Chapter 157 (Money Monger): a teen kisses his sleeping friend.
Tokyo Sonata (Movie)
A burglar kidnaps a woman in her home. She then agrees to run away with him. He attempts to rape her but is finally unable to do so.
Tokyo Tribe 2 (TV Show)
A young man is literally raped to death.
The Toll (Movie)
The main character has several flashbacks to an assault in her past (though the actual assault is not shown). SPOILER: the main character is eventually chased and shot by a man admitting to wanting to rape and kill her.
S1E3: there is an attempted rape scene at the end of the episode (43:48-47:04). The victim is a mother and it nearly happens in front of her children. The agressor forcefully undresses the victim and kisses her before she fights him off and uns away. Then, there is an explosion, but it does not kill the agressor.
There are jokes referencing sexual acts with children.
Story 1: two men rob a woman. One rips open her clothes and grabs her while she screams and tries to gets away. They are stopped before anything further can happen. Story 3: while at a school, two teenage boys grab a teenage girl and cover her mouth. She struggles to get away and the creature appears and she is able to run away.
An implied rape occurs off-screen: the assault can be interpreted as an attempt to 'turn' the (queer) victim straight. She is then slut-shamed by another woman in the immediate aftermath of being assaulted.
Tommy (1975) (Movie)
The main character is repeatedly sexually abused by his uncle. The film deals with the effects of the psychosomatic disorder which he develops in order to cope with the repeated abuse.
Tong Ling Fei (TV Show)
The sexual harassment is most of the times not romantiziced, however with the love interest it sometimes is. S1E5: an attempted rape involves the main character being tied up, however no one is naked, and the perpetrator is interrupted before he has a chance to do anything sexual.
The premise of the book is that the four authors, who have a book club discussing Toni Morrison novels, write chapters reflecting on themes present in those novels. As such, most of the conversations around rape, sexual assault, and child sexual abuse occur because those dynamics exist in Morrison's novels. In particular, the sexual violence perpetrated against enslaved women comes up a lot. A few authors also discuss their own experiences with sexual harassment. One of them relates how, when she was a child, an adult she did not know repeatedly tried to get her to enter his car. Another describes how, when she was a teenager, she escaped a man who was harassing her in an ice cream shop.
The scene (taking place in the first few minutes) mostly focuses on the faces, hands and feet of the people involved. It is upsetting because the two people do not know each other, and friends helped orchestrate the assault. It begins a sort of revenge story arc.
S1E1: the episode opens with a policeman showing a nude picture a woman sent him to his colleague (other men look at it later on). He then proceeds to say that he will have to kill the woman, who is his mistress. The next scene shows the same man pulling over a woman: with his colleague standing next to him, he makes inappropriate comments and acts threatening to her (hinting that he will force her to give him sexual favours). She seems very distressed during the whoe scene (which is very long). He eventually forces her to pay to leave. The male protagonist (in his thirties) has entertains a romantic relationship with a high school girl (17 year old). The fact that their love affair is illegal is mentioned several times throughout the episode: their affair goes on during the next episodes, and they are showed sharing intimate moments. The final scene shows a woman restrained and covered in blood, who has been beaten by a man. It is implied that 'men who hate women' would harm her if the protagonist does not kill her (which he is implied to do off-screen). S1E2: human trafficking is a central theme of this episode, with female prostitues being referred to and treated as merchandise (sexual violence is heavily implied several times). In the last part of the episode, a man (leader of a cartel) grabs a woman's hair in a club, drags her in front of a whole audience and she is implied to be abused and gang raped off-screen by the men. An elderly and terminally ill man entertains an ambiguous relationship with his very young nurse, whom he says he found naked in the desert. Several dialogues imply a potential incestuous relationship between this man and his late sister. S1E3+4: paedophilia is an important plot point of these two episodes, dealing with people killing peadophiles and rapists. The crimes of the latter are mentioned throughout, but not depicted on screen. In the final scene of S1E4, one character is proposed to become the pimp of prostitutes: he declines. S1E5: this whole episode is about a man killing two men who make snuff movies (people getting raped). The opening scene shows one man being interrogated (increasingly uncomfortable), drugged, obliged to sign a consent form and then raped by two men (grabbed on-screen then raped off-screen, with sounds of struggle being heard). Incest is also mentioned during the interrogation. Video of their films is shown to the protagonist (not shown on-screen). A long scene shows a woman in her underwear being watered by one of the snuff movies producers with a hose, who then fondles her, grabs her by the throat and strips her naked with a knife: she seems increasingly uncomfortable and tense. While the scene seems to suggest that she will get raped, it ends with the man painting her toe nails. The episode ends with the antagonist digging up a woman he presumably raped and buried alive in the desert. S1E6: it is implied (through dialogues and non explicit flashbacks) that a man has entertained incestuous desires towards his mother since he was a teenager. The episode closes with him performing oral sex on his wife, who says that she is the reincarnation of his late mother. S1E7: the assassination of child molesters is discussed and shown on screen. The relationship of the male protagonist (30 year old) and his young girlfriend is also mentioned and shown on-screen: the latter is shown turning 18 and the couple is shown having sex. It is then revealed that the father of the girl watched her without their consent: he also explains that he was jealous since he always wanted to have sex with his own daughter: he then starts masturbating next to the protagonist, who ends up killing him. Before that, the father asked the protagonist to get dressed in front of him, and showed him a movie where two cops sexually assault and rape a woman (verbal assault is shown on-screen, rape implied off-screen). S1E8: the assassination of child molesters is discussed and shown on screen. The relationship of the male protagonist (30 year old) and his 18 year old girlfriend is also mentioned (it is described as statutory rape since it started when the girl was 16). Women (who are prostitutes 'owned' by a cartel) are held captive in stables: they are raped off-screen by a group of men (we hear them scream). Later on, several of them are shown being tied to their bed in a motel, next to the clients who raped them: a woman comes and kill all the men. There is also a consensual SM sex scene where the woman strangles and ties up her husband with a whip, which she puts into his anus. S1E9: a husband and wife roleplay (and have sex), with the woman impersonating the late mother of the man, with whom he entertained an incestuous relationship. A man mentions that he wants to use rape against his enemies and their female relatives. The assassination of paedophiles and rapistes is discussed and shown on screen. A woman tells an early version of the Red Riding Hood, where the wolf rapes the girl multiple times. S1E10: rape, incest and child sex abuse are mentioned several times. A woman rescues prostitutes 'owned' by a cartel by killing all men in a bar/brothel.
It is revealed late in the movie that a character had been raping his younger cousin and then proceeds to rape a 15 year old main character (1:20:10-1:21:05). It shows the violent assault starting, and it fades to black before clothes are removed. They are seen in bed together in the next scene with him clearly thinking he did nothing wrong. She kills him off screen.
Top of the Lake (TV Show)
The plot revolves around the investigation of multiple cases of child sexual abuse. There is a scene where a character describes that she had gotten pregnant as a result of rape and was forced by her family to carry and bear the child. There is a scene where a teenage girl is forcibly taken away and gang raped by some of her schoolmates - her boyfriend tries to make it stop but does not succeed.
Torchwood (TV Show)
S1E1: a male main character tries to pick up a woman at a bar. When she rejects his advances, he sprays himself with a love potion so that she (and, later, her boyfriend), will find him 'irresistible.' She is shown leaving the bar with him. S1E2: a character is possessed and forced to have sex many times by the thing possessing her, and the other people, who die afterwards, are not always consenting either. S1E3: the character who used the love potion in S1E1 witnesses the moments leading up to a teenage girl's rape and murder, being unable to move and feeling her emotions. S1E5: a character is stated to be a convicted pedophile. He is shown approaching a young girl outside a school, and later turns himself in to police. S2E1: an antagonist flirts with a main character, calling him "eye candy" while being physically violent towards him and other characters. This character returns later in the series and calls the same character "eye candy" while pointing a gun at him. S2E5: a man with the ability to alter people's memories makes a woman he just met believe they have been dating for a year, and then has sex with her. Later, another character tells her, "He forced it on you." This has no long-term repercussions because every character permanently forgets the events of this episode, having willingly erased their own memories. S3E2: one character calls two other characters "a couple of pedos." He does not actually believe that statement, and was just trying to distract the two other characters. Later in this episode, a character with no ill intent asks a question to a young girl in a park. The child's mother comes over and calls the character a "perv." Season 4: a main character raped and murdered a 12 year old girl. It is heavily discussed throughout the season.
Rape is discussed multiple times. It is twice graphically described and one character is prsented as liking it, although it is clearly rape. There is also some rough sex, but it is implied to be consensual. It is vaguely mentioned that several characters who went mad on lust and forcefully took women. Several main characters "have their way with women": no consent is given.
A character is drugged at a bar and forced to dance and coerced into making out with another character.
Touch of Evil (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, a sexual assault on a woman held prisoner by a group of young thugs is strongly implied.
A teenage boy is threatened with rape if he loses a game of mahjong. There are two teenage girls with chains around their necks. There seems to be a sex trafficking going on.
A character disassociates while being raped and replaces the experience with a consensual, romantic one.
Trade (Movie)
The subject of the movie is sex trafficking
Various characters are touched sexually, without their consent, throughout the movie. It is played for laughs. One of the protagonists is forcibly stripped by prison guards. When he is let out of jail the next day, he has a breakdown and screams about how the other prisoners "wanted to have sex with him". A few minutes later, someone pays a sex worker to embarrass him in front of his fiancée, which entails him being forcibly kissed and groped. He looks very uncomfortable. (It is also played for laughs.) A gorilla forces itself upon a man dressed up as one. (The scene is short and played for laughs.
Traffik (Movie)
This movie is about human trafficking and sex slavery. It includes attempted rape and contains violence against women throughout
Season 80: a man speaking to a woman suggests that he was potentially molested by an unnamed uncle. The scene is very brief and not graphic nor detailed.
Train (Movie)
A young woman is given to a group of soldiers as a bribe. While nothing is seen, she can be heard screaming in agony as she is presumably raped or assaulted. A man is seduced by a woman who then drugs him and has him killed. Another man has his penis cut off.
Training Day (Movie)
Two men attempt to rape a 14 year old girl. The cops stop them but then one cop harasses one of the men. The same cop also victim-blames the girl. Worthy of note: there are also several sexual inappropriate comments about women throughout the film.
This documentary explores how the Woodstock Festival of 1999 turned from a run-of-the-mill music festival into a riot, including (but not exclusively discussing) the multiple graphic accounts of rapes, molestations, and other assaults that took place during those horrific three days, particularly during the performances of heavier bands - especially Korn and Limp Bizkit - as well as the closing night of the event. S1E1: remarks are made about the sexual harassment of Sheryl Crow during her set; references to the Bill Clinton abuse scandals; on-screen depiction of American Pie's stripping scene; unconsensual groping captured by the pay-per-view crew; women being molested while body-surfing; at the end of the episode, foreshadowing for Day 2 includes a group of men tugging a body-surfing woman down into the crowd beyond camera view, presumably to be gang raped, and footage of a naked woman being resuscitated by a medic. S1E2: fully-naked men and women, almost all completely under the influence of drugs and several women being forcibly groped; an MTV commentator reveals that a concert-goer tried to assault her with a lit cigar. From the moment the 4:00pm ticker appears on-screen, things get more severe - women begin recounting how they were groped and surrounded by men demanding they strip for them or give them sex; a series of photographs show one body-surfer nearly had her clothes torn off by male attendees while still body-surfing; as soon as Limp Bizkit's set ends, chaos reigns - a woman can be seen being pulled down from body-surfing to be assaulted; a chilling female scream can be heard during the scene transition to the Rave Tent for Night 2; during Fatboy Slim's set, topless women can be seen getting groped against their will; Limp Bizkit's manager describes seeing men having sex with women who are too high/drunk to consent; a stage producer describes opening a van that was driven into the audience and seeing a man in his 30s putting his pants on and a 15-year-old girl passed out, pants down and bleeding from her genitals; another producer describes a line of women who couldn't consent being pressed against the hangar wall and raped. S1E3: the MTV commentator remarks how she saw a lot of the audience stark naked as well, with women still getting groped against their will; in the final minutes discussing the aftermath, one of the coordinators of the event recalls being called by a mother of a rape victim; news footage accounts that four women were assaulted, with contradicting claims from attendees saying there were many more, some right in front of the main stage during performances; a series of still images at the tail end of the documentary reveal that more women were groped, molested, and pulled down by crowds to be assaulted all throughout the weekend. The mini-series is ultimately a tense, sickening watch, especially for those familiar with toxic concert culture or the phenomenon of late-90's hyper-masculinity.
Trancers (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, a woman has sex with a man she thought was someone else when two men's minds get switched for a period of time.
Transamerica (Movie)
A girl is shown surrounded by a group of men, with one of them on top of her. It cuts to them walking away and it is implied that they raped her.
Transparent (TV Show)
Transsiberian (Movie)
A man and a woman kiss in an abandoned church. This evolves into a sexual assault.
The entire world of this dystopian scifi novel is one in which women are constantly living in fear and/or being abused by men: it contains a lot of sexual violence against women. The main character was lured into having sex with her older teacher when she was a young girl, and she recalls the scene of them having sex in ways that make it seem non-consensual (in addition to her being too young to really give consent). Another main character is a prostitute and was raped by her pimp not to mention her clients. The women are the central figures and they are kinda well-developed, but not enough to make it worth putting yourself as a reader in this grim world.
Trauma (Movie)
There are multiple instances of on screen rape in this film. The antagonist is shown to have been forced to rape his mother while she is strapped to a chair, they then kill her and force him to continue raping her. This is shown in full. The antagonist is shown to have been forced to molest a baby when he was younger. He sticks his hand in a baby crib at the demands of his father, baby is heard crying and he pulls his hand out with blood on it. We never see the baby but the implication is clear. The antagonist is in a sexual relationship with his son. The antagonist and his son break into a house with 4 women in it after leering at them through the windows. They proceed to rape the women and kiss each other. Generational incest is shown through the antagonists' relationship but also in the female victims they are holding who have had children.
This book is about trauma related to sexual violence and torture. There are no in-depth descriptions of specific acts of sexual violence, but this whole book is a deep dive on its psychological effects. The author also describes instances of victim-blaming, gaslighting, and saneism that survivors have experienced when speaking about their trauma.
Travelers (TV Show)
S1E1: a female character is assaulted by a group of men who rip her clothes and attempt to rape her. She escapes, but the scene is jarring and very sudden.
The Treatment (Movie)
The main antagonist is a known sex offender, making sexual violence a major theme of the film.
The main character tries to rape a women but is stopped by a vision of his father.
Treehouse (Movie)
In a conversation, a boy briefly mentions a man who is suspected to be a pedophile (19:30-19:36). A man attacks the female protagonist and knocks her unconscious in an attempted rape. Once she is unconscious, however, he touches her mouth inappropriately and leaves (1:25:08-1:26:08).
A woman is raped and killed off-screen (graphic audio).
Treme (TV Show)
Tres Por Cento (TV Show)
S1E3: a young woman is grabbed by three men, who push her to the ground while insulting her while she screams (01:19-02:57), It is implied that they are trying to rape her but eventually let her go. S1E8: people kidnap and torture a naked woman. She is forcefully grabbed by the face, tugged by the hair while crying (05:48-09:00; 14:12-18:16).
The assault scene in this film is extremely violent and graphic, and features multiple men trying to rape one unnamed woman (1:01:30-1:02:00). In one later scene, one of the protagonists mentions that he is being prosecuted for carrying ideas beyond state borders, and not little girls.
SPOILERS: A women says that she has been raped multiple times by different people. She is eventually found to be lying.
It is believed that the titular character was molested by family members. Another character was violently gang raped as an adolescent.
During the last part of the movie (showing survivors of a shipwreck on a deserted island), one man is pressured to obtain privileges (food, shelter) from a woman in a position of power in exchanges of sexual favours: most of these acts occur off-screen, except for non-consensual kissing and one scene showing them together in "bed".
The Tribe (1999) (TV Show)
Tribes of Europa (TV Show)
S1E4: a teenager/young adult is a slave and must have sex with the ruler (20:58). There is a clear disbalance in power and no choice to say no.
Throughout the book, there are references to the #MeToo movement, legal definitions of rape, cousin marriages in the British royal family, marital rape, rape and pedophilia in the Bible and in various literary works, Gamergate, Pizzagate; and rape allegations against Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein, and Donald Trump. The chapter "We Come from Old Virginia" includes particularly frequent and graphic references to sexual violence, such as specific rape cases on college campuses and the author's own experiences with surviving sexual violence at college and while working in the Peace Corps.
A man stalks a young woman throughout the film. When he finally catches up to her, he attempts to sexually assault her before she turns the tables, overpowering and killing him. A young boy is shown spying on women changing clothes.
Trigun (TV Show)
S1E1: an antagonist implies that he will rape two female characters, and lifts one of their outer jackets slightly open (18:30-18:47). S1E2: the male protagonist tries to watch a woman shower. She ends up not being in the shower. S1E3: a drunk man jumps on the male protagonist and begs him to buy him more alcohol. He ends up kissing him on the cheek as well. S1E4: the main character tries to look up the dress of woman who is tied up (07:22-07:35). S1E7: the male protagonist is drunk on a bed. Two prostitutes leave his room and tell the guy who hired them that he is too drunk to perform. He was pretending to be asleep. The guy who hired them says he probably bought him too much alcohol. They were having a party before this scene. S1E11: mention of sex slavery. S1E15: three women are held captive by many men. They sit on the floor while the men sit on the couch. One of them gets beaten up for looking at another man. They are saved by a man. The male protagonist rips off 5 buttons of a woman's shirt and tells her he could have fondled her 5 times. S1E17: a man grabs the breast of a woman without her consent. He later on leans on her and hugs her from behind. This is also done without consent and the woman looks uncomfortable. She later on accuses him of rape. Later on it is implied that she and another man made it up because they both dislike him. The man who helps her with this, ends up killing her after she refuses to marry him. A child tells a grown woman that he loves her. It is unclear whether he meant it in a romantic way. The woman is somewhat of a mother figure to the child. She laughs it off.
Trigun Stampede (TV Show)
S1E11-12: the protagonist's twin brother mind controls him into forcibly impregnating several other members of their species who are referred to as their "sisters".
The first story involves a woman being drugged and having photos taken without her consent. The second story involves a child who has "seduced" their father and the two have a sexual relationship.
Trinkets (TV Show)
A main female character is caught in an abusive relationship. S1E3: in the first scene of the episode, a girl is raped on-screen. She is held down by her boyfriend who ignored her when she tells him to stop. He is interrupted by a car.
The Trip (Movie)
Thhree criminals who have taken refuge in the cabin threaten to rape both of the main characters, with an extended scene where they physically restrain the male character. The male character is noticeably traumatized by this. Both characters must beg the criminals not to assault them.
The film contains lots of harassment that leads to eventua on-screen rapes. Multiple times, the survivors appear terrified and traumatized.
The protagonist goes on a date with someone who assumes that she will have sex with him because of her reputation for being promiscuous and because he treated her to an expensive dinner. He gets quite rough and argumentative with her in a way that makes her fearful, but he ultimately allows her to escape. Prior to the events of the book, a prominent community elder molested the protagonist when she was 15. The narrative doesn’t go into detail about the molestation itself, but the protagonist’s father didn’t believe her when she told him what happened and instead believed that she tempted the community elder. The elder uses his status as a pious individual and the protagonist’s history of consensual sexual interactions to turn the community against her. There are several instances in the book when the elder threatens to further humiliate the protagonist if she tells others what happened, and he and others insinuate that she is unclean, broken, and not worthy of consideration. There is even a moment where the elder implies that he would rape the protagonist’s mother or that he had done so in the past.
