A man is accused of having sex with a 12 year old girl.
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.
A man is raped by his ex-girlfriend and is forced to apologize for it.
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.'
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
S1E5: a character talks about being abused by a stepparent during their childhood.
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.
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.
Angry Mom (TV Show)
The Animal (Movie)
A man pulls a bag of drugs from another man's rectum. A man tries to have sex with a goat.
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.
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.
Apokawixa (Movie)
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.
Archer (TV Show)
In several episodes, it is implied that male characters have been sexually assaulted or raped while unconscious.
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.
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.
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.
One hour into the movie, a voiceover describes that the tomatoes are "pillaging and raping" and we hear a woman scream.
Austenland (Movie)
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
Basket Case (Movie)
A potential rape involving main male and female characters is implied.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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)
Blackadder (TV Show)
S1E6: rape on-screen.
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.
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.
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.
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 Bags (Movie)
The third short story has a scene where a man rapes his wife while possessed.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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).
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.
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 Ceremony (Movie)
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.
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.
Chobits (TV Show)
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)
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
S1E4: rape scene.
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'.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
De Patrick (Movie)
A husband initiates sex with his wife, but refuses to let her go (holding her hand) when she rebuffs him.
Dead Alive (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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)
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.
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.
A Dirty Shame (Movie)
Dirty Work (Movie)
Divines (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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
Drawn Together (TV Show)
A woman is drugged and then raped by her husband while unconscious (15:42-16:30).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
Earthquake (Movie)
A psychotic national guardsman takes woman hostage and attempts to rape her after she tries to escape (01:41:00).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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]
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.
The Escort (Movie)
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.
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.
Evil Toons (Movie)
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.
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.
Father's Day (Movie)
Numerous scenes of gratuitous sexual violence throughout.
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.
Feast (Movie)
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.
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 robber implies that he is going to rape a girl: he grabs her to another room but is stopped.
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 Man (TV) (TV Show)
Accidental incest occurs as a result of time travel. On-screen scene where consent is unclear; definitely not enthusiastic.
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.
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.
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.
A male character is raped by a woman.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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.
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 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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Hammerhead (Movie)
Women are used, likely without their consent, as part of a scientist's breeding program for cross-species humans.
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.
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
High-Rise (Movie)
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.
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.
Holy Smoke (Movie)
One female character (antagonist) uses psionics to force a woman into a sexual encounter. This is explicitly mentioned to be non consensual.
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.
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.
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".
A main character continuously tricks women to sleep with him, which is used for comedy.
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.
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.
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.
I Love Dick (TV Show)
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 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.
There are multiple violent, graphic rape scenes throughout the film.
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.
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.
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).
Inbred (Movie)
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 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.
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.
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).
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 Frost (Movie)
A woman is raped to death by a snowman: it is played for laughs.
Jackass 2.5 (Movie)
A man has a non-consensual prostate exam.
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.
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.
The Jerk (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
Joy of Sex (Movie)
Kaboom (Movie)
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.
Kick-Ass 2 (Movie)
The villain prepares to rape a secondary female character but fails to get an erection.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Kurage Hime (TV Show)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Lexx (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode features a woman who was forced to marry a child husband and then transformed into a sex slave.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
A man ties up another man and rapes him whilst holding a gun in his own mouth.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Love Stage!! (TV Show)
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.
Lowlife (Movie)
Immigrant women are abducted and forced into sex slavery. Child sex abuse is alluded to in conversation.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Maid Sama! (TV Show)
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.
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).
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).
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
Mela (Movie)
The male protagonist pins down the female protagonist agressively and grabs her wrist down.
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.
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.'
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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)
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.
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.
Moral Orel (TV Show)
S3E4: rape is discussed and strongly implied. S3E6: brief mentions of rape/sexual assault.
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.
Movie 43 (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
The film is an absurd comedy, thus the two rape scenes are in this tone (one by a giant lobster).
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.
Worthy of note: a character is implied to have been raped by her father in the past.
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.
A male character is raped with a strap-on; this is played for laughs.
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.
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.
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).
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 series is a satire in which the main character does many offensive/triggering things.
Nicole (Movie)
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.
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.
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 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.
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?"
Now Apocalypse (TV Show)
The show contains several rape scenes shown on-screen.
One character rapes and beats another, who later commits suicide. There are other scenes of consensual violence during sexual situations.
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.
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.
A character is anally raped by a giant mutant hamster.
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.
The whole movie is about an officer catching sex offenders. We see them forcing themself onto a woman.
Olla (Short) (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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Otis (Movie)
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).
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.
Palindromes (Movie)
Rape and pedophilia are recurring subjects throughout the film, and the perpetrators are depicted somewhat sympathetically.
Patch Adams (Movie)
One of the characters confides in a doctor about her molestation as a child.
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.
This documentary features a graphic cartoon rape scene during its final 20 minutes.
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.
Pirates (Movie)
There are two rape scenes in the movie, one attempted.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Porky's (Movie)
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.
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.
The lawyer friend of the main love interest tries to force the main character into sex, using her profession as an excuse.
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.
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.
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.
Pulp Fiction (Movie)
A key male character is taken to a backroom and is raped as punishment.
Putney Swope (Movie)
The film contains a mention of a man having sex with a 13 year old. Nothing is shown on screen.
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.
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.
Raw Force (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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".
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.
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.).
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
The main heroine is nearly raped but is saved at the last moment by the hero.
Robots (2023) (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
One of the main characters was molested by his father as a child. A girl has sex with her step-brother.
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.
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 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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 is one discussion of one character's experience of sexual abuse at school by a teacher.
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.
On top of the above, the film contains on-screen necrophilia.
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.
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.
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).
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.
A demon-possessed boyfriend rapes his girlfriend on screen while she begs him to stop and take her home.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
An artist attempts to rape a woman as part of a performance.
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.
Storytelling (Movie)
The first half hour of the film is about a professor who abuses his power to have sex with students.
Street Trash (Movie)
Sexual violence takes up a large portion of the 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.
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)
Switch (1991) (Movie)
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 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.
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 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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
ThanksKilling (Movie)
A woman is raped by a turkey puppet.
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.
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).
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.
S1E2: child abuse is discussed S1E3+4: explicit on-screen rape and attempted rape.
Thursday (Movie)
A woman rapes a man who is tied to a chair: the scene goes on for quite some time and is graphic.
The film is about a woman who is kidnapped, then ends up falling in love with her captor.
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.
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 Tribe 2 (TV Show)
A young man is literally raped to death.
There are jokes referencing sexual acts with children.
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.
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.
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.
Transamerica (Movie)
Transparent (TV Show)
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 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.
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.
Tuff Turf (Movie)
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.
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.
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.
A woman discusses the fact that she was accused of being a child molester by a vindictive ex.
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.
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.
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 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.
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)
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.
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.
Van Wilder (Movie)
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.
Video Nasty (TV Show)
It is heavily implied that one of the female protagonists has been gang raped.
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.
Visitor Q (Movie)
There are various graphic scenes of rape, incest, general sexual deviancy, and necrophilia throughout the film.
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.
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 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").
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.
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.
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.
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 protagonist receives repeated rape threats from a boy she has a crush on.
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 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.
It is told that two little girls were raped.
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.
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.
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.
Winx Club (TV Show)
S2E6: off-screen rape.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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)
An on-screen rape occurs about 5 or 10 minutes into the movie.
S1E20
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" .
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.
Your Highness (Movie)
This film contains multiple instances of threatened sexual assault and actual sexual assault, all played for laughs.
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.
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.
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.