12 Hour Shift (Movie)
Female characters are groped: they smile. Later on, sexual comments are made at other female characters: their reaction is not shown. There are a few jokes about sexual harassment. One character tells another character to "bend over" before ramming the front of her car into the back of another racers. At the end of the film, one character makes a prison rape joke.
A character mentions that he is scared of an action that 'rhymes with grape'.
25Th Hour (Movie)
One character in his thirties has a crush on his student, a high school junior. At a nightclub, the student gets drunk, straddles him and he kisses her. A big theme in the movie is the threat of the rape that the main character will likely experience in prison.
3-Iron (Movie)
The 39 Steps (Movie)
A man forcibly plants a kiss on a woman and she clearly does not want it.
8 Women (Movie)
Acca-13 (TV Show)
A young policeman is in love with a high school girl. Her age is unknown, but if the story is followed she would be around 17 to 18 years old. He is a rookie agent and it is mentioned how he had to take an entrance exam. Depending on how long the police academy is, he would be around 19 to 22 years old. He stalks her in the hope of getting to know more about her. She never finds out about him stalking her and she also does not know he is in love with her. No relationship develops between them.
The Accident (TV Show)
S1E2: a man enters his martial bedroom in a state of drunkenness, and proceeds to describe how he plans to assault his wife. He ends up not going through with this as he passes out drunk. S1E3: a man is ordered by a woman to take off his clothes. He repeatedly states he does not want to, but ends up disrobing. The woman then proceeds to touch the man sexually, with the man stating a number of times he does not want this.
An armed man breaks into a woman's apartment and catch her before she manages to escape. A character threats a man to rape his wife.
Ace Attorney (TV Show)
There is a recurring plot device where two girls, a teenager and an 8-year-old, are spirit mediums and can channel the spirit of a dead adult woman. When this happens, the girls’ physical appearances change to those of the woman they summon, meaning that they suddenly look like her and have larger breasts and cleavage. In the third arc, Turnabout Samurai, a TV show director stares at a teenage girl’s breasts and legs, and imagines her as a super hero; the audience sees this superhero as the teenage girl with much larger breasts.
One man recalls his desire to sexually assault women and specifically goes into detail about sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl.
Adieu Poulet (Movie)
A police officer dressed up as a patient in a hospital slaps a nurse's bottom.
Adolescence (TV Show)
Talks between a therapist and accused criminal (a teenage boy) include sexual questions and topics, all professional: the therapist is not predatory. There are mentions of a teenage girls nudes being sent around school. The teenage boy accused of a crime is forced to be strip searched. There is nothing visual but we can hear the audio which includes an officer instructing him to lift up his genitals.
Adulthood (Movie)
A woman discusses how she was gang raped. Later, a man threatens her by saying it will happen to her again.
Early in the movie, a character jokes that he would like to be raped by another character.
After Hours (Movie)
A woman discusses in detail how she was raped by her ex-boyfriend.
The Afterparty (TV Show)
S1E4: a woman talks about her plan to drug a man and take photos of him naked. She does not go through with the plan. S1E5: a teenage boy tries to kiss a teen girl while they are both drunk; she refuses. He leaves her alone but, along with another boy, lies to their friends about having a threesome with her.
S1E6: a man forces his wife to visit another man on a late-night errand. It is later implied that he did this whilst believing that she would be sexually assaulted by the other man (but she was not).
S1E4: a female main character locks a chasity device on her husband with an app without asking his permission. A young employee of a film set get harassed by an actor: he is stopped by another actress. Worthy of note: this entry is relevant only to the first series.
S4E2: a character talks about having been sexually assaulted by her brother (between the 1:16:30-1:17:20 marks). S4E4: discussion of the sexual violence experienced by one character (between the 1:16:40-1:17:15 marks).
Airheads (Movie)
There is an aside joke where a woman despairs at the fact that she had perform oral sex to keep her job.
A woman (a sex worker for the yakuza) propositions a teenage boy and tries to kiss him, laughing when he looks the other way.
Worthy of note: S1E3: the female protagonist is held back and in order to get free, she accuses the male protagonist of sexual harassment. He was not actually sexually harassing her.
One of the main characters gives a fairly graphic description of getting raped in prison (38:08-39:16).
The film is about a murder trial; a large part of the prosecutor's case is depicting a woman as a flirtatious nymphomaniac who deserved to be raped by the murder victim.
Episode 9: mention of footage showing rapes.
In the opening sequence, it is mentioned that a woman in trial for stealing said to the policemen to go after the real criminals like rapists. Near the end of the movie, policemen ask the three main male characters to lift up their kilts. This is played for laughs.
Animal Kingdom (TV Show)
Animal World (Movie)
A nurse is sexually harassed by one of her male patients.
In a flashback, a teenage boy shoves his hand down a teenage girls pants and then tells all his nearby friends that she is on her period. It is unclear whether the hands in the pants was consensual (they were fooling around prior) but the humiliation and sharing of intimate details definitely was not. It is mentioned that the main character ran away from home when she was 12 and stayed with an older man ; it is unclear whether anything sexual happened between them. A child is taken to a shady doctor and stays in a closed room with him, but it is not implied that anything ambiguous happened.
Apt Pupil (Movie)
At the end of the film, a teenager blackmails a teacher with a false sexual abuse accusation. There is no real abuse or relationship between the teenager and adult.
A character is restrained, and it is stated that he is a serial rapist to the women he guards in quarantine. A man harasses a woman, asking if she wants his 'rectal thermometer'. He is later sacrified to the zombies for being a rapist.
Arrow (TV Show)
A lesbian character is forced to marry a man despite violent protests, though she and the main character joke about the marriage in later seasons.
A woman is taken by force in a cellar by a killer, but finally escapes. After that, she seems very distressed, but her husband does not take her seriously. Later, when she discovers bodies buried in that cellar, she tries to warn the police: her husband shuts her up by forcefully kissing her. Both scenes are played for laughs.
A man states that he would not be strong enough to prevent many prison rapes (41:10).
The relationship in the film is between cousins (it is implied they have sex).
Atlantic City (Movie)
The main male character first encounters the main female character by spying on her while naked when she appears naked through her window.
B: the Beginning (TV Show)
Relevant scene occurs in episode 1.
Two yakuza make plans to kidnap and sell a group of young women working at a maid cafe. It is implied that these women would be sold into sex slavery.
Baccano! (TV Show)
Different women are verbally harassed by men throughout the show. This includes one child, and workers at a club who are told to get undressed (it is not shown and no one complies).
Bad Samaritan (Movie)
A nude picture of a woman gets shared online against her will. Women are physically, but not sexually, assaulted on screen throughout the film.
Bande a Part (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, a woman is slapped, grabbed and tied and against her will.
A woman is sold by her father to a husband against her will.
Bank Robber (Movie)
The Batman (Movie)
Many scenes are set in a club where young women work and are objectified, with it being somewhat unclear whether they are paid to have sex with clients or simply to flirt with them. There are frequent scenes of men menacing or hurting women in a very sexually-charged environment, including one scene where a man holds a woman down in a way that is meant to be reminiscent of a sexual position. Domestic violence and client-on-sex-worker violence clearly occur with some frequency, and some of the women are shown to have bruises and black eyes at work. At least one woman seems to be the victim of explicit human trafficking tactics, with powerful men who employ her stealing her passport and hiding it. She is heard being interrogeated and strangled. A man observes a woman dressing and undressing without her knowledge, but not for any sexual reasons on his part. On two occasions a woman kisses a man without his explicit consent, including on one occasion where the man is delirious. These scenes are framed as romantic. The main villain uses duct tape with his victims to cover their mouths and place them into torture contraptions.
Baywatch (TV) (TV Show)
S1E8: a man repeatedly pressures a woman for sex. After picking her up and knocking over a lamp and her computer, she acquiesces and he says "did you really think I'd take no for an answer?" The implication is she has no choice. The man is controlling throughout the episode and hits the woman in the face later, giving her a black eye. It is revealed that he beats her again and potentially raped her. She tried to send things and he tells her "you can't stop it. It's not over." The domestic violence situation is realistic and disturbing.