Troy (Movie)
A captured woman is bound by rope, beaten, and almost raped by a group of soldiers. This woman is later threatened with rape again. Women are described as being used "for breeding".
True Blood (TV Show)
One character had a sexual relationship with a grown woman when he is 17: the sex is shown and while he consents, he is still visibly confused and a little scared. The woman knows that he is underage and he appears traumatized or at least disturbed by the memories. S1E3: a woman's sexual partner pretends he is someone else and grabs her, acting as though he is about to rape her. She fights him off before he eventually reveals his identity. S1E7: flashbacks to child sexual abuse involving a relative. A woman offers sexual services in exchange for a loan. The banker is very clearly resisting, but she continues to touch him while trying to change his mind. S2E7: there is an attempted rape, from which the target is rescued. A woman speculates that she may have raped her love interest after blacking out. In reality they are both, along with many other townspeople, performing sexual acts under a type of hypnotic spell while not being capable of consent. S3E3-S3E6: an ongoing plot point is the kidnapping and subsequent repeated rape of one character. The incident is discussed throughout later episodes. S3E6: a character in training to be a police officer stops a teenage couple having sex in a car by smacking the boy on the ass. He also strokes the boy's hair while threatening him. S4E3: a man wakes to find someone is raping him. He is tied down and raped numerous times on-screen. S4E4: shows a sexual relationship between a woman and her vampire ancestor. S4E6: a rape is shown on-screen in a flashback. A character confronts someone who raped her in the past. S5E2: a flashback scene shows a woman being saved from a killer/rapist. S5E3: a teacher is shown to have engaged in a sexual relationship with one of her students, a teenage boy. In this episode, as an adult, he meets this teacher and they have sex again, only for him to realise that what happened between them was abuse and that he was likely traumatised by it. S6E6: two characters are strongly pressured to have sex under threat of violence. This is stopped, but only after one has already partly undressed.
True Dare Kiss (TV Show)
True Detective (TV Show)
Throughout seasons 1 and 3, rape, torture and paedophilia are common themes even if little is depicted on screen graphically. In season 2, one character's wife is raped. Her assault is mentioned on various occasions, but no details or flashbacks are given. Later in the season, another character has a flashback to her childhood, in which she is following an older man into a van. It is implied that she was raped, although it is never shown. S1E6: a woman rapes a drunk man as a form of revenge against her husband. Moments after realising what was done to him, the man makes her leave the house. S1E6: a woman flirts and initiates sex with a man who is very drunk and hesitant to engage. The man then leads the rest of the sexual encounter but regrets it afterward (44:30-46:30). She reveals she wanted to sleep with someone as revenge on her cheating partner. She took advantage of the man when he was intoxicated, but it was the man who performed the rest of the sexual act. S4E1: a woman and man have consensual sex. She is on top of him and at two points he tells her to wait and attempts to make her slow down: she pins his arms down and covers his mouth. This scene is not portrayed as an assault and is never brought up again.
The first sequence of the film shows a female prostitue giving oral sex to a man. It is then implied that she is forced into sexual relationships with him because of his position of power. Her husband is forced to leave the house when this happens, and her son looks at it without her knowledge. Later, when the husband dies, the rapist says that he will come more often to see her and he kisses her. Later, a dead man is shown with his genitals in his mouth, impliying that he was killed for raping a woman. A man in a position of power hits a female prisoner and presumably rapes her off-screen. A man unconsensually kisses a man on the lips.
The Trunk (TV Show)
The male lead is a victim of childhood domestic abuse. Multiple flashback scenes show his father beating his mother. The female lead is also stalked throughout the series. S1E2: the protagonist's mother is raped by his father.
Trust (Movie)
The film's plot revolves around a teenage girl who is targeted online by a sexual predator. A 14-year-old girl is raped by an adult man, who also films the incident. The same rape is relived again as the girl's father imagines what might have happened. Though both scenes are unambiguous, this second scene is in many ways more disturbing than the first. An extreme close-up of a girl's genitals is shown on a computer monitor (very briefly) as her rape allegations are processed by the police. It is discussed that a grown man has raped several girls, some as young as 12. Sexual pictures/videos of a 14-year-old girl, taken without her consent, are shared online.
Truth Or Dare (Movie)
Siblings in a group held captive are in an incestuous relationship, and it is revealed they have been for a while. Later in the film, the brother is forced to rape his sister with a wine bottle while at gunpoint. This results in the wine bottle pulling out her organs and her dying. Another character is a grown man who was revealed to be a pedophile who had sex with a 13 year old girl. One character is revealed to be pregnant and another character is forced to give her an abortion, which results in her death. Another character gets his kidney removed and one gets a cancerous testicular tumor removed, both against their will and at gunpoint. One character is a trans woman and is mocked and brutalized for entertainment. There is excessive gore and sexual violence shown and mentioned, on and off screen.
Truth Or Die (Movie)
SPOILERS The ending of the movie reveals that one of the protagonists made one of the antagonists perform oral sex on her boyfriend while he was unconscious and under the influence and that she recorded the entire ordeal. The scene is shown in small flashes of the recorded video (01:25:20-01:30:40) where she can be seen holding his head down onto the unconscious penis and the man performing oral can be seen scurrying away hastily when the man “finishes” in his unconscious state to make it seem like it was his girlfriend performing oral, not the other man.
A woman tells the group that she had been raped in high school A man tells the group that when he was in high school his girlfriend's father coerced him into oral sex so that the father would write a letter of recommendation. It is then said that it continued for multiple times after that.
Some mentions of sexual harassment (mostly verbal), detailed scene of sexual assault that involves forcefully removing a characters clothes and writing on her (the other character shows remorse for this and they go on to become a couple), attempted rape scene towards the end of the book however, the character is able to escape before she is hurt.
Tuca and Bertie (TV Show)
Several episodes feature discussions of sexual harassment and child sexual abuse (notably S1E8-9). The topic is handled sensitively and the show focuses on the experiences of survivors. S1E2: one of the main female protagonist is sexually harassed by a coworker. She reports it and organizes a seminar about it, but the issue is downplayed by the human resources department. Later at another job, the same character endures bullying from her new boss until she quits and exposes him. S2E5: a vibrator shoots it's way into a fish. It is played for laughs.
The Tudors (TV Show)
S1E4: a character is forced to marry a much older man. She clearly does not want to have sex with him, but is forced to do so in front of many people, though this is only heard and not shown. S2E6: a character rapes his wife on their wedding night. The entirety of season 4 focuses on an adult (50) and implied young-teen (13-15) relationship. Historically, it refers to a 49 year-old man with an estimated 14-16 year-old girl. S4E1: a local woman is attacked by a group of men who taunt, hit and chase her. She attempts to run away but is grabbed by several men whilst another tells them to "hold her still" as he begins to undress. S4E5: a woman tells someone that a man used violence to coerce her into sex with him when she was younger.
Tuff Turf (Movie)
Turks Fruit (Movie)
Season one: it is vaguely implied that a British captain and the main antagonist intend to rape one of the female protagonists. However, it is later clarified that he never dreamed of their relationship being anything but consensual, and quits making advances once she has mentioned that she does not love him. The said antagonist engages in a duel with the protagonist upon hearing that he had engaged in drunken sex with a married woman, and believes what occurred was rape. This is not true, as the sex was consensual, but the discussion of rape is still present. Season three: a Rebel officer attempts to rape a Tory woman. She fights back, and in the resulting gunfight, is shot and killed. S3E6: a woman is raped on-screen.
The two short films that contain these elements are Cockleshell and The Turning.
A young boy makes continue sexual remarks to a female adult, as well as attempts to kiss her. She does shut down the conversation and is depict as uncomfortable with the advances, but it is still lace through out the movie. There is mention of a female ghost having pictures taking of her and verbal harassment as well through journal entries that are read allow to the viewer. There is non-consensual touching and grabbing of the female lead during a possible dream sequence. There is implied rape off-screen of a dead female character, as well as on-screen in a several scenes. There is also discussion of the assault between character who are alive. For the actually on-screen rape (01:20:00-01:22:00), the scene goes from showing a creaking bed that is implying assault, to the ghost showing the rape on the screen and the scene than insinuate that the female lead experiences the same assault through a dream-like sequence.
Tusk (Movie)
(48:42-56:47) The main antagonist discusses childhood abuse which occurred in a mental institution, including explicit descriptions of this abuse. There are also several conversations in which sexual abuse is mentioned outside of this scene, but these occur more or less in passing and are not explicit.
A man grabs a woman aggressively and it uncertain what he is going to do: the scene cuts. It is later revealed that the man has put the woman in the boot/trunk of a car.
This book takes place between 1925 and 1980 in the United States and focuses on different members of a black family. In one chapter, two members of the family are traveling by car through the Southern United States. While they are eating a picnic lunch in a park, three white men harass them to leave, threatening the husband. They wolf whistle at the woman and joke that she should stay with them. Another member of the family is molested as a child by a community member.
Twice Born (Movie)
Near the end of the movie, it is revealed through a flashback that a woman was gang raped and forced as a sex slave by soldiers. Throughout the movie, the main protagonist (another woman) is also sexually harassed at several occasions.
Twilight (Movie)
The main protagonist, while out at night, is cornered by a group of men who verbally assault her. She is saved before anything more occurs but the man who stops the situation, able to read minds, implies that they would have sexually assaulted her further. The main romance is between a 17 year old girl and a 200+ year old man. He implies that he was her age when he was turned into a vampire and appears as such. The attempted assault and murder of the main character at the end has extremely sexual overtones: the villain breaks her leg and throws her into things while speaking sexually right up against her, sniffing her hair etc. He is also videoing her the entire time.
A character describes in detail how she was gang raped by the man who was courting her and his friends while they were drunk. The beginning of the rape is shown but it cuts out to audio only.
S1E1: a comedian discusses the crimes of various abusers and sexual harassers in his set, doing so with condemnatory intentions. S1E4: there is a passing mention of a covered up scandal where one employee tried to feel up another. Another character dismisses this as an 'unsusbtantiated rumor'. S1E7: this episode is about male violence, exacerbated by meteor influence. During a date, a man makes unwanted sexual advances and gets violent when rebuked. Women are stalked by an angry man. A woman implies she has been raped while on dates, but does not explicitly say so. A teenage boy drinks with a friend who starts getting aggressive when he does not wish to make out/is put off by how aggressive he is being. While there is no outright sexual assault in the episode, the constant threat of violence may be very triggering.
Twin Peaks (TV Show)
The series follows an investigation into the murder of a teenage girl. It is progressively revealed that she was a prostitute at a brothel and engaged in dubiously-consensual sex with men much older than her (notably S1E8). It features several toxic and violent heterosexual marriages/relationships (especially in season 1), scenes of domestic violence (notably S1E8) and discussions of sexual violence. S1E1: a woman appears out of nowhere after having survived a kidnapping: she has bruises on her thighs. It is later stated that she was raped several times. S1E2: it is mentioned in the beginning of the episode that the victim had sex with three men before beig killed. This is repeated throughout the rest of the season. Near the end of the episode, a man beats up his wife. S1E3: two men go to a brothel, where they choose young girls to have sex with them. S1E4: a coroner reports that that the victim's killer tied her up and kissed her before killing her. The final scene shows the victim's father desperately asking women to dance with him: they rebuff him. S1E6: a teenage girl (18 year-old) being interviewed to get a job at her father's department store, blackmails the male recruiter with a fake sexual assault allegation if he does not hire her. As she is falling in love with the main character (who is in his thirties), she makes her interest apparent and even shows up in his bed naked in an attempt to seduce him. S1E7: the main character turns the teenage girl down. The same girl goes undercover at the brothel to investigate the murder victim's death: the madame hiries her despite knowing she is underage. S1E8: the father of the undercover girl enters into her room to have sex with her, not realizing that it is her. A man acts threateningly towards a woman he partnered with. A husband attempts to kill his wife (who cheated on him) by tying her up and burning her alive. Season 2: S2E1: in the brothel. the undercover girl narrowly avoids sleeping with her own father. She hides her identity and tries to rebuff him, but he insists until another character calls him out of the room. The girl is then confronted about ther attitude by the madame, who physically threatens her. She is later shown being distressed by the experience. The conditions of the murder, kidnapping and rapes (mentioned above) are described by the protagonist once again. In the final scene of the episode, flasbacks of the murder are shown, with a man standing on the victim in her underwear. S2E2: the protagonist tries to question the survivor of the kidnapping and rapes, who was in a coma. She is in a state of shock and experiences PTSD when he shows her a drawing of the presumed rapist. The undercover girl in the brothel takes advantage of the situation of a man (her boss), who is tied to ropes for a BDSM game, to obtain information from him. He admits that he uses his job as the director of a department store to recruit girls for the brothel. S2E3: the episode opens with the rape survivor having a panick attack. The undercover girl in the brothel is kidnapped, restrained, drugged and filmed in order to claim a ransom. S2E4: the undercover kidnapped girl mentioned being beaten by one of her captors. One of them kills him and she appears visibly distressed and forced to accept to embrace him. The videotape of her, crying and gagged, is shown twice throughout the episode. S2E5: the protagonist rescues the undercover girl from the brothel, where she is tied up to a bed. S2E6: a rape off-screen is implied. We see a man buckling up his belt next to a woman lying on a couch, visibly distressed by the encounter. S2E7: the undercover girl confronts her father about their encounter in the brothel he owns and he admits having sex with the murder victim, who worked as a prostitute there (teenage girl). The daughter then reveals their relationship to the protagonist. A wife who is not in her right mind after a suicide attempt kisses her husband, who clearly does not appreciate it but is afraid to rebuff her because of her new physical strength. An apparently male character enters a man's house during the night without him noticing: he kisses him without his consent and admits of being attracted to him. It is immediately revealed that the said character is in fact his supposedly late wife disguised as a man. The episode concludes with the revelation that the father of the victim has been possessed by a demon: he is shown violently beating up his niece (his daughter's look-alike), kissing her and killing her (off-screen). S2E9: the possessed father proposes to a female character (a friend of his daughter and niece) to dance with him, which she accepts. Shortly after, he suddenly hugs her, which leaves her shocked. They are interrupted by someone knocking at the door. It is finally clearly stated that the possessed father is the killer of his daughter: the protagonist reminds that he raped her before killing her. S2E11: the woman who was raped in S2E6 describes her relation with her rapist. She also mentions child trafficking. A transgender character is introduced and her identity is generally played for laughs throughout the rest of the episode she appears in. S2E12: a female character is revealed to be caught in an abusive relationship with her husband, who beats her. Near the end of the episode, we hear the couple arguing, implying that he is (or will be) beating her. S2E13: a adult woman thinking that she is a teenager and having superhuman strenght (after a suicide attempt), acting increasingly pushy towards a teenage male who is clearly not interested, kisses him and lays on him after he rejected her advances and asked her to leave him alone. He eventually consents to the romantic relationship in further episodes. In the final scene of the episode, the abusive husband (who was incapacitated since the start of the season) reappears threatening when his wife is alone at night. S2E14: the abusive husband tries to kills his wife, but he is defeated by her new boyfriend. It is mentioned that a child (a secondary character in the previous episodes) is the product of a rape. S2E15: a male antagonist threatens a female character and fondles her breast. Another male antagonist, who was previously described as a father figure to another female character, kisses her hand while discussing how much he would have to pay to own her again. S2E17: the final scene of the episode shows a woman breaking into the room of a man who is passed out drunk. She undresses, wearing only a bathrobe, and enters his bed before the episode ends. A 18 year-old woman engages in a romantic relationship with an adult man. S2E18: the episode opens with the woman fondling the sleeping man, and drugging him so he thinks she is his former lover. When she tries to strangle him, he defends himself. A man discussing with his former female lover (who is in a wheelchair) caresses her and wishes for them to be together again: she rebuffs him and he stops. S2E21: during a beauty pageant, a man holds the arm of and puts his arm around a woman who rebuffs him twice. In the final scene of the episode, the antagonist kidnaps a woman. S2E22: the antagonist takes a woman hostage to lure the protagonist somewhere. In season 3, a female character describes how she was raped and later has unconsensual sex with the doppelganger of her rapist. S3E2: the male protagonist enters a room where his presumably girlfriend waits for him in her underwear on a bed. He suddenly holds her against her will when she understands that he represents a threat. He then tells her that he will kill her and punches her in the face when she tries to flee. He eventually gets on top of her and kills her. S3E4: a FBI boss expresses his concern that an elderly male agent will go on a mission with a young female agent. He answers that he is indeed 'old school'. S3E5: in a bar, a woman asks a man for a light. He strangles her and threatens to rape her in front of her friends. S3E7: a woman confronts the antagonist. She seems very distressed when mentioning their last encounter at her home. In the end of the episode, a phone conversation revolved around the prostitution/human trafficking of underage girls. S3E10: the episode opens with a man breaking into a woman's trailer after threatening her and presumably killing her off-screen (while she is screaming). We then see her, alive but unconscious and bloody. The next scene shows another man assaulting his girlfriend and shouting at her, while standing on top of her. A female main character has sex with the protagonist even though he does not seem to be in his right mind: seemingly disoriented during the encounter, he eventually enjoys it. Later in the episode, the man from the first scene breaks into his grandmother's house, assaults her (strangling her and pushing her down) and robs her. S3E11: the first scene shows the bledding woman from S3E10 crawling out of the woods. Later on, the main characters find the headless body of a naked woman. S3E14: a group of policemen investigating a forest find a naked woman presumably lost in the woods. A female character is verbally assaulted and threatened at a bar by a man (lesbophobia): she kills him. S3E16: the female protagonist from S3E7 tells about her encounter with the male antagonist, while being very distressed. She explains that he came to her home, kissed her, and when he saw that she was frightened, enjoyed it and raped her. S3E18: a waitress is sexually assaulted.
A major theme of the movie is that the female lead (a young woman) escapes from a forced marriage. Early in the film, we see her husband forcingly taking her away from a party to rape her. Later, she tells about how he raped her before. This is discussed several times throughout.
There are many graphic scenes of cruel and violent sex involving a main character. A main character secretly sets up microphones and cameras in a friend's house to record his friend having sex. Multiple graphic panels depict a main character being raped by his stepfather when he was a pre-teen or young child. He frankly discusses these events on numerous occasions. He has flashbacks to these assaults on multiple occasions, including during sex with his partner. A main character describes the time he was raped by a school nurse when he was in junior high. His superior openly masturbates while he is talking and pressures him to continue describing the assault. A main character walks in on his father raping his adopted sister. He attacks his father and is sentenced to prison for nearly killing him. Later, he struggles sexually due to remembering this event and worrying that he might rape someone like his father. There are depictions of a main character being sexually assaulted in prison. A character's significant other is kidnapped and gang raped as punishment. He is shown photos of this.
Two Summers (TV Show)
The physical effects of the rape (shown on-screen) on the victim are shown.
Typhoon Club (Movie)
The teenage characters do (or attempt to do, or almost do) a variety of extreme things throughout the film. At the beginning of the film, a group of girls remove a boy's shorts/swimsuit and hold him underwater in a swimming pool, nearly drowning him. A girl finds herself in the apartment of a suspicious young man after running away from home. He slaps her at one point, but she leaves without coming to further harm. A boy chases a girl though a school; the culmination of this scene looks like attempted rape. The boy stops himself after ripping the girl's shirt.
Tyrannosaur (Movie)
A woman is physically abused by her husband and eventually brutally raped after he hit her with a knife over the head: the focus is mainly on her as she struggles with consciousness. The toxic relationship with the helplessness and terror the man installs in that woman is very tangible throughout the film. She later recalls how her husband raped her in the past and "put glass inside her", which lead to infertility.
U.F.O. (Movie)
While at a bar, a man tries to kiss a woman he was hitting on. Later the same man attempts to rape one of his female friends. He hits her and pushes her down onto a counter where he tears her shirt open, but he is fought off by her and another man.
Ugetsu (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie (about 30 minutes in), enemy soldiers invading a village forcefully take women into a house to rape them. Later, pirates are shown capturing, taking away and pinnind down a character to rape her off-screen (about 1hour into the movie). She is then shown after the assault, visibly distressed. She is later shown in a brothel, where she became a prostitute since she "lost her honour".
A drunk man forces himself on a woman who is then saved.
In seasons 1 and 2, a woman makes suggestive comments towards an adult man who is stuck in his 13-year-old body. She often calls him "cute" and on one occasion (S2E7) says that he is "really starting to fill out those tight little shorts of [his]." She is shown to have no boundaries with him or with other characters, and enjoys playing mind games with him. She is also his boss at some points. Nothing ever goes past suggestion, and the man in a child's body never reciprocates or acknowledges her comments in any way. S1E2: a joke about prison rape is made about 34 minutes into the episode. S1E7: some guys sexually harasses a woman in a parking lot. Later, there is a flashback of this scene. S1E17: child abuse and sexual harassment. S1E18-19: domestic violence. S2E5 : a woman has an extramarital affair with another woman. Alongside this relationship, we see scenes where her husband insists on having sex with her despite the fact that it is clear that it bothers him. S2E6 : a woman is briefly harassed by three men in the street. She hits one of them before running away. The men chase her into a store before being threatened by another woman After being possessed, a character says "I feel so violated". S2E8 : one of the songs talks about a rapist. S3E5: a woman uses her powers on, a.k.a "rumours," his adoptive brother into "wanting her," leading to him passionately kissing her and attempting rape against his will. Moments before, the man pleads "Please. Don't do this." when she rumours him to not leave. During the attempt, she says "stop" 3 times and shouts "stop" a 4th time, breaking the spell. She pushes him off of her. This is not acknowledged or addressed as a sexual assault in the following scenes or episodes." S4E1: people are durgged against their consent. S4E4 : one of the main characters is retained prisoner by one of his enemies to whom he owes money. To reimburse him, our main character is forced to use his powers to do medium sessions in which he is possessed to maintain sex with customers. Later, that enemy plans to do the same with the character's sister. She gets out of this situation very quickly and manages to defend herself. S4E5: someone hides information from his girlfriend for 5 months that would allow her to return to her feorm life, husband, and kids. Worthy of note: two characters who are unrelated, but were raised in the same household (adopted), develop a romantic interest in one another. S1E8: a woman uses her powers to manipulate ("rumour") her ex-husband into falling in love with her. It dappens during a flashback at the start of the episode.
Una (2016) (Movie)
An adult character is manipulated into having sex with another adult, so the consent is dubious. Incest, or incestuous grooming, is implied, between a step-father and his pre-teen step-daughter.
A woman discusses the fact that she was accused of being a child molester by a vindictive ex.
Unbelievable (TV Show)
The series is about a teenager who was charged with lying about having been raped, and the path to arrive at the truth. The rape is depicted on screen in the first 10 minutes of the show.
Unbreakable (Movie)
The protagonist sees a scene where a man is about to rape or sexually assault an unconscious woman laying in bed (1:20:01-1:20-28). It is implied because the man stares at her and locks the door as he proceed going towards her.
The protagonist was kidnapped by an adult man when she was in middle school, and was then kept underground in a bunker for fifteen years with three other victims, one of whom was also a teenager at the time. When asked after being rescued, the main character outright says, 'Yes, there was weird sex stuff in the bunker.' She's also revealed to have 'married' her captor in order to protect another victim from the same fate. In another episode, she outright refers to her captor as a rapist. It is shown in multiple episodes that her experience has left her with some trauma related to sex; for instance, in one episode, she attempts to have sex with her boyfriend but winds up punching him on instinct. However, the show contains no graphic or overtly frightening scenes related to these themes. In season 3, a character is pressured to perform sexual acts during an audition. The incident is expanded upon in season 4 as allegations about the perpetrator surface and the character begins to deal with the psychological ramifications. Though some of the specifics are a little absurd, this, like the rest of the show, is a lighthearted attempt to deal with serious, real traumas.
The movie is a choose-your-own-adventure style epilogue to the original series. Depending on the viewer's choices, there are several scenes that allude to sexual violence, and one where sexual assault is explicitly shown. The premise of the original series is that the main protagonist was kidnapped by an adult man when she was in middle school, and was then kept underground in a bunker for fifteen years with three other victims, one of whom was also a teenager at the time. Kimmy outright refers to her captor as a rapist. The central conflict of this special epilogue is that she discovers that her captor has an alternate secret bunker of kidnapped women. The captor is presumably running the bunker in the exact same way as the one where she lived, so she decides that she must save the women there. If the viewer chooses for a character to enjoy the "woodland banquet" instead of following the hero, there is a graphic scene where all the men sexually assault all the women present. Theoretically, this scene is supposed to be satirical. If the viewer chooses for her fiancé to learn about life from his nanny Fiona instead of from Lillian, the former makes a quip about Mary Poppins having molested the children she cared for. If you choose for a woman to lie about the wardrobe and then to resort to physical violence, she plays out a scene where it appears that a man is beating her up. She then makes a comment that she is in love with him and believes she can change him. In context, it is clear that she is making up the whole situation to stall for time since he is not actually present, but the structure of the scene and the words being said can be quite triggering. Finally, the main character's fiancé has a case of arrested development that resembles an oedipal complex due to growing up as a prince whose primary source of human connection growing up was his nanny. Consequently, as an adult, he has an odd attraction to her and another woman who looks like her (played by the same actress). Furthermore, almost every scene with Kimmy's former captor involves him making sexually harassing comments to her or about other women.
Uncle Buck (Movie)
A teenage boy attempts to rape a teenage girl but is interrupted; this is a long, serious scene. It is implied that the boy assaulted another girl. A man hits on a 15 year old teenage girl and tries to get her to go in his car. She says her throat is sore and it hurts to talk as an attempt to get him to leave her alone. He turns it into a sexual joke to attempt to get her to give him head. A man steps in to save her and scare him away. A man makes comments to a washing machine that sound like a sexual assault; this is played for laughs.
Uncle Sam (Movie)
A man in a Uncle Sam costume and stilts watches a women get undressed through her window. It might be implied that this character sexually assaulted his sister as young as 6 and later his wife.
The author discusses two instances of experiencing child sexual violence, as well as several instances of men following her or speaking suggestively to her against her will.
Undead Unluck (TV Show)
The series revolves around a young woman with the ability to accidentally kill or injure people when they touch her skin and an invincible man who wants to die. S1E1: the man gropes the woman in an attempt to be killed by her ability. She tries to run away, and he kidnaps her. He later chases her around a building to try to remove her clothes so he can touch more of her skin at one time. These scenes are intended to be comedic. S1E2: the man finds out that a kiss from the woman causes her ability to become more catastrophic, so he comes to believe having sex with her will finally kill him. He suggests they have sex, and she runs away from him. He chases after and corners her, but she convinces him to stop before anything occurs. The subject matter is handled very lightly, and the scene is intended to be comedic.
S1E4: mention of rape. S1E5: a character is interested in polygamy and wants to make his step daughters his wives. He can be seen in bed with one of her stepdaughters and heard asking her if she is comfortable in a position and "teaching" her how to be comfortable. S1E7: mention of rape. In one episode, some girls can be seen living in a recluded house owned by some of the characters. They are heavily implied to be underage and having sexual relationships with these older men, although their age is not confirmed.
Two male characters attack a female character in her home. The description is vivid and the character involved is hospitalised afterwards.
The main character wakes at one point to find a man groping her. Near the end of the film, a man attemps to rape the female protagonist. Worthy of note: at another point, a group of men emerge from the night and start attacking her van, trying to break the windows and force her out.
A man forces a woman to perform oral sex whilst holding a knife to her throat and then tries to rape her.
This film is shot from the perspective of an accused paedophile/murderer who is being interrogated following the discovery of two 12-year-old girls, who have been raped and murdered. No sexual violence is shown on-screen but the film ends with the revelation that the main character met his now-wife when he was over 30 years of age and she was 11, marrying her shortly after her 18th birthday. Other disturbing events and themes run throughout the film; the main character is shown to procure underage sex workers and at one point is discovered alone in a room with his young niece, arousing suspicion. He admits that he is sexually attracted to teenage girls and defends this attraction at length. The film seems to imply that the root cause of this behaviour is the main character's broken marriage, which has starved him of sex and affection, as well as the scrutiny of his wife following his discovery with his niece. The film seems to emphasise his emotional distress as a result of being accused and interrogated and might be taken to imply that it is wrong to accuse a person of sexual misconduct unless there is damning evidence (or that no evidence short of being caught in the act of an indiscretion is satisfactory). The movie also contains some intense flashbacks to and graphic descriptions of childhood sexual abuse.
Towards the beginning of the book, the protagonist, a pastry chef, walks in on her boss, the owner of the restaurant where she works and a prominent member of the community, as he is trying to force another employee to give him sexual favors in exchange for keeping her job after she made a small mistake. At the time when the protagonist walks in, the boss has his trousers and underwear down and is trying to kiss the employee. The boss fires the protagonist and threatens to ruin her career if she tries to tell anyone what happened. The protagonist had signed a non-disclosure agreement at the start of her career there, so she is too worried about the potential repercussions to go to the authorities. The protagonist's project from then on is to find women that the boss has harassed and get them to come forward against him. She has difficulty at first and makes some statements that some readers may find troubling, such as demonizing women who don't come forward and who therefore allow their antagonist to keep harassing others. As it turns out, the protagonist's close friend had been coerced into a sexual relationship with the boss when she had worked there in the past. The friend feels a lot of shame around this incident and for accepting hush money from him.
The book covers research on how autistic people form relationships at various stages in their lives. Throughout, the authors discuss how autistic people in particular, and disabled people in general, experience higher rates of sexual harassment and sexual violence. There are also references to childhood sexual abuse at the hands of family members and caregivers.
A man is shown forcing himself upon a woman who is shown struggling against him.
The Undoing (TV Show)
There is a storyline throughout the series about a doctor who had an inappropriate sexual relationship with a patient's mother. S1E6: a rough sex scene between two characters leads into one murdering the other.
This movie is about a group of people (women, children and an old man) hiding in a flat in a context of (civil) war. At some point, two men enters the apartment: they beat one of the woman, tear off her clothes and threaten to rape her while the others are hiding and cannot intervene. She negotiates with one of the man (promising to let him rape her regularly if he keeps the other man off her), who rapes her on-screen. After that, the man tries to kill her by strangling her and the other man (who wants to rape her as well) intervenes. They eventually leave, and the others characters come to help the woman, who is shown profundly distressed during the rest of the movie.
Une Vie (Movie)
Early in the film, the protagonist's wedding night is depicted as umcomfortable, and her husband does not stop when she asks him to. Soon after, it is revealed that the husband repeatedly raped their maid and impregnated her. The victim is held accountable as much as her rapist by the other characters, and the cheated wife is pressured into forgiving him.
Unfreedom (Movie)
This is a generally violent film, with particular sexual violence against a minority. It contrasts the harassment and attempted murder of a liberal Islamic scholar by fundamentalist extremists to the persecution of LGBT minorities in India, attempting to make a statement about structural violence and social discourse. In the last scene in the film, a lesbian is stripped and gang-raped in prison while her father watches and chooses not to intervene because she earlier ran off with her lover. The scene is explicit and prolonged.
The protagonist's boyfriend tries to pressure her into sex. When she refuses, he embarrasses her in front of all their friends. The protagonist, a high school student, walks in on a teacher kissing her classmate. The student the teacher assaults acts as if it is her decision to be in this relationship, but it is clear in context that that is not the case. This teacher later follows the protagonist into the girls’ restroom at the school to proposition her. In the interlude between chapters 23 and 24, there is an interview of an unnamed person who killed a girl and her mother because the former wouldn’t go out with him. A boy tells the protagonist that she and other girls exist for boys’ “entertainment.”
Unit 42 (TV Show)
The events take place in S1E8.
During a sequence at a brothel (about 20 minutes in), a man grabs an initially willing sex worker by the throat and throws her onto the bed. She is visibly uncomfortable from the moment he grabs her and sounds pained when thrown. The film cuts away briefly before returning to the scene, where the man still is still gripping her throat as she straddles him. Worthy of note: The film opens with a home invasion scene: there is no sexual assault but a mother and daughter are brutally shot. The same thing happens with the sex workers in the brothel sequence.
In this sequel to The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things, there is further development regarding the rape case against the protagonist's brother. Specifically, the woman he raped finds her mental health deteriorating and decides to press charges against him, leading to his arrest towards the start of the book. Many characters, especially the protagonist's parents, engage in rape apologism: because they are more concerned with ensuring that he won't have to register as a sex offender than with the wellbeing of the survivor in question. They insinuate that the survivor only pressed charges for financial gain. There are no rape scenes; the survivor mentions in passing that the protagonist's brother overpowered her, but no more detail is provided regarding the event itself. The rape case and potential consequences for the brother are discussed throughout the book.
The movie is about a cop who becomes obsessed with a married woman after responding to a report of a break-in at their house (during which she was threatened and physically assaulted by a stranger) and who tries to get the husband out of the way so he can claim her as his own. The antagonist spies on the couple having sex (naked) before announcing his presence: the woman (exposed), screams at the realization that he was watching them (56:50-58:54). The antagonist breaks into the house and the woman attempts to get away, but is subjected to a non-consensual massage (he unbuttons her shirt before she interrupts him) and has to play along (kissing him and trading caresses) until she grabs a gun. He then hits her and attempts to rape her but is eventually stopped and deafeated (1:33:45-1:40:40).
Unleashed (TV Show)
The film contains several flashbacks and discussion of an attempted rape throughout.
A class of 18 year old boys lure a woman to a squash court, hit her, and threaten to gang-rape her before she is able to run away.
This book features abuse, kidnapping and rape/assault.
UnREAL (TV Show)
Unsane (Movie)
A woman is stalked by an aggressive, controlling man who harasses her consistently. A man tries to rape a woman before another woman stabs him in the neck.
Untamed Heart (Movie)
The main character gets harassed by two men while walking home: they eventually attempt to rape her.
The Untamed (TV) (TV Show)
S1E46: a prostitute tells the story of how she and other prostitutes were forced to have sex with an old man until he died. Flashbacks show the man tied to a bed and the women sitting around him, but no actual sex or nudity is depicted. The same episode reveals that a character had married and had a child with his (unknowing) half-sister.
Until I Kill You (TV Show)
S1E1: a man starts to strangle a woman he is in bed with, during a night terror (about 33 minutes in). It looks at first like the start of a sexual assault, but is not. S1E2: this episode opens with the woman naked and tied to a bed against her will. About 8 minutes in is the prelude to the off-screen rape, with the man suggesting they have sex. The camera pans away and cuts the scene off, but we hear her make a whimpering sound just before it does. About 13 minutes in, the woman is making a statement to the police and describes multiple rapes having happened while she was being kept prisoner, but does not go into graphic detail. She describes having dissociated during them. One officer asks her how she can be “sure” she did not consent.
The book is an autobiography, detailing the author's experiences with sexual violence and gender dysphoria. Much of the story is dedicated to them recovering from their trauma and unlearning harmful coping mechanisms related to their trauma - which includes vivid discussion of internalized misogyny/transphobia. The author describes a traumatic series of events in which they acquired a job at a manga studio that ostensibly accepted their nonbinary identity, but their higher-up constantly misgendered them while putting them through a series of sexual violence; such as verbal sexual harassment with violent undertones, touching them on their face and back in a sexual manner, standing right outside a washroom while they showered, and asking them invasive questions (in one instance, labelling them as a 'nympho'). The aftermath of the event shows them with intense gender dysphoria and self-blaming tendencies, as well as severe PTSD and disordered eating habits. When they came forward in the face of the #MeToo movement a few years later, they also received a barrage of victim-blaming comments and DMs, and again when they shared their manga for the first time publicly (to which their publishing agency had to release a statement and moderate comments). They also recount memories from their childhood and adolescence where they experienced sexual violence or were witness to it; like a boy lifting up their skirt in front of a classroom, being pressured into having a shower with a male friend when they're in middle school, being asked invasive questions about their sexuality, and watching a close friend of theirs get sexually harassed by other men. In the face of boys sexually harassing them as a child, they retaliated by writing explicit boys love fanfictions involving their male classmates - but as an adult, they acknowledge that this is also a form of sexual violence and regret their actions. Near the end of the book, there is a brief recollection from their transfeminine friend, who was forced into a sexual situation by cis men for being a feminine-presenting AMAB person.
The assault scene is very violent (35:00).
The Unwilling (Movie)
Characters discuss their childhoods where one was sexually abused by their father (32:27). SPOILERS: What starts as consensual intercourse between two characters turns into rape (41:50). The female character manages to get the man off her with a knife, killing him. After the male character's wife asks the woman what they were doing, the woman cries and her broken explanation implies what happened to her (48:40). The wife further accuses the woman of his death, and the woman retorts angrily that he attacked her (50:00).
Upload (TV Show)
In season 2, a character liesin order to have sex with someone. Also, another character is creepily filming someone naked without their knowledge. Videos of people having sex are created and uploaded to the internet without their consent.
Upstart Crow (TV Show)
One of the main characters is gang raped (34:06-34:51) and is thereafter considered a "ruined woman." The person who ordered the rape was her beloved's father, and he ordered the rape so that the beloved would lose interest in her.
Rape is shown on screen as a flashback.
Chapter 3: Azami Kurotani stalks, harasses and presumably attempts to rape male deuteragonist Shuichi Saito (the attempt is unsuccessful).
Attempted rape is implied. A woman is circled and grabbed by a group of men in an alleyway. A bishop is implied to have had regular sexual interactions with children in the past. He also attempts to overpower a woman so he is on top of her, but is cut short from going any further.
28:30 to 29:01 A male character is drunk and in and out of consciousness while his fiancee and another woman take turns having sex with him (28:30-29:01). They are also drunk and on drugs. This scene is played for laughs and does not include violence. The man is not upset about his fiancee actions later, but only about her female friend. His memory of this event is minimal and very blurry. It is later revealed that neither of them had sex with him like he thought, but did have sex with each other on top of him.