Beastars (TV Show)
S1E2-3: a female character misinterprets a male character’s awkwardness as a desire for sex; she strips and begins stripping him, too, oblivious to his shock and fear. He panics and leaves, and nothing further happens. S1E8: a female character jumps and pins down a male character in a very suggestive way, but it is then revealed that her intent is not sexual. S1E9: a group of adult men kidnap a teenage girl. One of the men pins the girl down in a suggestive way and lifts up her skirt, but is stopped before he can do anything more. A different adult man later forces the same girl to strip naked and bathe in front of him; this is because he plans to eat her, but it is evocative of a sexual assault. S1E10: as her attacker prepares to eat said teenage girl, he grabs and pins her down in ways that resemble a rape scene. This is not what is occurring, but the visual similarities may be disturbing for some. S2E3: A group of teenage boys corner their classmate and ask him invasive questions about his sex life, including questions that violate another person's privacy. They then shame him for his lack of sexual experience. S2E4: an exotic dancer is attacked on stage by a patron who intends to kill and eat her. He is stopped before he can succeed, and the dancer is saved. S2E8: a man volunteers to have an organ harvested in exchange for money, but his money-lenders cut off his penis instead. Nothing is shown on-screen, but his screaming can be heard. S3E4: a female wolf is found drugged in her underwear. A man is planning on removing her skin and teeth.
During the first part of the movie, an ex-husband acts threateningly towards his (soon-to-be) ex-wife: he comes to his son's birthday unannounced (and uninvited), he enters her house while she is away and waits for her, etc., and becomes increasingly violent towards her current boyfriend.
At some point, a man tells his brother that he risks being imprisoned for life and getting raped in jail.
Beforeigners (TV Show)
S1E1: the lead character tracks down the man who raped her as a girl in the distant past. He ends up acknowledging, in a very creepy way, that it happened, and she beats the crap out of him.
Belly (Movie)
Below Zero (Movie)
Child sexual assault (the rape of a 13 year old girl by men) is heavily described (01:30:00-01:31-20).
Bet (TV Show)
S1E3+4: sexual harassment. S1E9: non-consensual kiss. S1E10: a man hits on a high school student.
Beulokeo (Movie)
During a conversation, a client asks child traffickers if the child's father is a rapist. It is asked once if a woman was raped. [SPOILER] We learn that one of the main characters was a prostitute and that one of her clients insisted for her to do things she did not consent to before she killed him. What clearly happened, if the character was raped or not, is never mentioned.
Beyond Paradise (TV Show)
S1E5: a teenage girl is pulled off-screen by a man in an attempted sexual assault: a button is torn from her clothing but she gets away.
Big Eyes (Movie)
This film features an abusive relationship where one of the characters exploits the other's work: death threats and on-screen abuse are seen throughout most of the middle of the film.
In a dream, a man looks up women's skirts.
Binsenjo (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman defends herself in court, saying that she and other maids employed before her were sexually harassed by her boss.
Black Doves (TV Show)
S1E2+E3: a woman who is being held against her will is shown laying drugged on a bed with cameras set up to record her, the possible implication being that her kidnappers intended to sexually abuse her.
Throughout the movie, racist comments are made about Black men, depicting them as rapists. In one scene, a policeman takes advantage of a woman by touching her when she is pulled over. A white cop jokes that he would like to force a Black woman to perform oral sex on him before another member of the KKK kills her. He is joking to maintain his cover infiltrating them. In one scene around the climax of the film, a woman is tackled in the street by a policeman: to evade capture, she shouts repeatedly that the man is trying to rape her, although this is not the case.
Bloodhounds (TV Show)
A man is forced to stripe naked in front of a gang; his genitals are photographed to blackmail him later.
A man is wanted by the police because he beat up his girlfriend. He comes to the protagonist to ask for his help, but he gets rebuffed. The main female character implies that she lost her job because she did not respond to her boss' advances.
Bodies (TV Show)
A side character is a serial rapist, and it is mentioned that one of his victim was 14. He is killed early on.
Body Double (Movie)
Bodyguard (TV Show)
Bomb City (Movie)
About 40 minutes in, a party gets broken up by police, which handcuffs a girl. A cop proceeds to whisper something in her ear, and proceeds to tell her to get on her knees: he opens her mouth and holds her chin, putting a gun in her mouth and making a comment along the lines of “I bet your daddy’s proud”.
Bones (2001) (Movie)
A female character is groped in bed by who she assumes is her lover, but is actually a ghost (43:00-45:00). She asks “him” to stop repeatedly, interspersed with flashbacks and gorey hallucinations. There is no nudity or implied penetration, bu tshe is left physically unharmed but mentally distraught. One of the main characters makes routine suggestive comments about the other female characters, which the other male leads reprimand him for. It does not escalate beyond “locker room talk.”
A woman forcibly plants a kiss on a guy who does not want it.
Bound (1996) (Movie)
The main male character has a habit of continually grabbing the main female character's bottom and lifting up her skirt without her permission. She smacks him every time he does so.
A pregnant woman is kidnapped and forced to undergo a gynecological exam against her will (off-screen), and is threatened with a forced abortion. A prison inmate must undergo a cavity search outdoors for the purpose of humiliation (off-screen). A prison inmate threatens a man that he will let the other inmates rape him.
After discussing the color of a woman's panties, a group of boys come up behind her and lift her dress to up to confirm the color.
A Bronx Tale (Movie)
Young men try to get the attention of two young women who are walking on the opposite side of the street. A male character describes a “test” that he uses on potential girlfriends, which involves physically forcing his date’s face down to his lap.
Throughout the series, in a briefing room containing a wall with crime statistics, the word "rape" is visible in the background. It is not present in every episode. Throughout the show, a woman makes various (often sexualised) comments about the appearance of a man who she works with, who makes it clear that he is married and faithful to his wife. S1E5: a man makes an inappropriate sexual comment to a woman he works with, and spanks a man he works with without his consent. S1E6: it is mentioned that a man was arrested for groping multiple women without their consent. S1E13: a stripper is hired to give a lap dance to somebody who is clearly uncomfortable with the situation. S2E23: a woman touches a man's body, under the pretence of frisking him, in an excessively slow and drawn out fashion which may imply/evoke sexual undertones. S3E2: a man implies that he has been accused/guilty of workplace sexual harassment in the past. S3E10: a woman agrees to help a friend, on the condition that he secures for her a picture of one of their colleagues naked. S6E6: a woman defends herself against sexual assault and the protagonists work on her case. Lots of discussion of assault and harassment and the consequences of speaking up follow. S8E1: mention of a woman being assaulted (hanlded sensitively).
In Bruges (Movie)
Bugsy Malone (Movie)
Early in the film, the titular character is pushy towards the main female character. At some point, a female character hits on the titular character despite his clear disinterest: she ends up kissing him on the forehead.
Burden of Proof (TV Show)
Burn Notice (TV Show)
A main character pretends to rape his girlfriend.
A couple tries to use rape as roleplay but the scene is interrupted and it firstly looks like an attempted rape. The main protagonist's sister is in love with him and tries to kiss him without his consent.
Bye, Bye Love (Movie)
In two scenes a man changes the appearance of two teen girls to look more like his dead sister: we see him tie a girl's hands to a chair and wash her hair while he hums and licks her face, and he then cuts her blouse off to reveal a bra and moderate cleavage and abdomen. For the rest of the film, the girl remains only in jeans and a bra. We see photos of a teen boy kissing his sister on the mouth as she receives chemotherapy.
Captives (Movie)
The Capture (TV Show)
S1E2: about 20 minutes in, two police officers have a conversation about a historical case when hidden camera footage recorded a "semiconscious girl" being raped by a terrorist. Revealing that they had video proof of the rape would have compromised their hidden camera anti-terrorism operation. Because anti-terrorism cases are higher priority than rape cases, they kept the camera footage secret. It is implied that the rapist escaped without consequences. None of this is shown onscreen.
Flashbacks from and discussions about the torture in Abu Ghraib, including sexual torture and sexual humiliation, are featured throughout.
The main protagonist is in love with an underage girl. There is also a man who is presumably gay who sexually harasses/assaults other characters.
The movie contains stated offscreen sex between a teenage girl and a man in his thirties. There are also scenes of strong transphobia played as jokes.
Castle (TV Show)
S2E3: a suspect is accused of coercing women into having sex with him in exchange for better job opportunities and interfere with it when they reject him. S6E20: throughout the episode, a man who believes is living in the 70's, makes sexists comments and sexualy harrasses (cat-calling, touching) all women around him, including the ones in authority positions.
Worthy of note: the main character hires a prostitute and pays her with counterfeit cash. He is 16-17 years old and has sex with adult women who do not know that he is a teenager/minor.
In the opening scene, a group of boys grab a boy who is showering and throw him infront of the school while he is naked. Students and teachers laugh at him. As an adult later in the film he gets flashbacks. In another scene, a man assumes a CIA officer is a 'strippergram' and shouts at her 'show us your tits' (but she gets revenge by tasering him).
Changeling (Movie)
A woman is being hosed down in the mental hospital and a female doctor tells her to spread her legs so she can check her for venereal diseases. Nothing is shown, but the scene is intended to convey the distress this puts the woman in. Worthy of note: although not shown, the movie is based of real life serial murder case where a serial killer abducted, raped, and murdered young boys.
There is a scene where the villain slaps a woman (who does not seem distressed) and closes the door of her room, presumably forcing her to have sex with him.
Charlie Says (Movie)
A woman is told to take off her clothes and looks visibly uncomfortable in doing so. A woman flashes a man. A man stands up in a bath and display his naked body to a woman who looks shoked at it. A man attacks a woman and wrestles her to the floor, which eventually turns into kissing.
The Chaser (Movie)
Chi-Raq (Movie)
The premise of this movie is that the women in a particular community in the South Side of Chicago decide to stop having sex with all men in the community to protest gang violence. This sex strike ends up spreading to the rest of the city, nation, and world. When the protagonist first enlists other women to join this strike, part of the oath that she tells them to repeat has the line, "If he should force me to lay on that conjugal couch, I will refuse his stroke and not give up that nappy pouch," implying that saying no is sufficient to stop rape. There is also a point where the protagonist's boyfriend cheats on her with someone else. The sounds of her moaning during sex are heard before the scene switches over, and, in context, it sounds like she might be being raped, even though the encounter is later revealed to be consensual.
The male romantic lead follows, touches, and flirts with the female romantic lead in spite of her protestations: it is framed as romantic. There are several instances where the female romatic lead is catcalled. Worthy of note: it is implied that the main female protagonist is forced to prostitute herself in the first part of the movie to survive financially. Throughout the movie, she engages in relationships with sugar daddies to pursue her career.
Class of 09 (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is felt up while being swept for weapons.
Clay Pigeons (Movie)
Clickbait (TV Show)
S1E3: a couple has sex after a fight. It is not clear either it is with consent or not. The sex itself is not shown but it is implied. A male character has had a sexual relationship with a underaged girl: he spreads nude pictures of her without her consent.
Clue (Movie)
One of the male characters frequently gropes the female characters; this is played for laughs. Worthy of note: also played for laughs is a scene where characters pretend to kiss corpses in an attempt to make the deceased appear alive.
Coffy (Movie)
S1E3: investigators describe in detail a case of sexual assault involving rape.
The Convincer (Movie)
Relationship between a teacher and a student.
A male main character is physically, psychologically, and emotionally abusive to his relationship partners including a female main character and a female side character. SPOILERS: The character makes multiple direct or indirect attempts to murder his wife, one of the two main female characters, when she exerts any independence. In one particularly disturbing scene, he fantisizes about killing her during their wedding ceremony and the sex afterward. In another, years later when she has sought divorce, he throws her an extravagantly romantic dinner, says some creepy stalkerish things, and tries to force an anniversary ring onto her finger while she is clearly resisting. In a third, he is physically fighting with a mistress while they argue and accidentally injures and kills her.
Crash (2004) (Movie)
A police officer pulls a couple over for preforming oral sex while driving. The woman is harassed and groped by the officer. The camera takes extra long pauses to show and focus on the hands of the officer grouping her vulva. The woman goes home and argues with her husband about how it could have been prevented. The cop later saves the woman's life, and this supposedly redeems him.
Creepy (Movie)
There is passing mention of a serial killer who abducted and raped sex workers, and then proceeded to hunt them for sport. The main serial killer verbally and physically harasses and intimidates the protagonist's wife.
The Cremator (Movie)
A man unconsentually touches a woman by her neck, implying sexual intent (the camera shot is focused on his hand). He is interrupted and the woman runs away, screaming.
The series surrounds an investigation around the disappearance of a young woman, which subsequently becomes a murder investigation. Although no evidence arises to suggest that this is the case, there is some discussion of the possibility that her disappearance/death was the result of foul play, and the possibility of sexual assault having been a factor in this is mentioned/implied. Aside from this, there is some general discussion of the various other crimes - including sexual crimes - which have occurred in and around the hotel where this happened throughout its history.
Criminal: UK (TV Show)
Every episode of this series takes place within the confines of an interrogation room: none of the events discuseed are actually depicted. As an anthology series, there is very little storyling continued between episodes, so some episodes can easily be skipped. S1E1: this episode centres around the interrogation of a man suspected of sexually assaulting and murdering his stepdaughter. Within the first minute of the episode an interrogator describes the teenage girl being found dead without any underwear on. The sexual nature of this crime is alluded to again throughout the episode. It is mentioned that, during trips away with his stepdaughter (the murdered girl), the man being interrogated had always opted to book a double rather than a twin hotel room, and that a post-mortem had shown the victim not to have been a virgin when she died. The accused stepfather later alleges that his stepdaughter had been engaged in a sexual relationship with her (adult) sports coach, and that he (the stepfather) had become violent when she confessed to this. The stepfather alleges that it was this coach who assaulted and killed the girl. Nothing is shown on-screen and the entire episode takes place within the confines of the interrogation room. S2E2: this episode involves the interrogation of a man accused of raping a work colleague. The events are discussed in detail but none of them are shown on screen. S2E3: this episode features a woman who acts as a vigilante paedophile hunter. She described posing as a 14 years old girl online and exchanging explicit messages with an older man.
The Curse (TV Show)
There is a fairly graphic rape threat. S1E1: a father in law makes his son in law look at his penis. His daughter told her dad that her husband has a small penis.
S1E2: there are mentions of cult leader sexually assaulting multiple women in the congregatio. It is one of the main topics of the episode and it goes into some detail with one woman being assaulted for 10 years. The leader also victim blames women he assaulted.
Daredevil (Movie)
The film contains a courtroom scene where a man is on trial for beating and raping a female bartender (20:00-23:00).
Daredevil (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: a man saves four women from what appears to be sex trafficking. S1E2: a woman mentions that she heard another woman recalling how she was almost dragged into an alleyway by a man who was waiting outside her work. Nothing further happened as she was saved by "a man in a mask". S1E4: a man mentions 'pedophilia' (when someone in power tries to defame another man). S1E8: violent domestic abuse. S1E10: a man recalls the first time he beat up a criminal, noting that it was because he repeatedly overheard a child being sexually assaulted and knew that the father was was covering it up so that the problem could not be dealt with through legal means. S2E2: a man tries to sell child pornography (21:00-22:00 S2E3: rape is mentioned by the antagonist who claims it justifies his violence. S2E7: 'rapists' are mentioned. S3E2: a man mentions how he does not want criminals on the streets to 'rape again'. S3E5: mention of child pornography.
An evil humanoid alien pushes a woman to the ground and rips open her blouse to insert a needle into her chest (38:00). Nothing sexual occurs.
The villain eyes up a woman who stands up to him and shouts 'well hello beautiful'. He circles around her, making her flinch and look very uncomfortable. He then grabs her head with a knife in his hands. He does not sexually assault her, but it is very reminiscent of one (he also says the phrase 'a little fight in you, I like that'). There is a mention of the main character using surveillance equipment to view a romantic interest's activities.