The main actress was only 14 years old during the filming of this movie. She playe a 13 year old girl who seems to go in and out of dream-like consciousness throughout the entire movie even questioning if she is dreaming. This movie navigates topics such as puberty, girlhood, womanhood, consent, rape, virginity, homosexuality, witchcraft, incest, and religion. A church holds a blessing for the young virgins in the town. In a room full of young girls, a priest blesses their “breasts and laps” A young man is chained to a water fountain outdoors. He is unchained and saved by the protagonist then chased by men with whips. The protagonist watches her grandmother get whipped by a man. Her grandmother is seen with the front of her blouse ripped off and she starts whipping herself on her back while crying and the man watches. A religious man of the church shares a story about how him and some other men “rescued a beautiful young black girl” and converted her to their faith in their tent where she “showed great talent”. Implying that they raped her. The protagonist asks if she became a nun and he says “unfortunately not. We lost her in a certain French harbor.” And that “she fell into terribly immoral ways and sinned against a sixth commandment”. He says that he must teach the protagonist about it later on. The same man later walks into the protagonist’s room while she undresses (the actress’s breasts are seen briefly) and says he must talk to her. Then he says “what breasts you have!” As she tries to cover up. She pleads for him to leave. He opens his shirt, smiles, and says “what I want from you is sweet”. She runs from him and he grabs her and pulls her dress down. She tries to hide behind a curtain and he grabs her. He begins to kiss her and the protagonist’s mood switches and she suddenly seems okay with the situation. The man backs away in shock saying “what have you done?” The protagonist pulls the curtain around her in shame. This is a confusing moment in the movie where consent is blurred and a young girl is almost raped. The man is later seen hung from a window. He is brought to life and yells at the protagonist and tells her she tempted him to sin. A young girl is forced to marry a man. It is unclear whether she is a minor. She is visibly upset on her wedding night. Her new husband pressures her to have sex with him. He takes her to a room where he begins to kiss on her and undress her. Two other figures are in the room as well and help him undress the young bride. The protagonist undresses herself as she watches from behind a curtain. Her breasts are shown again briefly. The man tells the young girl on the bed that crying makes her look old and comments that there is “not a drop of blood”. The physical rape is not shown on-screen but it is heavily implied. The young man that was tied to the water fountain previously, is now tied up in a stream of water where he screams for help as the water rushes around him. He is again saved by Valerie. A man tells the protagonist that the boy she has saved is her brother. It is unclear whether this is the truth but it is found later to be a lie. This causes her to panic as she has shown affection with the boy. A new woman is introduced and greets the protagonist as her second cousin. She is visibly attracted to her and pushes her against the wall and kisses her neck. The protagonist yells and pushes her off and runs out of the room. The protagonist falls asleep and awakes in a barn. She looks below the cracks in the floor boards and sees the same woman making love to a man. She later sees that the man is her (maybe) brother and he is dead. A monster pulls the protagonist down and lifts her skirt as an attempt to rape her. She screams and escapes. Te protagonist later befriends the above-mentioned girl: they are later seen kissing and laying in bed nude. Toward the end of the movie, many young girls watch an adult couple make out. Toward the end of the movie, the protagonist is seen undressing in a bedroom (fully nude). The protagonist and her mother kiss semi-passionately on the lips. Her father kisses a girl passionately.
The main plot revolves around incidences of child sexual abuse. It is mentioned frequently throughout the series and discussed in detail in some episodes. Another subplot is the rape of a teenage girl by some of her classmates. A phone recording of the incident is shown and repeatedly played throughout some episodes, but we only see the girl waking up and then screaming off-screen. S1E4: at the end of the episode, a girl is pressured to describe in detail what happened to her, and she does: her description is very graphic.
The plot revolves around a virus that causes girls to turn into weapons when aroused, and there are very few (if any) episodes that do not include sexual content involving minors. Episode 2 involves the 16 year old protagonist being forced into a marriage with an older woman. She gets stripped naked and the woman attempts to rape her before another character comes to her rescue. Episode 10 has a moment where a character sexually assaults another character to test whether or not she has a certain power. She does not, so she makes a plan to sexually assault more characters until she finds whoever has the power she is looking for. The character doing the sexual assault is implied to be a minor. Episode 12 has multiple characters (including at least one minor) get sucked into a sword, in which they are raped by tentacles to remove their powers and strength. If we include the specials, the first is entirely about two underaged girls having sex; the sixth is about a girl fantasising about sexually assaulting a minor.
S1E1: an underage boy attempts to sexually assault his girlfriend who is several years older than him. S1E10: a teenager has sex with a 150-year-old vampire (he looks 17). S1E16: a man tries to use his supernatural powers on a woman (to get her to sleep with him) but they do not work. S2E1: a man (one of the main love interests) kisses the main character without her consent and continues trying to push himself on her even when she says no (non-consensual kissing). S2E3: a character is told by a woman he is kissing that she does not want to continue hooking up with him. Despite this, he pressures her anyways and continues trying to kiss her though he does eventually stop once she says no again. An underage female character is sexually abused by a vampire. The main female character is involved in a emotionally abusive relationship, viewed as romantic throughout the series. She is coerced into sex by him (under supernatural circumstances). A 1,000 year olds hybrid is in someone else’s body, and looks like a woman's boyfriend: she kisses him and continues to make out with him until she realizes it was not actually her boyfriend. It is implied that he would have kept going if she did not figure it out.
Vampire Knight (TV Show)
Vampiric feeding is often used as an allegory for sex in this series. As such, vampires enslaving or attacking humans can be a stand-in for sexual manipulation, abuse, or violence. S1E8: an adult male vampire is said to have killed and devoured four young girls, and he uses very sexual language when describing the act of feeding. In the original Japanese with subtitles, he tells one girl, "Don't be scared, I'll be gentle." S1E9: from this episode onward through season 1, an adult female vampire is shown to have a very inappropriate, almost erotic relationship with some teenage characters. Her relationship with one, spanning years, feels very like an allegory for an adult grooming a child, and may make some viewers uncomfortable. S2E7: an adult man in a teenage boy's body makes a sexual pass at a teenage girl while they are alone. When she rebuffs him, he violently grabs her and slams her into a wall. Another character walks in and stops him before anything further happens. A boy and girl who have had a romantically-charged relationship finally kiss, before it is revealed to the girl that they are actually long-lost relatives. The boy, who had initiated much of this romantic contact - and the kiss itself - has been aware that they are related the entire time. S2E8: a character states that incest between siblings is normal in his culture. It is later mentioned that his own parents were brother and sister, and that they had intended for him to marry his younger sister when they grew up. She has been groomed for this role her entire life without realizing it. S2E12: an adult man grabs a teenage girl from behind and makes suggestive comments about her, and licks her neck. A vampire makes taunting comments about having drank the blood of an unwilling woman in a description that feels like an allegory for sexual assault.
Several women over the course of the movie have their shirts/dresses torn open by male vampires and some are also molested. The vampire's creature molests a woman while she is tied up and naked. In a later scene it rapes another woman.
Vamps (Movie)
The leader of the bad guys says several times that he is going to rape a man's wife and grabs her chest, kisses her, throws her up against a wall while taunting the husband. Later when he is tied up, she recounts the scene. It is also discovered that she used to have sex for money.
The male antagonist kidnaps, bounds, and attempts to rape a woman (about 76 minutes in).
A man 'caresses' a woman's cleavage as she tries to protest. A (female) vampire licks a woman's face; the woman is disgusted and protests. A woman (who is kidnapped and under the hypnosis of a vampire) is kissed without her consent: she is then visibly uncomfortable but has to contiune to dance with him (under his control).
Van Helsing (TV) (TV Show)
S1E8: about 35 minutes into the episode, two drunk characters go in a dark hallway to kiss, The woman changes her mind because the man gets too handsy: she starts saying 'no' so he slaps her, puts his hand on her neck and covers her mouth to stop her from screaming. Her friends arrive before anything further happens, but she is left with bruises on her neck. S3E11: towards the end of the episode, a woman tells that she was abducted and kept in a basement as a child, and hints that she was raped over a long period of time. S5E6: a character tells one of her co-stars was "handsy".
Van Wilder (Movie)
While working as a maid, one of the protagonists suffers frequent sexual assault from her employer’s husband. The violations are described in some detail. In a later job, this same character ends up marrying someone for whom she worked as a secretary. As time goes on, she feels embarrassed that that is how they got together. The husband insists to people that he “was no lech.” Another protagonist escapes an abusive relationship. Passing mention of catcalling.
A man rapes his wife after she refuses to have sex. The situation is described in detail. Later on the same woman gets raped by her brother in law multiple times. She is heavily medicated when he takes advantage of her. This is also described in detail.
The Veil (Movie)
A woman tells someone about a man from her past who spread sexual rumors about her after she rejected him. Mass rape and wartime sexual violence is discussed and described frequently and graphically. There ares discussions about entire villages of women and children being put in rape camps and used by soldiers all day. The protagonist privately calls out a man who is working at a refugee camp for sexually abusing the refugees he is supposed to be taking care of, and then says she will not report him for it if he lets her leave with the suspected terrorist she is investigating.
Velvet Buzzsaw (TV Show)
The movie uses clips from a number of avant-garde films from the 1960's. One such clip is of the infamous rape scene from the movie Flaming Creatures (1963). The clip is only shown in the bottom left corner, not the entire screen.
An attempted rape occurs between 03:03 and 03:50 on-screen.
The antagonist uses emotional abuse and magical manipulation to persuade both men and women to have sex with him (or each other). He often erases their memories of having encountered him or having had sex. He stalks the female lead character and attempts to rape her, but she outwits him. A secondary female character tells the story of an emotionally, psychologically, and physically abusive relationship she was in for years. She is safely away from her abuser by the time of the novel. The female lead character recalls a childhood incident in which a man is implied to be scoping her for sexual abuse, though all that happens before she escapes is a grip on her shoulder.
Veneno (TV Show)
S1E7: a transgender woman is forced to do sex work while in a men's prison.
Sexual assault/rape are significant elements of the film's plot. Discussions and depictions of sexual violence throughout. The rape scene is very early on in the movie and lasts a very long time.
This film mostly centers around the aftermath of child sexual trauma. It explores violence and gender roles. The main character has erectile dysfunction, which is a point of major shame for him. Halfway through the film we find out that this dysfunction began after he witnessed sexual harassment to a woman when he was a child. He was found by the two perpetrators and was forced to rape the woman in front of them (this last part is not shown on-screen) The main character's love interest also has a history of child sexual assault, after being forced by her teacher to sit upon his lap while he has a hard-on (also not shown on-screen). In general, the society is depicted as extremely sexist, with several sexualised images of women and insults towards them.
Most of the listed tags for this show are treated as jokes or made to be one liners. When something does happen, it is typically passed over quickly and nothing much comes of anything one way or another. It features suggestive dialogue, rape jokes, groping, mentions of past assault, forced kissing, and a male adult unknowingly has sex with an underage teenage girl. One character (Sergeant Hatred) is canonically a pedophile, and takes an experimental drug to alleviate his sexual urges. (It should be noted that the creators themselves admitted they went too far with his pedophilia as a running joke). Another character admits that both him and his brother were molested by Sergeant Hatred, but the brother can not remember the incident. Sergeant Hatred (in his early 50s) is married to a woman who is canonically 17 at the time. In one episode, one character wakes up in his prison cell to find his cellmate attempting to take off his prison uniform to rape him. This is played off as a joke as the two have an awkward conversation afterwards. While introduced, another character has very pedophilic undertones to his personality due to how sensual he acts towards the protagonist. However the creators have stated that he is canonically not a pedophile, only acting the way he does due to emotional scarring and trauma brought on by the death of his former side-kick. S3E6: two teen girls pin a boy down, kiss him, and take off his clothes while he tells them to stop. The girls are stopped by one of their guardians coming in.
Vera Drake (Movie)
The film is about a woman who performs illegal abortions. During the first third of the movie, a subplot follows a girl who has an abortion after being raped. We see her attacker grasping her and forcing her on a bed.
Veronica (Movie)
One of the main characters has flashbacks to being abused by her mother.
Veronica Mars (TV Show)
All the first three seasons of Veronica Mars deal heavily with rape and sexual violence (the female protagonist is a survivor of rape) with victim-blaming. Incest is discussed but it never occurred, a student is impregnated by a teacher, and an adult man molested the children on his baseball team when they were young. During the course of season four, the titular character's friend reveals that she was raped, and this is brought up futher on in the episode. In another episode, the main character visits a convicted rapist in prison to source information from him.
Verotika (Movie)
A spider monster is shown to be raping a woman. A woman is groped several times - first by the spider monster and then by several men in a pornography theatre.
Versailles (TV Show)
Versailles is a period drama and does not shy away from the realities of the time it is portraying. Its plot includes marital rape, a young girl forced to marry a predator (who subsequently rapes her multiple times), and maids and servants being forced into sex by superiors.
VHS (Movie)
One of the themes of the movie is the non-consensual recording of sexual acts. Segment 'Tape 56': the movie opens with a group of male characters assaulting an unsuspecting woman in a parking garage, forcefully pinning her arms behind her back, tearing her shirt off and exposing her breasts for a filming camera while she screams. The later rewatch the footage and laugh of the harassment. They discuss doing it again and plan to remove their next victim's skirt or pants instead of a shirt. A member of this same group conceals a camera to film himself and a woman having sex without her consenting to the recording Segment: "Amateur Night": a group of men rig a camera up to a pair of glasses and plan to film a woman during sex without her consent. They also discuss recording different women on the street. Later, one of these men tries to kiss a woman who has passed out in hopes that she will wake while another cracks rape jokes. The man then initiates sex with another woman and she is filmed nude without consent. This second woman, who turns out to be a vampire, later assaults the man wearing the glasses. Segment "Second Honeymoon": a man tries to coerce a woman into having sex on camera after filming her from behind as she takes her sweater off. Later, a stranger films this woman as she sleeps while stroking her buttocks with a knife. A young woman passes out while engaging in foreplay with a young man after a night of drinking and drugging. A friend watching jokes about how she is unresponsive and tells his friend to stop: the friend reacts angrily but does stop. Eventually, the girl kills them both.
VHS 2 (Movie)
It is strongly implied that a cult leader regularly abuses women and girls of 13 and under (0:45:43-0:57:49). The cult leader is seen having sex with a woman, but she appears to be an adult and the sex seems to be consensual. A character sees ghosts and sees an old man in his underwear staring in the window. A girl says that it is her dead uncle and that he was a bad man: she adds that she knows how to make him go away and she lets the ghost watch her undress and have sex with the other character.
Video Nasty (TV Show)
Videodrome (Movie)
The main theme of the film is snuff movies, with a strong implication of sexual torture. A fictional snuff TV show features a victim receiving a strong electric shock to his genitals, though that part of his body is obscured.
Vienna Blood (TV Show)
S1E1: a character discusses past and repressed traumas about her rape. S1E2: an attempted rape is shown on screen. S1E4: attempted rape on-screen + the rape of a character's mother is described.
A Vigilante (Movie)
The movie deals with themes of domestic abuse which could be upsetting for some viewers. Three men grab a woman and drag her away from her car into an alley: she breaks free and escapes.
Vigilante 2 (Movie)
Vikings (TV Show)
S1E1: two men appear with the intention of raping a character but are killed. Rape on screen (16:00). S1E2: a man is shown raping a slave. S1E4: there is another attempted rape of the same character but, again, she kills her attackers. This episode also features a rape on-screen. S2E3: a character is shown to be in an abusive relationship. S2E4: a nun escapes a first rape attempt, but later gets raped off-screen. Men are sent to the room of one character to assault her while she sleeps. A woman is pressured by her political ally into having sex with his son who seems to be in his teens (9:45-11:30). A husband attempts to rape his wife due to her political suggestion: she fights him off and stops him. S2E7: while a female and a male character have sex, the man chokes her and questions her about her political alliances. It is experienced as violent and surprising by the female character. S2E8: a female character mentions being raped by her brother when she was twelve (17:20-17:40). A female character is groped at knife point by a male character and threatened with rape (20:50-21:50). S3E2: a character discusses how she was abused as a child. S3E5: soldiers attempt to rape a woman during a siege. They are interrupted, but she is killed by one of them (36:50-37:15). S3E7: a character is kissed by her father-in-law; she shows no signs of wanting this to happen. S3E9: a character is pressured by her father-in-law to enter into a sexual relationship with him. S4E4: a character is choked and pressured to disclose whether she was raped or not by her captors. This scene occurs around the 29:30 minute mark. S4E9: Vikings attack some farmers and even though the rapes are not shown, the laying dead bodies of the women after the implied rapes lie all over and the violence of what they suffered is very explicit in their positions and blood all over. S5E2: a prisoner is tied up. Another character sits on him and rapes him. S5E6: a character agrees to have sex with a captain in return of a favor. After that, she is attacked by his friends and forced to have sex with them as well. S6E10: violent on-screen rape. A servant woman is told to sleep with the son of a king: he attempts to rape her and strangles her, threatening her life.
S1E1: a main character describes a past rape (18:40-20:30). Much of this episode deals with her plans for revenge, culminating in her killing her rapist. S1E2: the episode starts with the main character’s trial for killing her rapist, including accusations from his friend that she is lying. S1E8: attempted rape (43:10-44:05). S2E5: the past rape of a woman is mentioned (~29:20). Later, a man suddenly pulls a teenage girl/young woman to sit on his lap.
An off-screen rape (heavily implied) between the main character and a demonic creature is used as a climax to the film: we hear screaming (1:09:00-1:22:00).
Vinland Saga (TV Show)
This series contains many scenes where rape is implied: a man carries a woman who is protesting to another room; the legs of a woman laying on the ground is shown as a man is sleeping next to her; mention of gang rape, etc. S1E1: a woman says that she is cold and an older man implies they should go to bed to warm her up: she calls him a pervert. S1E2: Vikings raid a village. They come across a room of naked women with their children: implication of assault (2:00-3:00). S1E6+7: flashbacks show Vikings pillaging, with mentions of "fights over women" they are looking to sell. S1E20: at the end of the episode, a woman is auctioned off as a slave. Season 2: one character is a female slave, who is mplied to be sleeping with her owner. S2E1: when Vikings attack a village, two female characters run away with one male character and one invader makes comments such as 'we're on our way ladies', 'she looks fun', etc.
Violation (Movie)
The whole film is about a woman coping with a sexual assault. There is a rape scene, mostly shot in close-up. This scene is discussed by multiple characters in different ways. Many people try to invalidate the woman's experience, saying that she is covering up an infidelity.
Violence Jack (TV Show)
This miniseries features very graphic and violent stories such as various explicit rape scenes, necrophilia and cannibalism.
Violent Cop (Movie)
Under the influence of heroin, a woman is raped. The scene is brief and has no nudity, but thrusting.
It is heavily implied that one of the female protagonists has been gang raped.
S1E5: a major part of the episode is about a child marrying an adult man.
Violette (Movie)
Viridiana (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, the protagonist (a young religious woman about to take her vows) visits her old uncle, who becomes obsessed with her because of her resemblance to his deceased wife. She accepts to wear her wedding dress, but when she rejects his offer to marry him, he secretly drugs her. He brings her to her room and begins to sexually abuse her but stops before raping her. The next morning, he lies and tells her that he took her virginity. Later, she lives with her uncle's illegitimate son, who also lusts after her. That man also begins a relationship with his female servant: even if it is presented as consensual, the woman does not seem pleased with his first kiss. In the last part of the movie, during an orgy, several instances of sexual harassment are shown on-screen, and a rape is strongly implied on-screen (the feet of a man and a woman behind a couch are shown and we hear the woman asking him to stop). Eventually, the protagonist is sexually assaulted by two men who attempt to rape her. One is eventually killed and the other is stopped by the police. In the last scene of the movie, the protagonist is shown deeply affected by this experience and joining her "cousin" in his room to "play cards".
S1E6: a man try to lure the main character in his house. When she is there, there is a time skip with a POV of her running away and hiding; then him stalking her and telling her to stop playing hard to get, and eventually grabbing her by the wrist. She gets saved by another man.
Vis a Vis (TV Show)
A relationship between a minor and an adult is discussed frequently in Part I, but there are no overly graphic descriptions. The attempted rape is not unnecessarily graphic either.
Visitor Q (Movie)
There are various graphic scenes of rape, incest, general sexual deviancy, and necrophilia throughout the film.
Viva Zapata! (Movie)
The main character is raped while unconscious by her fiancée.
Volver (Movie)
The central plot of the film revolves around a woman who is impregnated by her father, resulting in the birth of a daughter. Another central subplot surrounds a young girl who is sexually abused by her step-father. A woman rejects her husband's sexual advances and he responds by masturbating next to her.