A man grabs the skirt of a woman he had sex with the night before: she does not approve of it. The two are also in an unhealthy relationship that is abusive, physically and emotionally.
Dealer (Movie)
A man and a woman are doing coke in a bathroom: the man says he wants to have sex and start touching the woman, who says 'no' and pushes him away and goes away. A grown man demands (agressively) a kid to take of his clothes off while another kid films it: the kid keeps his underwear on (the scene is not sexual in nature). Prostitution is present throughout.
The film revolved around the death of a male character, who is revealed early in the film to have been "raped to death". Rape is thus mentioned frequently throughout. About halfway through the movie, it is revealed that the victim was raped by a horse, with whom his two friends had been having sex for years. The tone of the film is rather ambiguous, and those themes are treated somewhat lightheartedly, presumably for comedic purposes.
S1E4: this episode contains leaked nudes.
A man accuses a reporter of grabbing him inappropriately. Worthy of note; a man makes penis shaped cookies with the purpose of handing them out to children, to make another man seem like a pervert.
Defending Jacob (TV Show)
A website containing extreme and disturbing porn is mentioned a few times. The site's content is not really expanded upon. A brief discussion occurs regarding a girl who was drugged and kidnapped at a party. The event is maybe mentioned for 30 seconds and is not at all detailed.
Déjà Vu (Movie)
The Departed (Movie)
One of the lead characters spends time in prison. Later on, when talking to a therapist, it is implied that he may have been sexually assaulted in the showers of said prison (54:20-54:50). A character threatens to rape another character's girlfriend. Worthy of note: in a tense scene where a character is collecting protection money from a shopkeeper, he asks a young girl if she has gotten her period yet.
Dept Q (TV Show)
S1E1: rape is briefly mentioned. S1E6: a man threatens a 17 teen year old, saying he will sexually traffic him and film him being abused. A man squeezes the leg of a minor. A man caresses and kisses an unconscious woman.
Des (TV Show)
The protagonist tells that he never raped any of the gay men he killed.
The protagonist molests a woman multiple times throughout the movie.
S1E1: the main protagonist tells a girl he would be able to see her panties if she stands from a particular angle. S1E5: the main protagonist mentions how he saw the panties of the female protagonist when she fell over. S1E8: the main protagonist comments that he saw pink and purple rabbits (referring to the underwear the girls are wearing). S1E9: a kid hugs a girl and then comments about her breasts being bigger than he thought. The main protagonist also makes a comment. S1E11: the main protagonist walks behind a girl and comments on the pattern of her underwear. It is not seen on screen. S1E24: the main protagonist makes a comment about a girls breasts. The girl hits him. He later on walks into a room while a girl is dressing. However, there was no sexual intent. S1E25: in the after credits, the main protagonist asks a girl to show him her panties if he wins next time. S1E29: bullies tell the female protagonist and another male character not to be in an explicit sexual relationship together. He later on says that they would get a lot of maniacs accessing the internet if they put her online. This is referring to murder videos going around. S1E32: this episode is about a groper on the train. It is not explicitly shown on screen.
Detroit (Movie)
As several people are forced to face a wall by abusive policemen who beat them to obtain a confession, one officer fondles a woman wearing a dress and puts his rifle between her thighs: she is shown to be very distressed. She and another woman are then threateningly taken to another room by a policeman who accidentally rips off the clothes of one of them. Men stares at her as she is trying to cover herself and fears that the policeman will abuse her. Another man eventually intervenes, helps her to cover herself and put both women in security. It is said several times that they are treated badly because they (white women) were in an hotel room with Black men.
S1E1-3: someone holds a woman captive and watches her. S1E1: a woman who appears to be a teen has sex with a drunk billionaire who is an adult. We do not know how old she is but she asks the main character not to tell her dad, which probably means she is a teen. S1E3: a group of high-school boys pretend to be a teenage girl and send nudes to another boy. S1E6: a main character talks about someone trying to molest him. S1E7: one character talks about his dad beating up women while he had sex with them and he watched.
Dheepan (Movie)
One main character watches another while she is nude without her consent and, later, kisses her multiple times while she expressly tells him to stop.
Dirty Harry (Movie)
The main character mentions shooting an attempted rapist.
Disparu a Jamais (TV Show)
S1E2: dialogue with talk of prostitution and drugging someone to take advantage of them (around 34-38 minutes).
Disturbia (Movie)
There's several scenes in this film involving voyeurism, and peeping at other people through binoculars without their consent.
Someone asks suggestively if female hostages are being abused.
Dog Eat Dog (Movie)
Rape is mentioned at the beginning of the movie. Midway through the movie, a man forcibly kisses a woman at gunpoint.
S1E3: mention of rape. Worthy of note: sexual assault is not discussed in the documentary, but one of the crimes (if you were to look it up for further detail), involved the sexual assault of the victim's corpse.
DreamKiller (Movie)
An inmate mentions being able to hear the noises of other inmates being raped.
Dredd (Movie)
A crime boss is mentioned to have once been a prostitute, who bit off her pimp's genitals after he scarred her face. The same crime boss instructs her men to kill a law enforcement officer quickly and simply, instructing: "No skinning, no raping." One character has telepathic abilities; a man intentionally imagines the two of them having violent sex in an effort to make her uncomfortable. In his imagined scene, it's deliberately unclear whether it's simply rough sex, or him raping her. The image of them is hazy and unclear.
In the beginning of the movie, a junkie asks a woman how much he should pay to have sex with her. She rebuffs him. Later, a policeman looking for a drug dealer is mistaken for a peeper.
About 12 minutes into the movie, the protagonist forces his ex-lover to undress and beats her (off-screen) because she cheated on him while he was in prison.
Echo (TV Show)
S1E 1: a security guard gropes the main character during a pat down. She beats him up.
A college professor smacks a college student on the ass. A man casually mentions having committed rape before and thinking of doing it again. There are also rape jokes.
There are multiple instances of grabbing and verbal harassment done to several women by a hijacker in quick succession, one of which is especially intense. A Woman is called a “whore” by multiple passengers. An harasser is lead to a trap and is then shot and killed.
El Caso Asunta (TV Show)
Elsbeth (TV Show)
The season involves a college professor sleeping with his students in return for giving them the best parts in a play. When he is threatened with exposing, he murders one of them. S2E13: sexual harassment. S2E18: there are unwanted sexual advances that end in the victim being murdered. The murder is off screen, but almost everything is shown including her dead bloody body. S2E20: sexual harassment happens on-screen and people talk about it.
Emilia Pérez (Movie)
Rape is mentioned once at 01:23:21.
The Endgame (TV Show)
S1E1: a character discusses someone liberating a village where a warlord was raping women..
Eraser (Movie)
At about 01:29:00, a woman is kidnapped and tied to the chair. Her kidnapper caresses her face while threatening her with rape. When she says "Don't even think about it" she is slapped and threatened with rape again.
An inmate threatens the main character to take him as his sexual object, but before anything happens, he punches him and knocks him out. The main character gets attacked by the bully several times during the rest of the movie because of this.
Eteros Ego (Movie)
Evil (TV Show)
Sexual assault is mentioned sporadically throughout the series, and at one point a ghost undresses a woman in her sleep. S1E1: within the first few minutes of the episode, a man is being questioned. It is said that he raped his victims. Midway through the episode, the main character is visited by a demon in the night. She is paralysed and he demon proceeds to get underneath her covers and make remakes about her underwear and caesarean scar. She screams, visibly terrified and disturbed. It is later revealed that the demon removed her underwear and kissed her scar. Child sexual abuse is mentioned (37:54), when a new character meeting a priest remarks "Well what do we have here? The priest in training. Don't you have altar boys to rape?" S1E3 mentions priests sexually assaulting people, and the threat of a child getting raped in prison. S1E12: the rape of Tutsis by Hutus is mentioned. S2E2: it is mentioned a few times that a little girl has been molested by her uncle. S2E10: a woman is drugged via drink and two men inject her with a serum that paralyzed but does not knock her unconscious. The men do not do anything sexual in nature but the situation could be triggering. S2E12: child rape in the church is mentioned. S2E13: an adult man is revealed to have been visiting an underage girl at her school, specifically to communicate with her without the mother's knowledge. It is not of a sexual nature, but these scenes could be triggering due to the grooming nature of the episode.