All female characters experience frequent low-grade sexual harassment and pervasive misogyny. This dystopia limits the number of words girls and women can speak per day, with cuffs to deliver electric shocks as an enforcement mechanism. The narrator refers to secondary female characters who have experienced domestic violence, which is implied to include sexual coercion. On a society-wide level, teens and young women are forced to choose between marriages arranged between their fathers and suitors,; being brothel sex slaves. Women and teens who have sex outside of a heterosexual marriage are brutally publicly shamed and sent to labor camps.
One character grabs the protagonist's wrist and try to sexually assault her.
The plot of the film centers around child sexual exploitation material and the lead's sexual abuse as a child. Abuse is not depicted on screen. We see photos of boys' faces and later learn that this is child sexual exploitation material.
Wadjda (Movie)
Early in the film, a construction worker cat-calls the protagonist, a 12 year-old girl, in the street. Forced marriage of young girls is mentioned several times throughout the film.
The Wailing (Movie)
The antagonist character is said to have raped a woman: in a flashback, he is shown cornering and verbally abusing her before the scene cuts away. In another scene, the main character tries to see if his daughter has got a rash on her legs (a main theme of the movie) when she is sleeping. She wakes up and asks why her father is looking under her skirt at night. The scene is not sexual at all, but the hint at pedophilia is obvious. At some point, the father goes through his daughter's things and finds disturbing images in her notebooks: the more prominent ones being female figures bleeding from their vaginss. Since she had previously refused to say how she had met the antagonist, it is heavily implied that she had been raped by him (off-screen).
The film depicts an abusive relationship. The husband is manipulative and physically violent toward his wife, and at one point suggests that he does not need her consent to have sex. A sex scene is shown between a woman and her abuser in which the woman clearly does not want to be participating and seems to be dissociating. The conception of the pregnancy around which the film is centered is heavily implied if not outright stated to be nonconsensual (referred to by multiple people as "the night x got y drunk").
Spousal rape.
S1E6: a character forces himself on a woman, but is fended off S2E1: a woman implies that her dead husband wanted to assault their daughter. S2E11: a man mentions that two men in his group raped two teenage girls. S3E7: a female character is abducted with her boyfriend. She is taken into a separate room from her and forced to remove her top for a man. The man tries to get her to information from her by intimidating her. He removes his gun belt, smells her hair, touches her, and then forces her to bend over on a table where he stands behind her. He does not rape her, but he comes incredibly close and this scene is very intense. S3E11: the same woman shares that experience with her boyfriend in detail. He asks if she was raped. She says no. S3E14: a character is preparing a room to torture another character. As he takes out a few items of torture, a speculum and other similar items are brought out, implying the torture might also be of the sexual kind. S4E7: characters stumble across a corpse with the word “rapist” nailed to it's chest. S4E16: a young boy and a woman are dragged away with the intention of being raped in front of the boy's father. They are, however, saved. S5E1: a group of men selects a woman to rape. As she is dragged away she screams 'not again', implying this has happened before. S5E4: a man threatens to expose a crime committed by a young girl if she does not become his sex slave. He is murdered in self-defense. A man corners a teenage girl and makes her suck on a lollipop: the scene has a lot of sexual tension. S7E4: a character discusses being married to and having sex with numerous women, all of whom are forced into engaging in this relationship to protect their spouses. S7E15: a character is about to rape a woman but is interrupted by another character. S11E2: a character describes an experience where they discovered a group of men who were planning to kidnap them. They prevented the group from doing so. They then go on to describe finding a dead woman who was horribly mutilated with the implication that they kept her as a sexual slave and then killed her after she became obviously pregnant. A female character shares a story about how she came across an old man faking a disability to lure to her to his home. She is aware that he is faking and does not need help, yet she goes to his home. She finds a cloth soaked in chloroform that the man was going to use on her. She takes the rag and stuffs it in his mouth and kills him. She then hears noises upstairs and finds a pregnant zombie woman with its arms and legs cut off and sewn back on. The baby inside the woman was trying to claw its way out of her womb. She also finds 3 other living pregnant women chained to a wall. It is implied they were used as sex slaves. She frees them and they go their separate ways. S11E11: the leader of a small community has the skulls of rapists, murderers, and cannibals on display on a shelf in his office.
The Waltons (TV Show)
S8E9: an army wife is raped by a neighbor.
Wanda (Movie)
The titular protagonist, who is caught in abusive relationships throughout the film, experiences an attempted rape towards the end, but she escapes.
In one episode, a teen girl reveals that her dad did perverted things to her and her jealous mother abused her as a result. There are other scenes with sexual harassment.
Wanted (2016) (TV Show)
The aggressor removes some of a woman's clothing without her consent, ostensibly with the intention to rape or further sexually assault her.
There is an attempted rape which ends with the rapist being killed by the protagonist.
Near the end of the movie, the main male protagonist is about to rape his own wife as revenge (on top of her with full rage, trying to disrobe her, saying 'I can no do whatever I want with you' while she screams 'stop'), ans as a tactic, his wife pretends to like it so he would loosen his grip on her. She performs oral sex to escape because of the physical pressure.
The War Zone (Movie)
The Ward (Movie)
A character is kidnapped and chained in a basement for months as a child, where it is implied that she is raped by her kidnapper. While the child is shown chained in the basement with her kidnapper approaching, no actual acts are depicted.
Warning (Movie)
A teenage girl (17) wakes up to a man pulling down her underwear and trying to have sex with her. She kicks him off of her, stopping the attempted rape. He beats her up after, including saying "look what you made me do" in regards to attacking her because she fought him off. During all of this she is occasionally unconscious and has blurry visions from drug use. The entire scene (1:11:30-1:11:51) is seen in first person.
Warrior (2019) (TV Show)
Throughout the show, there are many mentions of rape. In season one, a woman is aked by her father to have sex with her husband when she does not want to, so he can have a better business deal. She drugs herself to get through it and clearly does not enjoy it. In one episode a man forces his wife's hand onto his genitals, in another we see bruises on a young woman's thighs, implying rape. In season two, during a brothel raid, men can be seen raping women repeatedly. S2E3: a woman offers herself to a police officer to pay her husband's debts. She says that she has done it before and is clearly traumatized. A woman describes her husband sodomizing a 14 year old to his death and other artocities taking place in a brothel.
In these novels, there is a lot of inbreeding because cats follow laws called the Warrior Code which states they cannot have mates outside their Clan, and therefore they do not have many options for mates to choose from, and most pairings in the books are at least distant cousins. Spottedleaf's Heart: this novel is entirely about an apprentice (about 12-13 if she were human), being groomed by a middle-aged man (if he were an adult). It does not show their relationship in a bad light, and the teenager only stops contact with the adult after finding out that he trains in the Dark Forest (what is essentially cat hell in these books.)
The Warriors (Movie)
A male character makes aggressive sexual comments towards a female character, and aggressively kisses and attempts to rape an undercover cop.
A slave girl who is 11 years old is revealed to be pregnant. It is never clarified whether it was the slavemaster who impregnated her or another slave. Towards the beginning of the book, the main character, who is also 11 at the time, gets invited to the bedroom of the slavemaster's brother, who is visiting. Another slave insists that the main character be prepared to defend himself in case the brother intends to molest him. The visit turns out to be entirely benign, and the possibility of molestation never re-emerges.
WatchDogs (Video Game)
An underground sex-trafficking and auctioning ring takes place in Chicago. After stealing the identity of an auction attendee, the main character slips into the auction facility in disguise. As you walk through the hallway, you observe multiple girls in their underwear waiting outside of rooms, girls in cages, and see one be dragged into a room forcefully by her arm. Upon walking into the actual auction room, you see that multiple girls, displayed on stage in their underwear, are being bought and sold and that the auction is actually a human trafficking auction. You rescue a trafficked woman named Poppy by using your phone to scramble the tracking code tattooed on the back of her neck. You can shut down the ring through optional side quests later on. There is also an optional side quest to take down a serial killer who targets female prostitutes.
A woman pays her two friends to go and pretend to be cops and have them pretend to almost rape the main character. This is one of many "practical jokes" or "pranks" she plays on him throughout the film.
It is implied that a group of men chasing one character were going to attempt rape. There are multiple instances of catcalling and inappropriate touching of a female character. Many men harass her on the street by assuming she is a sex worker and propositioning her uninvitedly with money for sex. A female character is cornered by several men and they attempt to rape her but are not successful.
A man repeatedly ignores a woman's sexual rejections, beats her, and is preparing to rape her until another character intervenes. This instance is brought up again later in the movie to shame the victim.
Water (2005) (Movie)
Near the end of the movie, a scene strongly implies the sexual abuse of a child although it is not explicitly shown. The trafficking of one of the female character is only implied though less overtly.
Waterloo Road (TV Show)
The Watermen (Movie)
Two men watch women changing in their bedroom, and later one man barges in on a woman showering to film her. Everyone on the boat is drugged and kidnapped, and one of the women is seen being raped by a kidnapper while still unconscious. When on the island, the women are forcibly undressed and one is fingered by a kidnapper.
Waterworld (Movie)
A woman is used as a bargaining chip and a wman wants to have sex with her. She is unwilling and the man is eventually stopped.
The main topic of the book is the rape of an adolecent by a college aged family friend. The main character dates an adult who is not aware of her age. She is repeatedly harrassed and assaulted. We learn that her rapist has also assaulted his sister. There is a very detailed description of assault.
The Way Out (Movie)
There are frequent, brief references to sexual assault including child sex abuse. Specifically, a character accuses other characters (plausibly) of committing sexual assault in the past and being on the sex offender registry; he discloses his history of abuse, and implies that his abuser may also have abused another character (the abuser's son). Worthy of note: there is a somewhat tense sex scene early in the film and a brief scene later on where a character is choked without having consented to that behavior explicitly. In the first scene the characters both want to continue with the sex without choking, in the second scene one character wants to end the sex and they end it.
There is an extended rape scene at the end of the film with an unconscious woman and a group of men filming pornography.
S1E2: rape on-screen.
How to provide justice for survivors of sexual violence, including childhood sexual abuse, is a major topic in this book. There are no in-depth or graphic descriptions of any particular instance of sexual violence, however.
The author repeatedly references the child abuse that was rampant at Indian residential schools, which included sexual abuse. Many of the people interviewed in the book discuss their relatives' experiences in the residential schools, including the lasting effects of trauma from sexual violence and cultural imperialism.
A character sees a priest raping boys at the residential school, so he rapes her. Another character is raped at a different residential school.
The film contains a graphic date rape scene of a drunk teen girl.
Rape jokes and a female-on-male rape are played for laughs. There is a second implied man-on-man rape and non-consensual touching scene.
Weeds (TV Show)
In the first few episodes a man impersonates his teenage nephew online to trick his girlfriend (also a teen) into engaging in text-only cybersex. The scene depicts the text exchange, and implies that the adult masturbated to this exchange. He also regularly lies about himself to seduce women, including pretending to struggle with sobriety to get his sponsor (an attractive woman) to come to his house to seduce her. Season 4: a woman is raped on screen.
In the beginning of the movie, a woman tells a friend about a sexual experience with a couple. She does not seem distressed but it remains ambiguous whether the acts were consensual or not. Later on, when that same woman is on the road with her husband, the latter lifts up the skirt of a female hitchhiker before agreeing to take her on the car. Later, when the couple is waiting on the side of the road, a man passes by. He rapes the woman off-screen just next to her husband: while she is screaming, the husband does not flinch at all and let it happen. In the final sequences, both characters are captured by cannibals. We see one woman being forced to strip before being killed. After that, a man puts a fish in her vagina to cook her.
A woman inappropriately touches and has sex with a dead man she does not know is dead. More generally, unknowingly necrophiliac actions are a big part of the movie. A woman touches a man in a sexual way even though he seems uncomfortable in the situation. We later learn that they have a sexual relationship and he was only uncomfortable because other people were around. A much older man uses an overtly sexual pickup line on a woman at a party. She is uncomfortable and leaves.
The show revolves around a business operating in 1979 and as such, depicts many scenarios which would be unacceptable in today's world. S1E1: a controlling partner tells his girlfriend that a casting director is only interested in her because he wants to have sex with her. This episode contains lots of catcalling; both men and women are subjected to this. The episode ends with a murder-suicide motivated by sexual jealousy: both victims are naked. S1E2: a male stripper is noticeably uncomfortable when women reach down his underwear and touch his penis. He has a conversation with his manager about it. Asking if the groping is required for his job, and the manager responds "only if you want to get paid."
The protagonist receives repeated rape threats from a boy she has a crush on.
Welcome to the Game 2 (Video Game)
The dark web websites in the game containe are descriptions, sometimes graphic, describing sexual assault and abuse. There are also human trafficking sites: one shows a list of girls that some traffickers are selling, showing their names, ages, races, etc. Some of the girls are as young as 10. At the beginning, a video depicts a livestream of a girl in a red room on a website where people vote on whether she lives or dies: the comments on the livestream are full of people fetishizing her suffering and making sexual comments. One of the websites is a dad trafficking his daughter: it is heavily implied that he sexual assaulted her, and he says that his selling her online was part of a punishment because she would go out with "some other guy". There is a character called "the doll maker" who kidnaps young women and turns them into living sex dolls. On the website, he describes his process for turning the women into dolls in vivid detail and if you visit his website he blackmails the protagonist into finding women in his apartment building for the dollmaker to kidnap.
Welcome Home (Movie)
A man attempts to have non consensual sex with blindfolded woman (she thought it was someone else). The male lead is drugged and two female characters have sex with him while he is unconscious and they film him. The main female character is also discussed and shown engaging in sex when she is intoxicated and, while it is not implied as being unconsenting, it is depicted as unconsenting. Worthy of note: there is also some sexual choking.
Wentworth Prison (TV Show)
S1E1: an abusive partner rapes a woman.
The author describes her experience of having been raped by a burglar who targeted the store where she worked, as well as the legal matters surrounding the rape.
Werewolf (Movie)
Rape is a main theme in this sexploitation film.
The Jets grab a female character and seem to encourage another male character to rape her, although they are interrupted by another character who stops them.
Near the end of the movie, a group of men in a shop (the Jets) assault and try to gang-rape a woman. They are stopped by the owner of the shop.
Westworld (TV Show)
Sexual violence is a running theme in the show. S1E1: several scenes involve implications of the rape of androids by humans. For instance, the viewer sees an (android) main character slapped and dragged off with the implication that she is about to be raped (11:55-15:00). Two men talk about how it was okay to rape an elderly woman after murdering her. S1E3: there is an attempted rape of a main character where the victim is dragged into a barn. She does, however, escape by murdering the attacker. S1E4: a female character intensely propositions three other characters despite their objections; this includes physical contact and close proximity. Season 2: a woman reprograms her boyfriend to be more loyal. Season 3: a character disguises herself as someone else, and has sex with that character's husband. Season 4: many people are not in control of their bodies. S4E5: a man says he could do anything he wants (rape) with someone's wife.
Two teenage boys spy on a group of girls whilst they are undressing. An adult woman ends up in a relationship with a child. This is played for laughs and no actual child sex abuse is shown on screen, though it is meant to be intentionally inappropriate.
The entire show revolves around the main character being violently gang raped, blamed for it, and forced to marry one of her alleged rapists to save her honor.
Rape is mentioned in relationship to victims family relationships.
There is mention of a man who went to jail for statutory rape of a 16 year-old girl. A father finds his adult son's pornography and forces him to masturbate in front of him, at some points physically reaching to grab his son's genitals A woman was likely sexually assaulted and raped by her father as a child. She also had sexual relations with her twin brother, at least sometimes consensually. At some point one of her family members had impregnated her as a teen.
An adult male character is shown to be sexually attracted to a teenage girl. There is one scene where he touches her inappropriately.
The author describes detailed and graphic instances of her parents physically and verbally abusing her. Her specific abuse, however, did not involve sexual abuse. The author mentions reacting angrily to a stranger grabbing her behind. There are multiple discussions about Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD), and how many people who have it were sexually abused, sometimes as children.
It is implied that an adult character married and had sexual intercourse with a teenage character, and that that is a common occurrence in the place shown. Around 57:00, a character forces a kiss onto another. The former also attempts to rape the latter twice (around 01:07:00 and 01:23:00). The film handles the attempts in a serious manner. Though the plot explains why the people engaging in unconsenting actions towards others behave this way, their actions are not being excused by the film.
There is a lot of domestic abuse scattered across the film.
Wheel of Time (TV Show)
S1E1: a man kills his wife (who is a character absent from the books and created for the show to further the male character's plot development). S1E3: a female barkeeper gets one boy alone in a room, tries to kiss him, and then when he refuses, tells him to "get back on the bed" and draws a sword. S1E5: a woman is stripped naked and forcefully scrubbed by a group of men. While not inherently sexual, it is extremely traumatizing for the character. The aim of the scene is to show that men want to hurt women: a torture scene follows. S2E4: a woman has been sleeping with a man without telling him who she is. He is also hiding a part of himself. S2E6: it is mentioned that a woman was forced to wed before she had her first period. S3E3: a main character is revealed to be have been a child bride. The place she is from routinely takes child brides. S3E6: this episode features a child bride and her baby. She is sexually harassed in the streets.
The main character (a teenage boy) is stripped and humiliated in public. There are also multiple scenes where a child is physically abused (non-sexually) by her mother. While the animated series did not adapt this part of the story, the source material (visual novel and manga as well) contains heavily implied sexual abuse, including incest and child sex abuse.
The main female character is raped rather abruptly off-screen. She is also grabbed without consent at a few additional points.
The book is about a teenage girl who goes missing, and the police do not take the matter seriously because she is a Black girl from a poor neighborhood. The protagonist, her brother, spends the book trying to figure out what happens to her and eventually finds that she was kidnapped and held hostage by college frat boys, at least one of whom attempted to rape her.
The audience is shown the scene prior to a woman being raped; the frame fades out before the actual attack occurs. The same woman is later shown injured in hospital, having been the victim of a rape and beating.
The protagonist’s ex-boyfriend beats her: she is punched, and while dazed, his and her movements make it heavily implied that he is raping her on screen. She regains her clarity and hits him off of her and escapes. Worthy of note: this movie contains violence from men in a position of power throughout, with the father similarly backhanding and punching his daughters and wife.
Domestic violence throughout.
It is told that two little girls were raped.
Where's Rose (Movie)
A teenager rapes another teenager until his younger sister tells him to stop.
This film deals with the sex crimes perpetrated by international soldiers in the aftermath of the war in Bosnia and addresses the cover-up which occurred on an institutional level. There is an onscreen rape scene (with an object) at 55-58 mins.
White Chicks (Movie)
A character sexually harasses what he thinks is a woman throughout (it is a man pretending to be a girl). He eventually buys a date with her. A man tries to use a date rape drug on one of the men posing as a woman.
There is a strong implication and detail from multiple women peppered throughout the book. The main character is the product of rape.
White Girl (Movie)
Worthy of note: even the consensual sex scenes have a violent tone.
In "The Golden Dragon," there is an attempted rape and discussion of two rapes that happened before the events of the story. In "Best Served Cold," there is discussion of the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two Spirit People. The protagonist of this story is drugged and kidnapped. They think their kidnapper will rape them, but that ends up not being the case.
The White Lotus (TV Show)
Season 1: a boss and his employee have sex; this seems consensual but there is an unequal power dynamic between them (one of them is also much younger than the other). S1E1: a pedophile joke is made. Throughout season 2, many people use sex as a means of trickery and coercion. S2E1: a man is killed for having sex with a woman of a different race. Sex workers are harassed and insulted. A man changes clothes in front of his friend without her consent. S2E2: the rape of Persephone by Hades is described. It is discussed that a character's dad was 'pervy' towards her. A man says that he suffers from sex addition and does not want to have sex. A sex worker hears this and brings her friend to convince him to have sex with them: it works. S2E3: priests raping altar boys are mentioned. A woman is left alone by her friend in a piazza and is stared at by the many men there. It makes her uncomfortable and the men seem to close in on her. This scene is uncomfortable because it demonstrates the high level of male scrutiny that women deal with in public in a very accurate way and could be triggering to those with the relevant triggers. S2E4: a teenager (above the legal age of consent) says that she has to have sex with a man to get ahead. She asks for the sex but clearly does not enjoy it. He then has problems getting an erection, and she gives him drugs which he thinks are viagra, but they are not. S2E5 and S2E6: a grown man has sex with someone who may or may not be his uncle. S2E7: one character is kidnapped so that someone else can get murdered: sex is used to keep her away. S3E1: an older brother talks about sexual things with his siblings in a creepy way. S3E5: intoxicated brothers kiss and they advice to get women drunk while staying sober to take advantage of them. S3E6: flashbacks of a threesome that involves two brothers, one of which is 18. S3E7: a young boy watches his parents have sex and gets off on it. A man seduces a woman just to try and get money from her.
It is mentioned several times that girls and women are coerced into sexual favors in exchange for shots at fame. There is one scene where this happens directly although nothing graphic is shown. Another flashback scene is briefly shown and it is unclear if the sex is consensual.
White Palace (Movie)
A woman performs oral sex on a sleeping man. He appears to resist initially though they eventually end up having sex.
S1E1: flashbacks reference sexual violence from the previous series.
The White Queen (TV Show)
S1E1: attempted rape of the heroine. The heroine later regrets that she 'refused' the man who attacked her, falling in love with and marrying him. S1E4: violent on-screen rape.
White Room (Movie)
The author references the following: receiving rape threats on the Internet, the #MeToo Movement and rape allegations against Harvey Weinstein, rape allegations against Donald Trump, rape allegations against Brett Kavanaugh, rape allegations against Clarence Thomas, false rape allegations by white women used as justification to lynch Black men and other men of color, rape as a tool of war and colonization, rape of slaves, and rape in the military.
Rape is a central theme in this book, as the main character is seeking vengeance for the rape of her mother, of which her birth was a result. The second chapter contains a graphic rape scene.
S1E2: a man attempts to rape a girl about 24 minutes into the episode. She manages to fight him off and gets away. The man approaches her again just a moment later and she runs away and hides. The girl struggles with flashbacks and nightmares afterwards.
Considering that this book is about the tactics and mindsets of abusers, the author delves into how some abusers are also rapists. The author even points out that, in an abusive relationship, it is nearly impossible for sex to be truly consensual. While this book focuses on intimate partner violence, there are also examples of how abusers target their and/or their victims' children, including through incest. There are no in-depth rape scenes, but there are numerous, detailed examples of physical, verbal, and psychological abuse.
The Why Files (TV Show)
S2E14: a detailed description is given of a man kidnapping a woman multiple times and physically and sexually assaulting her, sending her graphic and disturbing letters, and psychologically terrorizing her.
Why Him? (Movie)
A man repeatedly talks about sex around a woman's parents. making everyone uncomfortable. A man listens to his daughter having sex. A digital image of rape happens on-screen.
The author references rape allegations against Donald Trump, Trump painting undocumented immigrants as rapists, a joke Ann Coulter made about someone who raped his daughter, and workplace sexual harassment.
Wicked (1998) (Movie)
The entire premise of the movie is about a disturbed teenage girl (age fourteen) dressing up as her mother and seducing her father, so the perverse actions in the film are not handled sensitively. Throughout the movie, she dresses in heavy makeup and her mothers wardrobe and proceeds to seduce her father, in one of the scenes they take about romantic kisses, fall asleep together, and wake up on the couch together implying sex. It is implied throughout the movie that the man has sex with both of his underaged daughters.
The female main character's ex was abusive and manipulated her sexually. He also grabs her and harasses her verbally in the novel. The female main character sometimes uses sex as a coping mechanism. She and one of the male main characters have rough/kinky sex without negotiation first, but all characters are implied to be consenting throughout. The characters express concern for one another and engage in caretaking and express love for each other. Consensual-but-not-verbalized-consent is a theme throughout the author's novels. There are no scenes of rape in the novel but the lack of explicit consent may feel upsetting to some readers.
Wife Quest (Video Game)
The main character's husband is abducted in his sleep by "monster girls" who intend on having sexual business with him against his will. Enemy NPC killing animations are also suggestive.
Wifelike (Movie)
A man who stole the memories of a woman who loved someone else, puts them into an AI. He then has sexual relations with said robot and lies to her about who she really is and loved. All AIs are programmed to do whatever their owner wants.
The Wig (Movie)
Wild (Movie)
There are abrupt flashback sequences of explicit images/short clips of sex acts from the beginning of the film. It is unclear whether they are consensual or nonconsensual in the context and thus can be triggering to sexual assault survivors. When the protagonist is alone on the trail, she is approached by two hunters who make sexual remarks towards her. She is then followed by one of them who talks about her body and implies he is going to use her. He is called away by the other hunter and she is left alone.
Wild At Heart (Movie)
A woman discusses her rape as a 13 years old by a family's friend: there are brief flashbacks throughout the film showing the aftermath. A sexual assault begins at aroung 01:25:00, when a man walks into a woman's cabin under the guise of using the toilet. He uses force, degrading language and evermore escalating sexual assault until the woman says 'fucke me' as he wishes.
Wild Card (Movie)
The main female character has a flashback to her rape (about 20 minutes into the movie): we see a man on top of her.
The main female character of the film is a prostitute: prostitution is one theme of the movie. At about 01:35:00, she is raped by a man (who is then killed by someone else): the scene is particularly gratuitous.
Wild Orchid (Movie)
The main female character, who is a virgin and afraid of sexual intimacy, is convinced by a man she is falling in love with, to accept money from another man for sex. She meets him in his room, and she is visibly afraid and crying. He grabs her from behind while naked, and she attempts to run away, but the man physically stops her and puts her on the ground to get on top of her. She is crying out in fear, and he calms her down. After calming her down he kisses her stomach sensually, and eventually has sexual intercourse with her. She cries out in pain, grabs his wrist, and after a few thrusts the scene is over.
One of the protagonists is a millennia-old being whose goal is to breed humans who have powerful magical powers. He does this by coercing his descendants into producing children with one another, especially with parent-child or brother-sister pairings. Because this character is so powerful and influential, almost no one can effectively stop him or resist him The book also takes place during the time of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The rape and forced breeding of enslaved people is discussed throughout.
Wild Things (Movie)
This movie is about two students and a teacher who fake a rape accusation. Throughout the film, a teacher maintains a relationship with two high school students. He harasses the girls and other girls throughout the movie. At the beginning of the movie, it is hinted that one of the characters is raped by the teacher. Then an investigation talks about rape and how the teacher raped another girl. In the end, this movie defends the rapist and depicts victims like the bad guys.
One of the main plotlines centers around a dysfunctional marriage. The woman arranged powerful magic to force the man to become romantically obsessed with her, and as the glamour begins to wear off, he gradually becomes confused, distressed, and highly abusive (physically, emotionally, and ultimately spiritually/magically). A significant secondary male character is magically highly sensitive. When he is touched, he involuntarily and painfully absorbs psychic impressions from the other person. Multiple characters (mostly past, some present) use this double-edged talent as a weapon. Most notably, a past authority figure forced him into prostitution (with all the personal pain that entailed) to act as a spy.
S1E2: archival footage shows men forcibly stripping and attempting to assault women.
The author does give a trigger warning in the beginning about sexual assault. Her abuser is her step brother who In the beginning of the story she speaks roundly of, making the reader think he is one of the only good pple in her life, later we learn he uses this trust and kindness to manipulate her throughout her childhood and teenage years. She feels betrayed because he was her only true friend.
It is discussed that a young witch has been held captive since she was a child and raped by the king of her kingdom since she was 14 years old. There is reproductive coercion where the main love interest throws out the main character's birth control and impregnates her without her knowledge nor consent.
Wildling (Movie)
A boy grabs at a girl in a crosswalk. Later, that same boy attempts to rape another girl after a party.
The Wilds (TV Show)
S1E1+E6: details are given about a relationship between an adult and a teenager. S1E7: a girl describes the sexual assault she experienced in detail and describes her desire to get her agency back (around the 18-21 minute mark). S1E8: a girl describes being groomed and assaulted by her stepbrother when she was 13 and he was 19. S1E9: in flashbacks, a doctor is accused of touching his younger patients, including one of the girls caught on the island. S2E4: a character mentions now that someone is 18, a specific pedophile would not like them. A main character holds another main character down and ejaculates on him. This is frequently discussed and referenced for the rest of season 2. S2E5: the assault from the previous episode is discussed . The end of S2E6 and all of S2E7 deal with a main character's complete days-long dissociative episode related to the aftereffects of previous child sexual abuse. While the abuse is not referenced in the episodes, it is clear that the dissociation is because of it (in response to the guilt of accidentally maiming an animal and feeling like a "monster" who hurts innocents, like her abuser).
Sexual violence and the concept of rape culture are discussed primarily in the chapter "Male Sexual Being". The author cites quotations from a book entitled Victims No Longer: Men Recovering from Incest and Other Child Sexual Abuse.
Will Trent (TV Show)
The first two episodes (S1E1+2) revolve around a teenage girl who has been kidnapped: they feature a high amount of rape, child sex abuse, and sexual coercion. The culprit is her teacher and in the investigation, the detectives interact with other victims of the teacher and rape is mentioned on various occasions. It is also mentioned that the dad of the teenage girl might be having an affair with her friend and that he has a type "blondes who are 22 but look 16". S1E1: rumors are discussed that one of the characters was sexually abused by a foster parent. S1E2: a tenant trades sexual favors for her landlord keeping up her apartment. When she wants to stop, she is murdered. One man apologizes for having sex with his colleague when she was too drunk. It is revealed that a main character's mother started pimping her out at the age of 5. S1E6: a sex trafficking victim is found right after sex. This episode deals with a whole sex trafficking ring. S1E7: a teenager is raped by her foster father and gets her pregnant. There is a discussion about how the police will not do anything, and how they have to go to another state to get an abortion. S1E8: it is implied that an ex boyfriend might be abusive. A detective is sexually harassed by an elderly woman. S1E9: the main character, who was raped in foster care, confronts her abuser after he has gotten out of jail. He attempts to apologize. S1E10: the rape is mentioned again in a flashback. The woman who was raped in foster care warns a teenager about her rapist's past. The survivor confronts the rapist again: he says that she deserved it for how she dressed and acted. S1E11: the foster dad who raped a main character is sexually assaulting his fiances daughter. S1E12: the previous rape is mentioned again. A sex worker who had been beaten by her pimp is shown. A killer targets sex workers. An 18 year old murder victim is married to an adult man. A kid peeping on girls in the shower is mentioned. A female police officer mentions that a superior threatened to rape her with his nightstick. Two female police officers are sexually harrassed by their bosses. S1E13: a male cop threatens to sexuallt assault a female cop. A woman describes being violently assaulted when she was a prostitute. A cop raping prostitutes is discussed. S2E2: one character has 8 counts of sexual assault. S2E4: mention of two teenagers wanting to rape their friend. This is partially shown on-screen. S2E5: this episode mentions a serial rapist. An attempted rape is shown in-screen. S2E9 features people trying to solve the murder of a sex offender. S2E10 features someone who murders pedophiles. S3E3: rape is mentioned. S3E4-6: these episodes feature a long term character who has been convicted of rape and murder. Then there is a copycat killing. S3E16: past rape is discussed.
Willow Creek (Movie)
It is implied that bigfoots kidnap women to rape and/or breed with them. While lost in the woods at night, a couple come across a woman who was previously seen on a "misisng person" poster in town: she is naked. The bigfoot creatures attack the man and drag him away from his girlfriend. She is heard screaming for help in the background as she is presumably attacked by the creatures.
Early in the film, the rape/sexual assault of at least one or two women is discussed and constitutes a significant aspect of the plot. A rape occurs on-screen at roughly the 1:16:00 (1hr 16m) mark.
It is revealed that another important character raped one of the main characters. She gets pregnant. The assault and pregnancy is mentioned many times starting from ch 14.
There is a graphic depiction of the main character being restrained and gang raped in the past. He is ‘paid’ afterwards with a small amount of food and medicine. When he returns home, he is berated by his boyfriend for “taking too long” to get the supplies, and his obvious injuries are ignored. He has nightmares about this event years later. Antagonists discuss attempts to lure in women with the promise of shelter for the purpose of raping them. The main character is verbally harassed by the men who raped him years previously. An antagonist strangles and attempts to rape the main character, but the main character fights him off.
A stalker breaks into a woman's room at night and tries to remove her clothes as she sleeps: he is caught before he is able to do anything.
The Winter King (TV Show)
S1E1: rape is mentioned. S1E2: someone attempts to rape a calibate character. It eventually turns out to be an actual rape.
There is a non-detailed description of the mute female main character being sexually assaulted by a village young man in the past. In the present, a male secondary character stalks her, watches while she bathes and attempts to rape her. She fights him off. Soon after, he sabotages her in a way intended to discredit and/or kill her. Another past (interrupted) attempted rape, of a secondary female character, is mentioned briefly.
The narrator/protagonist describes in detail a memory from when she was a young teenager (she is 16 in the novel and this took place a few years earlier) where a friend of her father (who is possibly a cousin) got her high on hallucinogenic drugs and then raped her while she was inebriated. At one point, when the narrator/protagonist is forced to encounter the man who raped her, he jokes about the encounter and implies that she has come back to him to 'have sex' again. Sexual harassment of women of all ages occurs throughout the novel.
Winx Club (TV Show)
S2E6: off-screen rape.
The Wire (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman mentions how she was catcalled by her male colleagues before she told them she was a lesbian. S1E4: a man explains how he killed an unsuspecting woman who was naked (coming out of the shower) from the window of her home at night. Another man asks why he did not raped her first. Shortly after that, rape is mentioned in another context. Throughout the episode, the picture of the naked body of the woman is shown extensively. S1E7: a detainee repeatedly uses homophobic slurs to insult a lesbian officer. S1E8: during a party, a man has sex with a woman who is highly intoxicated (off-screen). She is shown dead and nude afterwards: the man is completely indifferent. Two officers joke about and discuss sexual harassment. S1E9: the rape from the previous episode is discussed. It is implied that three men raped the woman while she was overdosing, and that they dumped her body in a dumpster. Her dead naked body is shown at the morgue. S2E1: one man shows his penis to the crowd in a bar, despite the female bartender asking him not to. Near the end of the episode, one character makes a rape joke. Worthy of note: the final scene of the episode reveals a container full of dead women (presumably prostitutes). Their death is the central plot of season 2. S2E2: rape is mentioned. In the last scene of the episode, one character who has been tortured while naked, explains why the girls from S2E1 were murdered. Their age is not stated but they are referred to as 'girls'. They were prostitutes smuggled by boat, and when one sailor raped and killed one of them, the crew decided to kill them all, after having had sex with them. S2E4: the exhibitionist character from S2E1 takes a picture of his penis and set it as a screen wallpaper to one of his colleagues' computer. Rape is mentioned later on. S2E5: one male character showing enthusiasm to work with a friend/colleague touches him inappropriately (off-screen) as a joke. We hear the latter say: 'Don't grab my dick'. S2E7: a drunk male character is briefly shown acting inappropriately towards a woman in a bar. S2E9: one lead male character (a detective) goes to a brothel undercover and wiretapped to expose a human trafficking network. He ends up in a room with two prostitutes and seems uncomfortable when they start having sexual gestures towards him (undressing him and giving him a handjob), because his colleagues are taking too much time to intervene. When they eventually arrive, the two women are having sex with him: he does not seem disturbed at all. It is later stated that he broke regulations and has to justify his behavior. S3E1: rape is mentioned twice metaphorically. In the final scene of the episode, a woman (presumably a prostitute) is shown giving oral sex to three men in a dark alley at night. S3E2: throughout the episode, two men (40s) discuss which celebrities one of them would like to have sex with. He answers Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen (who were just 18 when the series first aired), and the other precises that, in their fantasy, they would be his "slaves". S3E4: early on in the episode, rape and date rape are briefly mentioned. S3E5: a group of men harass a woman on the street and one of them eventually slaps her. S3E7: a woman (presumably a prostitute) is shown giving oral sex to a man in a dark alley. The male protagonist (a detective) uses professional resources to stalk a woman. S3E8: a woman flirts with a man and ends up having sex with him. It is then implied that she was paid or instructed to do so to trap him, and later get him killed. S3E9: rape is briefly mentioned early on in the episode. S3E10: a male judge, who was previously shown being attracted to a female recurring character, is increasingly insistent in flirting with her. She does not seems disturbed at all and even plays it to get what she wants. An homophobic man goes several times to a gay bar to bait one customer out and kidnap him. Season 4: throughout the season, one character (a boy) acts oddly towards male adults. It is increasingly suggested that he was sexually abused by his stepfather, who does not appear in the season until episode 9. The abuse is hinted at more clearly in episode 10. S4E2: rape is briefly mentioned by a politician as part of the city's criminal problems. S4E3: a man jokingly gropes another male character's bottom: he does not seem bothered and keeps joking with the other. S4E4: a main character, who frquently hit on women in bars, persists on flirting with a couple of women despite their clear disinterest. S4E5: two boys rape a girl off-screen in a school's bathroom. Another boy is paid to keep watch. We see the two boys accompanying the girl in the bathroom, and later exiting: the girl is always paralyzed, like if she was threatened beforehand. S4E6: the rape from the previous episode is discussed by different characters. The boy who kept watch insists on saying that the girl was consenting. We also briefly see here giving her deposition to a policman, distressed. This incident is briefly mentioned again in S4E7+8+11. In one of the final scenes, a woman starts kissing a man, who firstly accepts it but quickly rebuffs her: she insists and he has to pushes her away several times for her to accept his decision. S4E9: rape is briefly mentioned. S4E10: rape in juvenile custody is mentioned by a young criminal who is afraid to have to spend the night there (he does not). S5E5: during the first half of the episode, discussions are centered around the possibility that a serial killer rapes his male victims (which he is not). This is briefly mentioned again in further episodes. S5E7: the stepfather character from season 4 and his presumably assault of a child is mentioned and hinted at again. One rape and murder is mentioned.
The main character describes in vivid detail an incident where, as a child, he was chased down and gang raped by a group of boys. He later encounters a fairy who is known for using mind control to lure men into the fairy world where she proceeds to rape them to death, something she attempts to do to the protagonist. Whilst in the fairy world, he encounters a psychic fairy tree that tells him about how his mother was raped before she was murdered. Back in the normal world, he encounters a group of travellers who have kidnapped and repeatedly raped two girls. He brutally murders the travellers to rescue the two girls.
A boy is kissed on the lips by a grown woman (an antagonist), who puts him under the influence of witchcraft off-screen. Later, after returning home naked in a traumatized state, he mentions a witch's 'nether regions' while describing her attack: it is strongly implied that he was raped. Worthy of note: on two occasions, a young boy glances at his teenage sister's chest in a way which is implied to have sexual undertones. Eventually, her mother blames her for trying to seduce him as well as her father (these accusations are false).
In chapter 11 through the end of the book, a female character describes the harrassment and attempted rape she experienced at the end of high school and soon after graduating. The experiences are discussed multiple times by different characters in those final chapters. There is also mention of harassment aimed towards a gay male character.
A teen girl is revealed to be repeatedly sexually assaulted by her pastor from a young age and is pregnant with his child.