S1E2: mention of rape, some description of the crime (37:50-38:10). Two other mentions of rape, one with reference to a man's crimes, and one metaphorical (41:20-41:50). S1E3: mention of rape in on-screen text (27:50-28:00). S1E4: a man says that he's a 'convicted child abuser' - nature of abuse is unclear (7:40-8:00). Mention of rape (27:10-27:25).
F is for Fake (Movie)
There is a scene, lasting several minutes, in which men eye a woman who is walking near them. She is said to be acting as “bait”. A woman reports having been attacked by Martians - her description of the event may be taken to imply that this attack had sexual elements. Vague dialogue may be taken to imply that woman was raped, but it transpires that this was not the case. She is watched by a man who feels "tempted."
Fakes (TV Show)
S1E5: it is discussed that a guy was "getting handsy" at a club.
Fallen (Movie)
Fallen Angels (Movie)
Several main characters are obsessive about and disregard boundaries of others, to the point of stalking. One character makes sexual advances repeatedly to someone who is not interested. A fairly brief scene resembles rape; with one person screaming, it is unclear if she was joking or not.
A character comments on how the protagonist is blinded by a girl: a cop then proceeds to say "I don't blame you, I'd get off on her surveillance photos too buddy", to which the protagonist pushes the cop down (00:54:36), A man harasses a woman for racing, calling her baby and saying "how about I race you for that sweet little ass": she then races against him (01:10:34).
Fast Five (Movie)
A character makes a threat towards a character's sister ("I hear your sister is very beautiful, wherever she hides, I will find her") (18:23). A man checks a woman out (41:11). A man makes a 'flirtatous' comment towards a woman ("Sexy legs, baby girl, what time to they open?"). She then immediately pulls a gun on him and states: "They open the same time as I pull the trigger, want me to open them?" (42:49-43:00). A man compares entering a money vault to penetrating a woman ("No matter how much I caress her, no matter how much I love her, in the end she still ain't gonna give up that ass"): male characters around him then laugh (59:31-59:44). The film contains many shots of women's behinds for 'eye candy' (particularly at 01:03:19-01:03:53). A woman uses her 'sex appeal' to get fingerprints from a man who touches her behind. A scene later, two characters jokingly ask if he slapped or grabbed her behind and laugh about it (01:09:08-01:10:34)- A man breaks into a woman's apartment and pins her against a wall, covering her mouth and pulling off a necklace she is wearing (01:15:53-01:18:18).
The main female character repeatedly details her rape fantasies throughout the film. She is also slapped on the bottom several times by men during the first sequences of the movie. During the opening credits, a cartoon woman is catcalled by a man. Overall, the movie contains abundant misogynist, racist and homophobic jokes.
S1E1: sexual trafficking is referenced as an aspect of mob activity.
Fear Dot Com (Movie)
There is no on-screen sexual violence, but it is a torture movie, and the victims are shown in bondage gear. All of the dead women have their breasts revealed.
The protagonist makes woman he is holding hostage at gunpoint kiss him to hide his face from cops.
Fearless (TV Show)
There is brief discussion and suspicion mentioned at various points that the murder of a teenage girl was sexually motivated. It is revealed and mentioned throughout that an adult male photographer was taking 'glamour' shots of teenage girls. In episode 3, a character talks about a statutory crime which occurred when she was 15 and of parties she was told about where young girls 'met' older, wealthy men. SPOILER: They turn out to be irrelevant to the story, and the conversation in episode 3 is the only one with any detail on the subject.
The whole movie is about an old man befriending a desperate woman to kill her (in the process, he convinces her to have an abortion). He fails at the last minute (in the final scene) but some video footage and dialogues imply that he previously befriended and killed many other women.
In the first 20 minutes of the movie, a woman is actively being pimped out. It is not a violent scene, but she implies she does not want to do it later in the movie.
One character is sexually assaulted by a group.
Flight Risk (Movie)
The protagonist makes several aggressive, sexual comments throughout the film. He references being assaulted in prison and assaulting others. He repeatedly verbally threatens other characters with sexual violence.
Flower of Evil (TV Show)
A girl is asked why she killed an elder man: she answers that ‘he tried to…’ but does not finish her sentence (sexual harassment is implied). There are also scenes of a woman in a cage that might be stressing for some vieuwers.
Flus (TV Show)
S1E3: during a threatening scene (about 13 minutes into the episode), it is implied that a person will be assaulted with a broomstick.
A woman is undressed, bound and gagged (47:18-50:53).
Family is taken hostage in their home, a woman is forced to strip naked in front of her husband and son.
Furious 6 (Movie)
Two women interrogate a man and get physically violent after he makes a comments about them (39:23-41:40). Two men forces a third one to take off his clothes down to his underwear as payback (42:18-43:34). A man states he used to run women for an associate (01:01:54). The film contains many 'eye candy' shots of women, notably at 10:52 and 01:05:04-01:06:10.
Game Night (Movie)
There is a brief mention of the villain being involved in sex trafficking, and a computer display shows two people have been charged with human trafficking.
Garcia (Movie)
This movie is about a wife who stages her kidnapping to frame her husband. About 45 minutes into the movie, two scenes show what is apparently (at this point), her (a tied-up hostage) being raped by her captor (wearing a mask): it is in fact consensual (since they are in fact lovers playing their 'role'). At some point, a drunk male character lifts up the skirt of a prostitute and then threatens her with a gun when the man she was dancing with protests.
S1E5: rape jokes.
Get Hard (Movie)
The implication is made that it is necessary to be able to perform oral sex on men in order to survive in prison, despite the character's reluctance to engage in this activity. Sexual violence within the prison system is mimed and somewhat graphically described. Various predatory personalities, hand motions, and emotional emphasis may make this scene triggering.
Gigli (Movie)
The protagonist consistently sexualizes and harasses the main female character, who is a lesbian. He goes on a rant about how lesbians are inferior to men in pleasing women. The narrative makes her out to be a viable romantic choice for him, and they even end up having sex.
Gilda (Movie)
A woman is catcalled by a man, she does not seem to notice it.
Though the sexual violence is mostly implied, a major theme depicted in the movie is violence against women.
The teenage main character's foster father has behaviours that imply sexual attraction towards her (i.e leaning close to her to put on her seatbelt, but making it clear he wants to kiss her). The teenage girl later discusses her discomfort with this behaviour with a lawyer.
Go (Movie)
The Godfather (Movie)
During the opening of the movie, a man explains that his daughter was beaten as a result of resisting a sexual assault from two men (she is described as 'no longer beautiful'). The characters say that the victim would be impure and dishonor her family if she was raped. Worthy of note: explicit depiction of domestic violence. Whether or not this includes sexual abuse is ambiguous.
One of the main plots of the movie revolves around consensual incest between cousins.
Gone Girl (Movie)
Main character inserts the top of a wine bottle into her vagina to make it appear as though she has been raped (action is obscured and not fully seen). She proceeds to discuss her 'rape.'
Sexual assaults, rape, sexual torture and sexual interests in minors are mentioned (but not shown).
The crimes of a serial killer based on Dennis Rader (the BTK killer) are mentioned, and they involve the victims being sexually assaulted or raped. One of the victims was a child, but it is also mentioned that the killer didn't anticipate the child being there while going after the child's mother, so it is not known if these same acts were also done to the child or not. Pages from a pornographic magazine themed around torture are also shown at one point.
A fugitive hides in a house inhabited by an old woman and her granddaughter. The man and the 16-year old girl are watching TV, when the portrait of the criminal appears on the screen, he immediately kisses her and brings her to a room as a diversion. They engage in a consensual sexual relationship but are quickly interrupted by a noise in the house.