The Witcher (TV Show)
S1E1: a character states that she was raped after the main character replays a story in which he prevented an attempted rape. S1E2: a young woman is attacked by a couple, and the husband attempts to rape her, before she can escape by using magic. S1E3: incest is referred to, but not shown. A character suggests this may have been non-consensual. S1E4: soldiers raping people is briefly mentioned. S1E5: a groupe of people having sex is shown to be only doing so because of a magic spell. It is unknown if this was consensual or not. A woman magically forces a man against a wall, holds a knife to his throat, grabs his crotch and threatens to mutilate or kill him if he does not comply. The scene is played for laughs and the assault is not acknowledged as such by the characters. S2E1: a character confesses to having raped a woman (55:03-55:06). S2E2: a character mentions being held captive in a prison for pleasure during several years (31:51-32:31). S2E3: a man binds a woman in shackles. She calls him a pervert, but he says that he is not attracted to women like her (29:45-29:55). S3E8: a woman "worth being only what's between her legs" is mentioned. A man wanting to rape a child is mentioned.
The game contains various references to sexual war crimes, crude sexual jokes, references to rape, murder rape, and incest. Examples: * A character assumes a man is looking for a woman because he’ i attracted to her. When he clarifies she is like a daughter to him they ask why that matters if she’s “Shapely”. * A quest involves a fake monster hunter finagling a villager out on coin, then sexually assaulting his daughter. The player has the option to call him out on pretending to be a hunter, and further, can have him carried off to that same village for punishment.
The entire book takes place in a medieval-style world where sexual assault, rape, and relationships with teenage girls are commonplace, and many passing references are present. The Witcher : the monster in this story is the daughter of a king who had sex with his sister. A Grain of Truth: a man was cursed to look like a beast after raping a temple priestess, with the scene being described with some detail. He also describes having relationships with girls at least some of whom (if not all) are implied to be underage, as well as a vampire who looks very young. The Lesser Evil: a woman recalls (without detail) the time that she was raped by a soldier who abandones her in the forest. The Last Wish: an orgy of people have sex in a room under a magic spell from a sorcerer so it is unknown whether the act was consensual or not. Despite her having turned herself invisible to avoid being seen nude, Geralt watches a sorceress bathe and uses the water and soap to see what she didn't want him to see. The Voice of Reason: a priestess has a sexual encounter with the protagonist, and from the descriptions it's not entirely clear if she is of age or not. The protagonist also relates a story where he saw a soldier attempting to rape a pre-teen girl and kills him.
A non-consensual and extremely toxic relationship between two female main characters is depicted. The victim is a teenager and it is implied the aggressor is older, though exact ages are not specified. The initial description of assault details the emotions and thoughts of the victim as the assault is occurring, the morning after it happens, and the subsequent days.
Sexual coercion occurs early on, rape is about halfway through.
Witchhammer (Movie)
A woman being held on trial for being a witch is raped by her captor (01:06:27). She is seen being attacked by the man who rips her dress, exposing her breasts.
Witchtrap (Movie)
A man watches through the window as a woman changes. There are mentions of rape and underage trafficking as crimes. The main group speculates that a woman may have been raped before she was killed but we as the viewer know this did not happen.
One of the titular character's uncles is shown to be sexually interested in a young man. He harasses this young man persistently and then later breaks into his room at night with the express purpose of having sex with him. He makes it clear that he means to have intercourse with the young man, even if he has to do so by force.
There is a graphic depictions of rape, including an autopsy report describing the assault, characters taunting other characters by detailing the rape, and women forced into prostitution.
Without a Trace (TV Show)
S1E5: a detective pretends to understand and collaborate with a pedophile and serial abuser in order to extract information on the location of his latest victim. Their conversation is pretty heavy and it can be triggering to watch. S1E11: a young girl's body is found and it is determined that she was sexually assaulted and killed by a man known to her. S1E17: during a war, a soldier from the rival army separates a woman from her people saying he will interrogate her. Later on, it is discovered that he actually raped her and that various similar incidents were covered up throughout his military carreer. S1E19: a high school teacher confesses to be in love with an underage student and, since he believes she loves him too, he plans to run away with her. S1E21: a young boy victim of a pedophile is put on the stand to testify against his agressor, who's in the room too, staring at the boy. The boy is really nervous and uncomfortable and ends up giving up on the testimony.
Wolf (1994) (Movie)
The main antagonist is a violent rapist, who talks about how he has raped women in the past, then tells one of the characters that he is gonna assault her now. Before anything can happen, the camera leaves the room and they are interrupted shortly after.
Wolf Creek 2 (Movie)
A character marries his first cousin. A character masturbates while looking at a woman in the middle of a crowded party. He is also shown at one point groping the breast of an unconscious woman. A character engages in intercourse with his wife despite verbal and physical resistance (2:38:03-2:40:21). Domestic violence (2:42:22). During a BDSM scene, a safeword is ignored.
This book contains sexual activity between minors; sexual assault by a family member; female genital mutilation; rape; sexual violence; marital rape and domestic sexual violence; gang rape; forced sexual servitude; sexual assault attempts; description of feelings during prostitution and rape threats.
The protagonist is encouraged to have public sex with a woman without her consent for resemblance of freedom. It is unclear whether it actually happens or if it is play-pretend. Anyway, it is shown on-screen.
The protagonist's internship supervisor touches her inappropriately. We find out later that this supervisor has assaulted interns in the past. There are themes of exoticization and victimization of colonized women in the protagonist's mother's backstory.
The plot of the movie surrounds a dating show contestant who is a serial killer. This man is depicted killing multiple women, with on screen physical attacks and strangulation depicted. It is stated that he also sexually assaulted his victims. One of these victims is a teenage girl. The killer shows a pictures on which one of his victims is seen naked (36:00). The victim's friend tells the policeman that her friend was killed and raped by one of the TV game's claims (52:10). We see a picture of the naked victim with blood briefly (55:50). The victim wakes up after fainting with his pants down next to his attacker/rapist (01:19:10).
Throughout the film, the topics of forced marriage (girls with adult men), (sexual) slavery and the conception of a child through rape are discussed and depicted. Intense flashbacks scenes of sexual assault are shown: the protagonist is raped by the antagonist after being captured as a war prisoner (her legs and arms are tied with a rope). At a slave auction where several women have been captured, a slaver molests one of the women. Worthy of note: one of the central characters attempts to escape from a slave auction. When she is caught, her love interest (a free man) buys her. However, in the next scene, he immediately sets her free and shows he only paid the money to prevent her from being killed or sold as a slave to someone else. The two are implied to have had sex afterwards.
A man takes a drunk woman home from the bar. Once at her place, he starts kissing her despite her telling him to stop. They fall to the ground and he gets on top of her. Nothing is shown, but rape is strongly implied. The female lead is physically, verbally and psychologically abused throughout the film. She is often grabbed by her husband and thrown around. Her children are also given alcohol by the husband, abused and thrown around.
The first section is about an aunt who was driven to suicide after having a baby with a man who was not her husband. The author surmises that she probably became pregnant through rape. There is recitation of a racist story that Japanese people were created when an ape raped a Chinese princes, "who then fled to the Eastern islands to have the first Japanese child." In the final section, the author recounts being stalked by someone who she was not sure if he was an adult or her age (a teenager). He would show up at her school and at her family's laundromat. She also discusses getting harassing phone calls when her parents were out of the house.
Womb Ghosts (Movie)
Rape is discussed as a potential in relation to a medical mystery. Within the first 10 minutes of the film a character's romantic partner forces himself upon her- kissing her and groping her.
LGBTQ characters are raped and end up losing their minds as a result.
Women Talking (Movie)
The subject of the film is the women’s response to regular and violent sexual assaults: rape, incest and domestic violence are discussed throughout. All of it is implied and handled sensitively but there are frequent flashbacks of the main characters distressed with blood between their thighs and on their bathrobes.
The Wonder (Movie)
1:08:30-1:11:30: a child describes her brother sexually abusing her and stops eating so as to "get her brother out of hell."
One of the major themes in this anime is childhood sexual abuse. The abusers are shown as bizarre monstrous antagonists, but the things they say and the abuse situations (which are sometimes shown in flashbacks) are very realistic. An on-screen rape is shown during a flashback scene.
There is a scene where a man accosts a woman who is alone in the park at night. The scene is not sexual in nature but may be troubling to some viewers: before anything beyond an arm grab/pull happens, the man is confronted. This scene goes on for almost 20 seconds. Cat calls occur on multiple occasions - one of which precedes the scene detailed above. This particularly happens to one character in particular and most scenes of this kind occur within the first hour of the film. The film contains a whole plot line about the titular character's dead lover coming back to life through the body of another man. It is implied that the titular character and her lover (in somebody else's body) have sex: at the end of the movie, the female protagonist meets the man whose body was 'used' in this scene without his consent.
A police officer, believing the trio of main characters to be cis women, attempts to rape one of them during a traffic stop after separating her from her friends. During the attempted rape, the main character is able to fight him off and he falls, unconscious. After the main characters flee, the officer spends the rest of the movie trying to find them, with homophobic/transphobic violence in mind. There is another scene later in the movie where it is implied that a group of men will gang rape one of the main characters, but she manages to escape with the help of a minor character.
The story is set in 1920s rural Kentucky, in a deeply religious town where it is common for older-teen girls (17-19) to marry and bear children. Some of these marriages are consensual, others are under duress. The two main characters are transgender men who are routinely and sometimes aggressively misgendered by the townsfolk. The perspective character refers with minimal detail to a past rape, and copes with PTSD in the present. The secondary main character is violently raped offscreen in a direct attempt to force a marriage. The narrative describes his wounded condition afterwards in detail, and returns repeatedly to the consequences: pregnancy, abortion, his search for justice and then for revenge.
Throughout the book, the characters mention and fear sexual assault. The antagonists are serial rapists targeting young women backpackers. There are at least two scenes of sexual assault, and a scene of attempted rape- though, this is interrupted.
Throughout the filmz, there is video footage of women being groped and molested. One of the festival promoters victim blames assault survivors, and at one point an extremely graphic description of an assault occurs.
A main character’s conception was implied to be from a rape. A main character is a prostitute because she is said to have been repeatedly sexually abused as a teen. This is not described in detail, but it’s said that a baseball bat was involved that permanently damaged her reproductive organs. There is a story about a girl whose mother was a nymphomaniac and a, “ borderline predator.” The two main characters are a man and a prostitute. Near the end of the story the man reveals that he has hired her because he wants to shove his head inside of her vagina for a, “rebirthing experience.” The woman is then drugged as he does just that. He ends up suffocating and passing out inside of her, and once she comes to she is forced to push him out of herself.
Word of Honor (TV Show)
One of the two male leads is pushy about his romantic interest in the other. In the early part of their relationship, the second man wants nothing to do with the first, who is persistent to the borderline of stalking. They soon become close, and the romantic chemistry softens the more dubiously consensual elements. A male recurring side character referred to as Lustful or Lovelace Ghost is constantly sexually predatory. Usually he is leering at or otherwise harassing women off and on during his scenes. There are two on-screen scenes of attempted rape and it is clear that he is a serial rapist offscreen. He only appears in the first episodes of the show. A female recurring side character referred to as Poison Bodhisattva is an assassin with, literally, a poisonous kiss. She acts simultaneously highly sensual and gleeful about violence, which makes for a disturbing combination. Spoilers: in one of the show's most disturbing scenes, roughly 1/4 of the way through the show, Du Pusa tortures a teenage male major character. He is restrained and distressed. She is extremely physical with him including kissing and caressing his face (and thus poisoning him). The scene is presented as appropriately disturbing.
There are mentions of rape and threats of rape against the indigenous aliens life forms of a planet that is being colonised by humans. This is used to draw comparisons to the real world history and implications of colonialism.
S1E5: the main character goes home angrily drunk after telling her friend that her mom has called feeling a bad omen. She returns home alone and someone comes into her apartment (22:25-26:06). They are shown as being violent towards her and pinning her down. Everyone's clothes remain on. Her friend arrives and uses a fire extinguisher on them and beats them up. S1E6: the protagonist explains why she has her friend on speed dial.
Working Girls (Movie)
The film contains many scenes of sexual violence and rapes.
World War Z (Movie)
The female lead works at a sex club in exchange for protection from an abusive ex. She is let go from the club and is forced to marry her enemy in exchange for protection from her ex. She heavily implies her ex was sexually abusive and might have raped her a few times as she has a bad relationship with submission. At one point during a scene, she is bound and has a panic attack, hinting that she may have been bound and assaulted at one point, stating it was triggering. She gets kidnapped by her ex and its strongly implied he is about to rape her before her enemy (now husband) comes to the rescue. Worthy of note: The absuive ex does have a new partner (also abused, later it is hinted she was killed) and the abusive ex is killed later.
A woman is almost raped by the son of her captor but manages to escape by stabbing him.
The main male antagonist tells a story about a military mission he was on. It is implied that he raped the woman in the story. There is no description and this is not a graphic conversation. Near the end of the movie a female antagonist tells the captured protagonist that she will let the main male antagonist "have his way with her" as a threat to make her divulge information.
Wrath of Man (Movie)
A scene is extremely implicative of multiple accounts of prior sexual assault (57:26-59:30). There is background audio of forced child pornography.
On two separate occasions, the protagonist has sex while intoxicated. The second time, she is so inebriated that she cannot fully understand what's going on. The first experience is one she says she enjoyed, but initially said "no" to. There is a detailed dream sequence in which the main character is sexually assaulted and violently killed. Multiple characters involved in dubiously consensual or abusive relationships are portrayed with varying levels of sympathy or moral complexity.
There are two instances where the main male protagonist is asleep and wakes to a woman engaged in sexual acts with him. The first time, on a plane, he wakes up to a hand job that he did not consent to, and after a bit of turbulence, he finishes: it is not addressed as problematic at all. The second time, he wakes up from a sex dream to her having intercourse with him: it is just brushed past again.
A man corners a woman while she is leaving the bathroom. He tries to get her to leave with him but after she refuses multiple times he grabs her breast and then drags her into another room. The man pins her down as she screams and tries to get him off her, and her husband finds her before anything further happens.
A woman offers herself to "carry the child" of a villain in order to save her friends. A man states his intentions of raping a woman in detail.
A woman is grabbed and pulled off screen while in a towel. The next time we see her, she is lying on a bed, presumably having been raped and brutally murdered. A child is raped offscreen and the rapist talks about it afterwards.
Throughout the movie, the prisoners catcall and pick on the female in the group. Eventually one grabs her by the throat and acts as if he is about to carry out his assault but is stopped. At the main end of the movie, the wrong turn character tries cutting off her clothes but is also stopped.
X (2022) (Movie)
One of the film’s antagonists watches from a distance as the protagonist undresses and skinny-dips (26:00). One of the film’s protagonists tells another to “feel how hard (his) cock is” and guides (and holds) their hand over his erection (26:40): it is played for laughs, but as the shot lingers, the other may read uncomfortable. One of the film’s antagonists strokes the protagonist’s exposed skin (36:00). One of the film's antagonists watches the protagonist film a sex scene through a window without her consent (42:00). One of the film’s protagonists discovers a man’s body: the man is tied up and nude except for his pants around his ankles (1:12:00). Given the later context, the film implies that he was imprisoned and touched (at minimum) against his will until his death. This discovery then recontextualizes the antagonist’s motives from moral disapproval and jealousy to sexual predation, as they cull the protagonists for his implied replacement. One of the antagonists get into bed naked with the sleeping protagonist while the latter is topless and fondles her. This scene is intercut with others and the film returns to it twice in various stages of progression (01:15:00, 01:18:00, and 01:22:00). One of the protagonists hides under the bed and is trapped until the antagonists begin to have sex (1:31:00).
The X-Files (TV Show)
S1E12: no assault in this episode, but one character does discuss an emotionally abusive relationship he was in. S1E14: an alien has the power to put people in a trance in order to have sex with and kill them. The majority of these encounters are in club settings, and although most do not physically resist the aliens there is one instance where an alien attempts to rape one of the main characters by putting her in a trance - she is clearly resistant and says no - before another character stops him. S2E3: a character has a fear of being raped and kills someone she thinks is going to rape her. Rape is mentioned repeatedly throughout the episode. S2E10: it is mentioned that several rapes occurred by high schoolers which was caused by them being surreptitiously injected with a drug. There is a pedophile who records videos through a tiny hole in a bathroom mirror and also abducted high schoolers. S2E11: a woman is raped off-screen by a patient at a retirement home. S2E12: a woman describes being raped. S2E13: a man with a death fetish kidnaps women in order to murder them, and it is implied he either rapes them while they are alive or has sex with their corpses. He attempts to murder and rape another character but she escapes (this re-occurs S7E7). S2E14: a teenage girl describes being raped and molested as a child multiple times (in detail), though these are revealed to be false memories. S3E4: the female protagonist asks a psychic whether his vision involves rape: he answers negatively (15:00). S3E5: a woman is verbally harassed by male inmates in a prison. S3E6: a man kills women he goes on dates with. He also forcibly kisses some of them. S3E8: a woman who was kidnapped as a child implies she was raped. Another girl is kidnapped and forced to pose for pictures. S3E20: rape is discussed frequently, although not in detail. S3E21: a man has consensual sex with a young woman who then turns into an old woman, and he is disturbed by this. The woman is found dead afterwards. S3E23: a reporter on TV mentions that a man is guilty of war crimes including rape (06:43). S4E2: a woman in a family continued only through incest is revealed to have had multiple children fathered by her own sons. S4E4: a man's sister is implied to have been molested by their father. S4E5: a cult leader is arrested, and he has multiple wives. It is unclear whether or not they are willingly married to him. S4E10: a man is in prison for murdering young girls, and it is implied/mentioned that he also molested them. This is discussed frequently. S4E13: no assault, but following a one-night stand a man attacks and tries to kill the woman he slept with because voices are telling him to. S4E20: a man who has the ability to transform into other people disguises himself as women's husbands in order to trick them into 'consenting' to sex. The female protagonist discusses a potential rape via date rape drugs. S5E5: a man drugs women in order to have sex with them, which the woman have no awareness of, and one woman gets pregnant as a result. S5E7: rape is mentioned very briefly in the context of women being unwillingly artificially inseminated. A man calls another man a rapist hyperbolically. S5E9: there is prolonged discussion of child abuse, both physical and emotional. S5E16: a woman is verbally and physically harassed in a bar on several occasions. Later, she is murdered. S6E3: a character forcibly kisses a woman (worthy of note: she's a doppelgänger of a woman he's in love with, but it's clear at this point that she doesn't know him). S6E7: a demon drugs a woman (his wife) and forces her legs apart while she is sleeping, then forcefully steals her baby, leading her to bleed and miscarry while she yells no repeatedly. He then gaslight her, murders her, and tries to do the same to his second wife. S6E17: a man approaches a woman in a threatening manner. S6E18: a man stalks a woman and writes graphic sexual things about her. He tries to kill her when she rejects his advances. S6E22: a woman has sex with a man who is unconscious and incapacitated by illness. S7E7: a male character from an earlier episode breaks out of prison and goes after a woman who previously escaped him, likely with the intention of committing a similar act of sexual violence. S7E9: a woman is said to have been impregnated by her father, although she herself later reveals this to be untrue. S7E10: it is implied that a man who kidnapped and murdered many children was also molesting them. S7E17: a teacher has an affair with a student, and then follows her to another state after she breaks off their relationship. S8E5: a man who kidnapped little boys and murdered them is implied to have been raping them. One of his victims survived and continued to be abused by the man. S8E13: discussion of women impregnated by aliens. S9E17: a man implies that he walked in on another man molesting a 7-year-old boy. Episodes without any assault, but which include some form of physical bondage (which may be reminiscent of it) include: S1E15, S2E5, S2E24, S8E4.