Goodfellas (Movie)
The main character's girlfriend tells him that a long-time family friend tried to grope and assault her, and then pushed her out of a moving car when she fought back. We see her after, when she is a bit roughed up from the incident.
Gotti (Movie)
One character says the word "rape", but nothing is further discussed or implied.
A mouse performs a suggestive dance number in a bar, and some patrons of the bar can be seen desperately attempting to get on stage with her. In a bar scene, a patron makes kissy faces at a waitress, who then punches him in the face.
A bed-ridden patient catcalls a nurse, he is ignored.
Gregory (Movie)
S1E1: in the first 20 minutes of the episode, one character mentions that a blackmailer and presumed killer threatened to rape the mother of the titular character.
The Grifters (Movie)
Incest is discussed.
The Guard (Movie)
About 5 minutes into the movie, a sergeant fondles the genitals of a male corpse at a crime scene. It is done with humorous intent.
Hackers (Movie)
Brief mention of a sexual assault that occurred earlier in the series.
One of the characters in the film is a child molester.
Happy Face (TV) (TV Show)
Hard Boiled (Movie)
A man is told to take his pants off. It is stopped before anything happens (toward the end of the movie).
Hard Target (Movie)
In the very beginning of the movie, it seems like a woman will be assaulted for a brief moment, but she is quickly saved.
An attempted rape is discussed. Women are grabbed many times and harassment occurs frequently throughout.
Hardcore (Movie)
This movie is about a father looking for his runaway teenage daughter, who is making porno films. He often finds himself in situations with women (and sometimes with men) where he does not consent to intimacy, but is pushed or forced to. Rape, bestiality, teenage prostitution and snuff movies are discussed.
It is mentioned that a teacher sold one of his underage students for human trafficking. Pictures of underages girls, crying, were found in his desk. [This serie is reviewed till S1E5]
Short but detailed description of rape, by the survivor. This happens on a handful of occasions, relating to two separate incidents. The veracity of these accounts is unclear. Mention of paedophilia in the context of discussing vigilante justice against child sex abusers.
Haven (TV Show)
S1E1: a pedophile is mentioned. S1E5: many men are compelled to have sex with a woman who is inhabiting the body of her ancestor and also has no choice. She has a rapid pregnancy after each encounter. The men then die rapidly of old age. S2E1: a story of child sex abuse is told. S3E5: a man up skirts.
A woman enters a room from the shower, holding a towel to her chest. A man surprises her and pretends to have a gun in his pocket to force her to put her hands up. The towel falls and the man is shown staring at her: both appear sexually aroused. The man goes forward and kisses the woman.
The Heat (Movie)
Heat (1995) (Movie)
Worthy of note: the film depicts very troubled domestic scenes and features a storyline about a serial killer who has sex with women before beating them to death. A scene is shown in which this serial killer (who has a swastika tattooed on his chest) has sex with a black sex worker before accusing her of lying about how good the sex was and grabbing her roughly by the hair. Her battered body is shown in the next scene.
In the first sequence after the opening credits, a police officer watches a naked woman (later revealed to be a girl of 15) through a window. This girl is later brought to the police station, pregnant, and a man is accused of statutory rape. Soon after, we meet the man who actually abused her: he handles her roughly but no sexual assault occurs on-screen. An adult man describes how he was arrested after watching the same girl disrobe.
Heathers (2018) (TV Show)
There is a teacher who is a pedophile. He is seen making out with a student, and also putting something in another girl's drink, but someone warns her and helps her sneak out of the bar. Additionnally, he is seen watching cheerleading on TV with a creepy look on his face. As a dark comedy, the show contains scenes with victim-blaming and jokes about how creepy this guy was.
An adult and the protagonist (a 14 year old girl) have sex. Even if she agrees to let him into her bed and later goes to his house (explaining in a voice-over that she had no choice), the younger character is clearly disassociating and flashes in and out of fantasy sequences replacing her reality. Earlier in the film, the other main female character explains, during an expose in front of a classroom, that a (fictional) queen has to escape her husband's constant sexual sollicitations: it is played for laughs.
A male bank robber puts money in the bra of a female bank teller who is clearly fearful. A man intimidatingly corners an assumed sex worker and asks to "sample the goods," but she is able to escape the situation.
Two female cenobites touch a man without his consent. A man jokes about a woman being "Too old" for another man.
Helluva Boss (TV Show)
An employer frequently oversteps his boundaries with an employee by stalking him, joking that he has a small penis, and threatening to have sex with him and his wife if he performs poorly at his job. This is all played for laughs. There is an ongoing relationship between two characters in which there is a severe power imbalance and lack of respect, with the implication that the consent of the lower-status character is under duress. The more powerful character has scenes where he dirty-talks the other character, who is visibly uncomfortable, which is played for laughs. Further into the series, this dynamic is explored with nuance. One of the major characters is in an abusive relationship with his wife, who proudly admits how much she loves abusing her husband and making him feel weak and powerless. A main character is threatened into an arranged marriage with his ex-boyfriend by his abusive father, which is just as much played for humor as it is for drama. A main female character catfishes several horny men into going out with her, only for the men to be violently murdered as part of a bet. S1E3: one of the main protagonists is sexually assaulted by a group of succubi antagonists. This assault is on screen, but sillhouetted, so details cannot be seen. This is played for laughs, but the assault is the 'final straw' for the main character to escalate his feud with them. S2E4: a woman and her brother share a conversation at around the middle of the episode. The brother uses words like "vixen" to refer to her, and is overall very flirty, though nothing is outright stated or shown on screen (10:42-12:19). Worth noting: in S1E2, one character makes several sexual comments in front of his teenage daughter. One of these is a comment that "people want our money and our bodies", including both him and his daughter in the statement. This is played for laughs. There are also frequent jokes about characters being 'perverts', and characters being uncomfortable with others' sexual advances.
High Potential (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode features a woman who was sexually assaulted.
Hightown (TV Show)
A brother is in love with his sister.
Hit and Run (Movie)
Rape and sexual violence are mentioned throughout the film for comedy purpose.
In a flashback, a woman's butt is groped at a bar.
Hold Tight (TV Show)
S1E4: this episode contains two scenes of sexual harassment. S1E5: rape is mentioned.
Hot Fuzz (Movie)
There is an off-hand joke made about a character's parentage saying that the character's mother and sister are the same person. The character in question also is described as 'having the mind of a child' and unspecified developmental disabilities. It may trigger people sensitive to incest. It is brief and does not go into any further detail than that.
Rape in prison is discussed, but only in the hypothetical.
Rape joke (~5:00).
The Housemaid (Movie)
One character threatens to falsely accuse someone of rape.
The only mention of rape or sexual assault occurs at 57:15. A woman flirts verbally with a police officer in an attempt to avoid arrest. In the next scene she laments her actions and says "did you see me practically rape that policeman?"
S3E1: around the 7:05 mark, someone makes a joke about someone consenting to sex by being drunk.
Hudson Hawk (Movie)
A man asks his colleagues whether they want him to rape a man and woman (who are not present) (55:13). This question is not taken seriously by the colleagues, who tell him to shut up. A man grabs a woman from behind, without her consent (01:03:30-01:03:50). Standing behind her he briefly forces her to dance, and then thrusts his groin against her buttocks twice in an overtly sexual way.
Hunters (TV Show)
S1E1: in the opening scene, a man caresses a woman and makes comments about her appearance at a barbecue. One character briefly mentions a Nazi raping a prisoner. A central plot point is that a Nazi doctor takes a romantic interest in an Auschwitz prisoner. She rejects his advances, and there is no indication in the plot that he rapes or sexually assaults her. He instead turns all of his aggression towards torturing her romantic interest, a fellow prisoner. Although there is no child sexual abuse per se, a side character is framed as a pedophile. He denies that he is, and the plot provides no evidence for it: according to the plot, the pedophilia framing occurred to get him to stop investigating the presence of Nazis in America. In addition, an adult main character mentions playing the child to get information out of someone.
The Hustle (Movie)
Women use sexual manipulation to hustle men out of money.
Hustlers (Movie)
Paid sexual favors (strip tease, unconsensual touching and even sexual acts) are the main themes of the movie.
I Care a Lot (Movie)
The film centers around elder abuse (financial, emotional) although no sexual abuse was shown or mentioned. A man says he hopes that the main character gets raped.
No rape or sexual assault however there is brief discussion where it is implied that men are coerced into performing oral sex in return for favours while in prison. The scene is played in a comedic way, leaving it up to the viewer's interpretation. It is also implied that the character Phillip Morris has been lied to by men in the past in order to be persuaded to perform sexual favours for them.
The One (TV) (TV Show)
S1E2: a few minutes in, a girlfriend asks her boyfriend if he would get with someone else if she died. He replies that he would wait till her body got cold and then find someone else. She replies, “That’s not funny.” I’d love to believe this wasn’t a rape joke but I don’t see how it could’ve been anything else".
ID: Invaded (TV Show)
S1E4+6: a man kisses the female protagonist without her consent. He could not control his actions due to a brain injury.
About 01:15:00 into the movie, one of the main male characters, who is in charge of his boss' wife's security, asks her to leeave her husband for him. When she goes away, he grabs her, pins her to a wall and forcefully tries to kiss her despite her protest. She then slaps him and leave.
During a therapy session, a female psychiatrist confesses that as a child, she falsely accused a man of molesting her.
Infinity Pool (Movie)
It is stated that the police will rape and kill women they arrest. However, we do not see this happen, and there is no implication it happened to any of the characters in the film. A character is snuck up on and masturbated to completion by someone without any consent given: he does not resist but is clearly shocked by it. A woman is in the process of having sex with a man when intruders pull her off of him while she is nude. She is tied up and forced at gunpoint into a living room where she sits on her knees still nude. She is not touched inappropriately. A man is held captive and tied up with a cover over his head and is urinated on by another man. The film is largely about a cult-like group drawing a new person into their sadistic psychosexual games.
Inherent Vice (Movie)
A woman says that she was raped to a man, which is quickly followed by very abrupt sex with no verbal consent from the woman. A teenager is in a sexual relationship with a man.
Inside Man (Movie)
Comments/jokes are made about assault occurring in prison. Hostages are forced to strip down to their underwear; one elderly woman is particularly upset by it. They are all immediately given other clothes to change into. Several comments made about womens' cleavage; one hostage referred to as "Boobs" and "Fat ass".
S1E2: this episode contains a joke about sexual harassment.
The film opens with the murder of a woman by her lover (the protagonist) while they are having sex. Shortly after, flashbacks show them enacting roleplays where the protagonist always ends up killing her: rape is mentioned multiple times during these scenes (in the first 20 minutes of the movie). Similar scenes and mentions of rape are also featured a couple of times throughout the rest of the film.
Iron Fist (TV Show)
S2E10: a woman briefly mentions her time in captivity, stating that she was questioned, raped, and tortured (39:27-39:45).
A woman remarks that her troubled brother "did something quite obscene" with the maid (28:17). She says further, "she was terrified, of course." A man grabs the buttocks of a woman while she is boarding a bus. It is made clear that this is done for sexual reasons, while he pretends that he is helping her. In the next scene, he and the woman are shown arriving at a police station, in a police van. As she struggles to get through the door of the police station he again grabs her buttocks. While stopped in traffic, a man reaches out to a random passing car and strokes the arm and hair of a woman driver through her window. The woman slaps him.
Jack's Back (Movie)
Jawbreaker (Movie)
Three high school girls lie to the police and imply that their friend has been raped and killed in a home invasion: the audience knows this is not true from the beginning. One of the high school girls, who we assume is underage, later has sex with an adult stranger in her dead friend's bed in order to frame him for her rape and murder.
Jigsaw (Movie)
Joan (TV Show)
S1E1: a gangster forces a gun into a woman’s mouth. Later, she is sexually harrassed by her boss, who presses up against her and insinuates that they should sleep together. She pretends to be on her period to evade him. He reappears in later episodes and is generally sleazy, looking her up and down. S1E6: after he gives her a ring, the boss undoes his trousers and says “I know you want it” (25:00).
Joe (Movie)
A man gropes the protagonist while patting him down for weapons. The scene is played for laughs but the character looks uncomfortable.
A senior employee talks about how he enjoys looking at visitors' breasts (mostly without their knowledge). He also makes suggestive comments to a significantly younger girl. Late in the story, when discussing a series of murders, a character points out that one of the cases was different because the victim was sexually assaulted.
Judy & Punch (Movie)
The antagonist verbally harasses a woman and calls her a whore.
Just 6.5 (Movie)
Child rape is mentioned (1:29:00-1:30:00).
S1E1: a teenager is sexual harassed. S1E2: a man makes suggestive comments about a 15 year old girl. S1E7: rape of a dead body after murder is mentioned.
Kangaroo Jack (Movie)
A woman's breasts are groped without her consent.
Karen (Movie)
Karppi (TV Show)
In one scene, a woman coerces someone to tell her more information related to a police case by threatening that she will say he groped her breasts (which did not happen) and send him to jail. In another scene, a teenage girl has (consensual) sex with a similar aged boy but the boy records the intercourse without her knowledge or consent.
Keanu (Movie)
A woman tells her husband over the phone that a man she was with was being inappropriate with her and it made her uncomfortable.
Key Largo (Movie)
A woman is grabbed and kissed without her consent and rapey comments are made.
Kick-Ass (Movie)
A father asks his son whether he was abused by muggers: he says no. Worthy of note: one character fantasises about having sex with his teacher: in his fantasy, the teacher is shown removing her top and wants to have sex with him too. Nothing happens and this is played as a joke. One character says that he is attracted to a character who is visibly a child: this is pointed out by another character, but they say that they ‘will wait’. This is played off as a joke and nothing is mentioned further.
Kill (Movie)
The plot is based on a black man being falsely charged with the rape of a white girl. This is discussed throughout the film, although not in particularly graphic terms.
Killer Sally (TV Show)
S1E1 (49:10-49:49): a woman describes being raped by her husband in the context of a violently abusive relationship.
There are several non-consensual grabbing/groping, particularly in the first half of the film.
A character says that the prostitutes he visits are not “pretty enough to rape”.
Killshot (Movie)
Diane Lane is forced to undress down to her undergarments and her nipples are visible through her top very briefly. A woman is physically assaulted by a man as he tries to get her undressed.
A police officer jokes about stalking a reluctant female witness for as long as she refuses to give testimony. A young boy in kindergarten looks up 3 kindergarten girl’s skirts while they are standing on a table. Worthy of note: A man slaps a woman and shoves her to the ground. A man often abuses his son and wife. The abuse is not shown and the mother states he is getting counseling for it. A man puts a gun to his son’s head in a kidnapping attempt. The boy is not hurt.
A man is kidnapped by a man and a woman. The woman talks about having sex with the kidnapped man whilst he is tied to a chair. She sits on his lap and gets undressed in front of him.
One of the first scenes of the movie shows a man in a brothel, groping several women (one of which is asleep). There is a prison rape joke (the main protagonist having spent several years in jail). Near the end of the movie, it is mentioned that one of the antagonists the main character killed was involved in child prostitution.
The films opens with a desperate woman, wearing nothing but a trenchcoat, running and hitchhiking alone at night. She forces one car to stop by staying in the middle of the road: the driver almost crashes but still lets her in. He is mad at her and does not care that the woman is visibly distressed. He even says that he suspects that she has been raped (which is not the case) but he does not seem to care. However, he eventually calms down and helps her. At the end of this opening sequence, both are kidnapped by a group of men and the woman (naked) is tortured to death (we only see her bare legs shaking).
Kleo (TV Show)
S1E5: a man takes pictures of his clients in their underwear without their knowledge and consent. Supposedly he does it for "collection" and not for "personal use".
Klute (Movie)
Though no character is sexually assaulted, there is an ever present fear of that or murder happening in this movie. The main female character is stalked, her apartment is broken into when she is not there by a guy who masturbates with her underwear, and he leaves her threatening and creepy phone calls.