X-Men '97 (TV Show)
S1E3: this episode reveals that a clone has successfully replaced a main character, resulting in a child with that characters husband. The clone then forcefully kisses the husband.
In the opening credits, a main character carries a woman into a house against her will. They are engaged in a war, and another soldier attempts to stop the man but is killed by the man. The screen cuts to a new scene, so no assault is shown on screen, but the character is well established to enjoy rape in other media he is in, so it is heavily implied he rapes the woman he kidnapped. Worthy of note: A woman engages in a years-long romantic and sexual relationship with a man under false pretenses.
X2 (Movie)
A woman attempts to seduce a man by disguising herself as a different woman. He sees through her deception and she leaves.
Xala (Movie)
This movie is about a man becoming impotent after marrying his (much younger) third wife. Polygamy and the submission it requires from women towards their husband is thus a central theme. In the last scene of the movie, poor men who were the victims of the protagonist take revenge on him: they enter his house and force him to get undressed while they spit on him. Before that, we see two of them dragging one of his daughters on the floor: it is unclear if they rape her off-screen or not.
Xi Yan (Movie)
Xtro (Movie)
Imagery/violence is often strongly evocative of rape or sexual violence. An alien uses a woman as an incubator. In one scene, a woman is attacked by an alien and impregnated/used as a cocoon. Later, the alien takes on a human form and crawls out of her body in a graphic scene.
XXY (Movie)
The 15-year-old main character is consistently sexualised. They appear naked several times, have (on-screen) sex with a character whose age isn't specified but who is presumed to be over 18, and are sexually assaulted by older teenagers, also presumed to be over 18 (on-screen).
An on-screen rape occurs about 5 or 10 minutes into the movie.
Yakuza Kiwami (Video Game)
The protagonist's love interest is raped off screen by the protagonist's patriarch. It is talked about throughout the rest of the game.
A group sexual assault is portrayed as "humorous" because the attackers "finish too quick". The plot is to rescue the main character's sister from a human trafficking ring where everyone is drugged and unable to recognize anyone they would even know.
Yakuza Zero (Video Game)
A fundamental plot point revolves around major character who is revealed to have been kidnapped and held as a sex slave/violently tortured at length by another character you work closely with. This happens quite a bit in but the description is pretty gruesome. The player's employer tasks them to exploit their vulnerable state and dependency on them.
Yaratilan (TV Show)
Two different female characters discuss their experiences with sexual assault in the past. One character was sex trafficked from ages 12-16. Another was raped by her cousin.
Worthy of note: About potential child sex abuse, the 1st years are around 15/16, the 2nd years around 16/17 and the 3rd years around 17/18.
One of the leading female protagonists is raped repeatedly by her manager while she is working in a fast-food restaurant. This manager has a reputation for taking up 'relationships' with women who work for him, which he continues until he eventually becomes bored and they 'disappear.' The woman is unable to reject his advances as he is a known violent criminal with a history of abusing women and she feels he poses a real danger to her if she resists in any way. Eventually, she is assisted in escaping, but she continues to live in fear of him finding her throughout this novel and the next in the series. Another main female character works in a strip club. It is mentioned that, occasionally, ex-convicts visit her place of work and behave destructively and threateningly, forcing the staff to take precautions to prevent injury or death to the women working there. It is discussed that another female character was involved in sex work as a child; the implication was that she was made to 'act' in child pornography. The character in question, as an adult, seems ambivalent to these facts but the severe nature of these events is not overlooked by the man who she speaks with about them. Her childhood experiences are brought up (in passing or alluded to) periodically throughout this novel and the next in the series.
The main character was sexually assaulted in college. She was blacked out when it happened, so no details of the actual act are discussed, but her trauma after the fact is explored. She is re-traumatized when her friend writes a story based on the incident and publishes it without her consent.
Yellowjackets (TV Show)
S1E1: a mother masturbates to a picture of her daughter's boyfriend (who is in high school). S1E2: some girls make a harassing/bullying phone call to a girl, telling her that a boy is spreading rumors that she did anal with him, and making fun of her. They say that no one would do that with her, and if they did, they would be a victim, because she is so ugly. A woman asks a man to come inside her house after a date. He refuses but she guilts him and says "this is because you don't think I'm pretty. If you thought I was pretty you'd come inside." He ends up coming inside. S1E4: a main character is called sexually derogatory terms by her abusive father. S1E5: a teenage main character slowly approaches a sleeping adult man's erected penis, and is about to touch it over the blankets, before the man wakes up. Girls make a joke about a dad paying for his daughter's fake breast and saying they look good. A girl (who is in age of consent) has a crush on her soccer coach and is creepily sexual and predatory towards him. He says he has returned feelings, but it is not clear if this is self preservation or genuine (she is not mentally well and has just poisoned him). She is the only one who knows how to do first aid in a survival situation and has several times harmed him supposedly for his own good, or just for fun. S1E6: a teenage girl tells a boy about a time she was with an older man and that the situation ws not great. One of the main characters watches another one have sex through a secret camera. There is an attempted self-inflicted abortion, with a sharp object (42:00-43:40). S1E8: it is implied that one character has seduced someone for ulterior motives . S1E9: a teenage girl and boy have sex with each other. The teenage boy is drugged but the teenage girl is not (though she does not realize this). In a flashbac, a group of drugged teenage girls start to kiss and touch a drugged teenage boy. The situation quickly becomes non-consensual as the boy asks for the teenage girls to stop but they hold him down as they continue to touch him and take off his clothes. He escapes, and the teeange girls chase him with a knife (they are high off mushrooms and see him as a bait to hunt down). S2E2: this episode features PTSD of the attempted gang rape/murder from season 1. S2E6: a teenage makes a false rape charge against a police officer. He had flirted with her to get facts for his case in earlier episodes. S2E7: a team member threatens to lie and say a coach raped two of them. S2E8: the false tape accusation is thrown around again.
Yellowstone (TV Show)
There are multiple implied rapes discussed and mentioned throughout the series. S2E7: attempted rape on-screen. S3E4: dubious consent bordering on rape (female-on-male) as the male character is bedridden in a hospital S3E8: attempted rape on-screen, character acts as a decoy to help catch a rapist.
The protagonist goes to a date’s house, and he attempts to initiate sex with her. She says she does not want to, and he keeps saying phrases like, “you know you want it.” She keeps insisting and finally pushes him off of her. The protagonist is firm in a commitment to remain celibate until marriage, and the date later gets angry and says she can’t expect a man to wait that long.
S1E20
Yojimbo (Movie)
A woman is rescued from being raped.
A man lures a young woman to his home under false pretenses to sexually exploit her himself and in the brothel he is building. There are multiple people present who do not try to stop him. The woman is saved before he can do anything to her.
Yona of the Dawn (TV Show)
This show contains a massive plot point surrounding human trafficking (non-graphic/implied sexual) between episodes 17-22. There is also general romanticization of child / adult relationships and sexual harassment common in anime. S1E1: a female character has a crush on her cousin, which is unreciprocated (the exploration of this quickly ends by the next episode.). S1E3: in a flashback, an adult man flirts and stalks a 12-year-old girl. He eventually catches her before she is soon rescued by her friend. S1E5: an 18-year old boy asks 16-year girl if she will pay him with her body for his service. This is played off and does not go anywhere. The boy pushes the girl to a wall and says he will play "pranks" on her if they sleep next to each other, this is used as a diversion in regards to the plot. S1E9: a 16-year old girl hides in bag and is carried around by 18-year old boy. The "joke" is that he touches her body and there is nothing she can do about it much to her anger. S1E17: a group of men try to kidnap a woman before she is rescued. There is implications of human trafficking and assault. S1E18: an 18-year old boy is creeped out by a 25 year old man chasing him. He says things that sound predatory that are not meant to be but because of limited context the boy thinks it is and calls him a "pervert" This is played for laughs. S1E19: there are implications of a 25-year old man having romantic feelings towards a 16-year old girl. An 18-year old boy licks a girl's hands in a sensual way without her consent, she appears very uncomfortable by it S1E20: human trafficking is discussed and shown to be happening, including with underage children. S1E21: more human trafficking shown / implied. A male adult character makes a joke about being "defiled" as other male characters rough house with him much to their confusion. S1E23: 16-year old girl begins to take off clothes in front of adult men when she is not in the right space of mind after a traumatic experience. After she realizes what had happened and runs off embarrassed the male characters make jokes and imply they wish she had not stopped. There is implication and scenes of flirting between a 25-year old and a 16-year old. S1E24: a 25-year old man makes comments about a 16-year girl and how her friend wants to "hide her away from other men" .
You (2018) (TV Show)
Season 1 focuses on a man who becomes obsessed with a woman and stalks her. He watches through her windows and masturbates while she has sex. He convinces her to date him through deception. Ultimately, when she realizes what he is doing, he kills her. A professor harasses his graduate students and grabs a main character's thigh under the table and conveys that he expects her to have sex with him. Season 2 features multiple plotlines dealing with sexual abuse. In one plotline, a young woman reveals that she, along with a number of other girls, was a victim of sexual abuse at the hands of a celebrity. The man in question would invite the young girls (often under the legal age) into his home, drug them and photograph them in suggestive poses with their clothes partially removed while they were unconscious. According to him, he never goes further than that, claiming nobody was getting hurt and the girls did not even remember it. The aforementioned woman's 15 years old sister almost falls victim to the same man, but this is prevented by the main character. The offender claims that his behovior stems from his own history of being sexually abused as a child. Another plotline features a sexual relationship between a young adult woman working as an Au-pair and the underaged boy in her care. Season 3 features a plotline where an adult woman has an affair with the 19-year old son of her neighbor, who is in love with her. She uses his feeligns for her to manipulate him into doing her bidding on multiple occasions. Throughout season 4, a female character is seen spanking waiters without their consent. S1E4: a character's son is revealed to have sexually assaulted a girl in college, causing his family to move away from the area, without him facing any consequences. He strikes again at his new college, and his mother secretly pays off the victim to stop her from pressing charges and make the situation go away. S1E8: a woman's ex-husband sends explicit photos of her to various people to ruin an important career opportunity for her. S4E7: a character is sexually tortured (nothing explicit is shown).
This is a collection of short stories. In "Danny Coughlin’s Bad Dream" a man dreams about finding the dead body of a young woman who had been raped and murdered. The detectives on the case become convinced he committed the crime and hammer him with upsetting questions and ruminate on how he might have assaulted her. Later in the story, a police officer describes finding the real killer when he tried to assault and murder another young woman; she escaped him when he tried to assault her but was unharmed. In "On Slide Inn Road", a boy finds the body of a woman killed by two nearby men. The men attempt to kidnap the boy's mother and little sister but do not succeed. It is not clear what the men would have done with the mother and sister other than kill them, but readers may find this uncomfortable.
Nothing is explicitly shown, but the film is about missing girls, sex trafficking, etc.
The main character can shapeshift into other people throughout the movie. While in the form of another woman, the other woman's abusive husband tries to have sex with her without consent, and she quickly kills him. Later, another character is made to have sex with a dying man off-screen because his family does not want him to die a virgin: she is clearly distressed and protesting before this takes place.
Young Adam (Movie)
The main character humiliates, beats, and rapes his girlfriend during an argument (01:11:24-01:14:29).
At about 1 hour and 33 minutes into the movie, Frankenstein's monster forces himself upon Frankenstein's fiancee while she tries to get him to stop, looking fearful and scared. At some point, he makes sexual contact with her and she starts enjoying it.
To Your Eternity (TV Show)
S1E17: a woman tries to rape the male protagonist who is physically a young teen and mentally a young child as he has only been alive for 6 years. She drugs him and then attempts to rape him. She does not succeed. In a previous episode she licks his face while he is unconscious. S1E4: a man attempts to rape a young woman. The scene lasts about 20 seconds.
S1E1: a 17 year-old girl has a 20 year-old boyfriend. In one scene, they appear together in a state of undress (no actual sexual activity is shown). The girl's mother appears to support/tolerate the relationship, but her father names it as statutory rape. S1E3: a women-only self-defence class starts when the instructor enters the room shouting “who wants to get raped?” Later, she repeatedly says “you’re raped” to women whom she does not think are taking the self-defence seriously enough. A teenage boy is having an affair with his girlfriend’s mother. Their sex is shown onscreen. S1E5: attempted rape (42:29) Both victim and perpetrator remain fully clothed, and the attempt is interrupted after about 20 seconds.
Your Highness (Movie)
This film contains multiple instances of threatened sexual assault and actual sexual assault, all played for laughs.
Your Honor (TV Show)
Season 1 features a high school student having sex with his teacher. S1E2: there is a mention of a criminal going free on a previous charge of underwear theft, then going on to assault women/children and stuffing underwear in their mouths (about 31 minutes into the episode).
In the first instance, two characters force a boy to take off his pants while a third tries to burn his genitals with a lighter all while calling him homophobic slurs (10:50-11:21). In the second instance, there is a very sudden scene change where an older man makes an abrupt sexual advance on a teenage character that looks uncomfortable and resists (57:15-57:50).
Many episodes discuss rape and sexual assault, sometimes of children. Many episodes discuss how criminals, including sex offenders, are prosecuted, how the law fails to protect victims, and how the system can be improved, emphasizing a need to treat both the victim and the perpetrator with humanity.
There is nonconsensual groping, touching, and harassment to one of the main female characters. The main character's grandfather makes a suggestive comment towards one of the female characters. This is played for disturbingly played for laughs, and never apologized for. Later on, a rape attempt is made and stopped and taken seriously. The manga tones down the sexist harassment tropes later on until they are no longer existent, but still has perverted comments made by one of the characters that are consistently chastised. In the early episodes, an attempt to frame a male character for spying on the girls' bath is made and failed. The episode's take on how harassment should be handled is treated rather poorly. None of the characters treat the harassment attempt as a good thing.
This manga (recommended as a "beautiful and spicy love story") starts with the MC following a women, breaking into her house and threating her so she "offers" to do anything (rape). This is supposed to be the origin of a beautiful romance.
Yummy (Movie)
There is some sexual harassment throughout the film, and an attempted rape at the very end.
Yuru Yuri is a series primarily exploring the same-sex attraction at a girl's-only middle school (most characters ages 12-15). One girl, ostensibly with a crush on another, forces herself onto a third girl (who tries to run away) under the guise of "practising" for her crush. The third girl is seen yelling for help, however the first girl catches her, pins her down, gets on top of her, and relentlessly kisses her. The third girl is shown afterwards traumatized, catatonic, and weeping. One young girl, when given chocolate, acts drugged and loses all her inhibitions, running around and forcing kisses on every person within range until the effects of the chocolate wear off. This is shown to leave the subjects of her advances temporarily dazed. The high-school-age older sister of one of the younger girls is obsessed and in love with her younger sister. Two girls are twin sisters. Both heavily fantasize about other characters in romantic or erotic situations which are shown frequently. One of them, in addition, is in love with her twin sister, but fantasizes about her with others. One member of the student council, a nearly mute girl with a prepubescent body, is heavily implied to be in a relationship with a mad scientist teacher. One girl appears to pursue another main character due to her looking like the character of her favourite anime. The subject of her affections continually rebuffs her advances but the first girl continues to make advances.
Yurikuma Arashi (TV Show)
The show revolves around an alien species, known as Ursa, who normally appear as bears but can take human forms. The Ursa regularly antagonize human girls and cannibalize them, which has overtly sexual undertones; said cannibalism is said to be a normal part of the Ursa's survival as well as a form of love, but consent from humans is often not taken into consideration. The relationship between the Ursa and humans in general appears to be an allegory for lesbian relationships and cultural homophobia, as humans befriending and loving the Ursa is seen as a societal taboo. There is a recurring scene of the protagonist falling into the Species Divide between the Ursa and humans, where major characters protest in an Ursa-run court to feast on humans. The protagonist is unconscious and forcibly stripped naked while a lily flower blooms from her chest, and the major characters eat from the flower in a heavily sexualized way. S1E1: two major characters who are Ursa stalk the protagonists and fantasize about cannibalizing them, with heavy sexual undertones. The court scene begins in this episode, and recurs in multiple episodes. S1E2: an Ursa character attempts to assault the protagonist, but is interrupted. S1E3: an Ursa minor antagonist verbally harasses the protagonist, made worse by the protagonist suffering a mental breakdown. Later, the protagonist is conscious and visibly distressed during the recurring court scene . S1E4: the younger brother of a major character states that he loves her and wants her to kiss him, with possible romantic undertones - however, this could be interpreted as simple childish innocence. S1E5: an Ursa character has overtly sexual fantasies about the protagonist, though she does not act on them - with the exception of licking the protagonist's face.
The author recounts a time where she was a small child, and a shopkeeper picked her up, ostensibly to help her see over the walls of a tall bin, but in actuality, he rubbed her body against his as he picked her up and put her down. In another childhood memory, a classmate steals the author's glasses and disrobes in front of her. As an adult, while she is moving to a new apartment, the man hired to help her offers to waive the moving fee if she'd "just be quiet and stand still for a minute" while he masturbates near or on her. A friend of the author's dates a man who later traffics her into forced sex work. She later escapes. Mention of homophobic rape by Black men against Black lesbians with the intent to "take them down a peg or two." The author describes a boss she had who would call her into her office to watch her pick up a pencil. The author’s friend runs away from home after being sexually abused by her father. This friend later commits suicide.
Zan (Movie)
A rape scene occurs during a fight, with many cuts between the action scenes and the rape.
Zardoz (Movie)
The protagonist is shown knocking a woman down and raping her. He also grabs an unresponsive woman's breast and attempts to rape her, but stops.
This movie about German business consultants takes place in hotel rooms in Nigeria. One of the male main characters pays maids to sleep with him. We see him wearing a bathrobe, looking at one of them, preparing money and getting ready to talk to her: the scene then cuts. He is later confronted about his behavior by the main female character: he brags about it and gives explicit details. In another scene, he jokes about rape, sexist violence and excision. Later, the said woman explains that her boss asked her to masturbate in front of her webcam during a business meeting. At some point, one woman (from Nigeria) begs the main characters to take her out of the country: she starts undressing in order to convince them. The female character tries to stop her and to hide her breasts, in vain. The scene cuts before we see her naked. Later, a scene shows the main characters partying with prostitutes. In the final scene of the movie, when supposed terrorists break into the hotel, we hear women screaming several times.
A man attempts to blackmail a teenage boy into sex with the threat of outing him. He is unsuccessful. It is handled sensitively.
Zola (Movie)
A woman is "offered" to a man against her will. He kisses her and puts his fingers in her vagina. A different woman is also violently dragged into a room then seen later with a split lip and bruises. It is unknown whether or not she was raped or just beaten.
S1E1: the protagonist hears the boss of a company having sex with his love interest in his office. We also see the shadow of the woman getting pushed to the glass of his door as soon as she went in his office. Although the womans dialogue insinuates that she likes it; it must be noted that the man involved is her boss so if she felt certain pressure is highly possible (given the fact that she is deemed very attractive in her high-pressured company, while the exploitative boss is older and definitelly physically less desirable). S1E7: a misogynistic character makes inappropriate comments towards one of the female side characters (he licks his lips and asks to "fondle" them). It does nit escalate past this.
A parasitic tentacle creatures restrains and rapes a woman.
One night, the main male protagonist (an SS officer) casually instructs his Polish servant to undress while he is on the phone: she does not seem surprised and proceeds. It is implied that he regularly rapes her (in his family house). We see her removing her shoes and starting to untie her shirt but nothing more. It then cuts to the man discretely going to a bathroom to wash his genitals.
Attempted rape of main character (clothes torn, thrown onto bed), off-screen rape of a teenage girl by two soldiers.