Koshikei (Movie)
The film revolves around the execution of a man who killed and raped two women. Both crimes are discussed continuously throughout the film, with multiple reenactments in the first half of the movie. During one of them, a prison guard kills a woman and lifts up her skirt. Most of it is played on the tone of dark comedy.
La Haine (Movie)
La Llorona (Movie)
A military general is on trial for genocide against indigenous people of Guatemala and one of the indigenous women gives a testimony about his soldiers killing the men and raping the women as a form of warfare. There are no graphic descriptions or anything, however. There is also a flashback scene where a soldier drags a woman through a cornfield by her hair and it could potentially be implied that he was going to rape her, but the next scene just shows her and her kids being held hostage and interrogated. A maid accuses the general of spying on her whilst she is taking a bath.
La Nuit Du 12 (Movie)
This film is about a police investigation surrounding the murder of a young woman (shown on-screen in one of the first scenes of the movie). Among the suspects is a man who was previously condemned for domestic violence: we see pictures of the swollen face of his previous victim and we hear him threatening his current girlfriend with physical and sexual assault over the phone. The woman is presented as being under his influence (protecting him from the police).
L'Adversaire (Movie)
Early in the movie, a woman shows her low-cut neckline to a group of friends. Her husband jokingly warns her that she is exciting "strong and vigorous" men around her. Near the end of the film, the protagonist, who has suddenly beaten up his mistress, goes on top of her to strangle her but fails. For a few seconds, it could appear as an attempted rape.
Women are briefly shown being strangled: the aftermath is only suggested or mentioned.
One of the victims is accused of being a rapist. Some of the main male characters are shown hitting on a female protagonist. One of the main victims is shown handing over a business card to a waitress, to which his friend tells him that the waitress is way younger than him. Later on, while waiting for the waitress to arrive, it is established that he wants to manipulate her into having sex in order for her to get the job. The killer, at one point, slaps a woman's ass without her consent. At the end of the movie, the killer is implied to mutilate a man's penis. There is also many parts that may seem to lead up to sexual assault, but which do not.
Layer Cake (Movie)
Near the beginning of the film, there is a line where a character says that drugs get you more time in prison than rape. Worthy of note: there is also a brief brothel scene.
Lazarus (TV Show)
S1E4: a wealthy nightclub owner selects women to a private section of the club. He spikes the drinks of all the women allowing him and multiple other men to rape them and with a guarantee the cops would not arrive (13:30-14:53). No such assault happens on screen as a lead woman character is not effected by the drug and attacks the owner, also causing the other men to stop. However the scene and the episode implies this owner to be a sleeze and could imply he has done with multiple other women. The dialogue could be triggering for some - 'let me tell you, the only females who show up at my parties, are gold diggers like these. And that's why i give them what they deserve with the special punch bowl. All right, boys, do whatever you want with them! I'm going to help myself to this one right here.' SPOILERS: While he is arrested at the end of the episode, this drugging crime is not brought up in what he gets charged for.
Sexual assault is not discussed in detail, it is only mentioned: two of the subjects of the documentary are a father and grandfather of a twelve-year-old girl who got murdered with suspected sexual assault.
The precise nature of the relationship between the two protaganists (a grown man and a twelve year old girl who came into his care) is ambiguous - potential interpretation of romantic feelings between the two are never acted on. Girl tells hotel manager that the man is not her father but is her lover (this is a lie intended to shock the manager.) Twelve year old girl repeatedly emphasises how much she loves the man, sometimes in sexual terms.
Les Ripoux (Movie)
Early in the film, an old policeman tries to "teach a lesson" to a younger colleague by asking him to take the deposition of a paedophile. There is no further mention of his crimes. Just after that scene, the same old policeman sets up the same colleague: he hires a prostitute to pretend having been repeatedly raped and harassed by a man on the phone. The first man voluntarily dismisses her claims as compulsive lies. The whole sequence is played for laughs.
Let Him Go (Movie)
Four men force themselves into an hotel where an old couple sleeps. One grabs the elder woman by her hand and says something in the line of: "I will keep her company but eventually give her enough reason to stay" in a sexual manner. Nothing happened as the husband grabs a gun. Worthy of note: the film shows multiple physical abuses of a woman by her husband (no sexual content).
Lethal Weapon (Movie)
A man receives a threatening note that his kidnapped daughter “looks pretty naked”. The note is shown briefly and this aspect of the kidnapping is not discussed. A man restrains a woman. It is implied that the woman will be sexually assaulted, but the man is stopped before anything happens.
There is a questionable scene, in which the male character asks a female character to have dinner with him. She repeatedly politely and unambiguously declines, but he continues to demand, grabs her shopping baskets and dumps it out, and eventually grabs her arm and leads her out of the supermarket. However, once being led out of the store the female character appears to be laughing off the male character's action. The characters later have consensual sex, and there are no further problematic scenes.
Leverage (TV Show)
S1E5: sexual harassment.
S2E11: a serial rapist's crimes are the subject of the episode. Many stories of sexual assault are shared, highlighting issues in the justice system which prevent victims from receiving justice.
L.I.E. (2001) (Movie)
The main plot of the movie follows the relationship between a pedophile and the main character. While they do not have sex there is no ambiguity of the real nature of their connection. He makes multiple suggestive comments to him, introduces him to pornographic material, smells a fabric he left behind creepily, etc., all while posing as a mentor figure to him. The protagonist also has a friend who is his same age,: it is suggested once or twice that he does sexual things for other men in exchange for cash. One of the main character's friend brags a few times aboutt how he has sex with his sister and sees no issue with the whole being her brother thing. This same friend lays down on the floor and looks up the skirt of a woman walking by.
Light Sleeper (Movie)
Early on in the film, a supporting character mentions that he had sex with an underage girl.
A man approaches a woman from behind and begins invasive physical contact: she pushes him away and turns towards him. He places her on the kitchen cabinet and kisses her, caresses her and grabs her by force. She grabs the coffee pot and hits him over the head. She regains power and threatens him if he tries anything again. Tension builds very quickly, but is released just as quickly by the reversal of the situation.
Lilies (Movie)
Two boys tie a third boy's hands behind a tree, and one of the boys forces a kiss onto him (15:30).
Lillyhammer (TV Show)
S1E9: a main character tells of a law professor who tried to rape her. S2E1-2: the professor is mentioned again, and confronted.
The film opens with a torture sequence: one soldier fondles a woman and threatens to rape her because she is the sister of one of the prisoners. The protagonist and titular character is violent towards women throughout the movie. He sexually harasses some of them and beats up several of them, including his wife, up to the point of putting a gun in her mouth. Other women (prostitutes) are also beaten off-screen.
The a List (TV Show)
Several characters in the show are mind controlled and kiss/make out while under said mind control, even when they previously had no interest in doing so. One pair of characters is mind controlled into believing they are a couple against their will, and the main villain uses mind control to make a love interest return her affections. Nothing is shown going beyond kissing though.
Little Man (Movie)
The movie is about a man with dwarfism who is prettending to be a baby. He harasses women troughout the film (touching, grabbing, pushing a women's head down to his private parts, etc.). All is played for laughs.
Little Odessa (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, a man mentions that his mother had to consent to a sexual act with a guard to escape Russia in her youth.
Little Woods (Movie)
A man implies that a woman would need to have sex with him in order to obtain a healthcard. He grabs her arm but nothing violent comes of this because she runs away.
A woman consents to have sex for the first time, although she does this after the main character uses her faith to deceive her into thinking she cannot refuse. The film does not treat this as problematic. As this female character's powers of divination are tied to her virginity, another male character's previous intentions to "take them away" are revealed to be rape threats. His anger towards her sexuality is a recurrent theme throughout the film.
A man kisses his girlfriend despite her clear discomfort. Worthy of note: The film is about a serial killer who targets young blonde women, but a possible sexual element of the crimes is never brought up or discussed.
Sexual harassment played for jokes.
The Long Shadow (TV Show)
A woman starts sex work during an economic crisis because her family cannot make ends meet. S1E1: the scene depicting her first encounter starts at 34:00. It is depicted as being traumatic for her and she somewhat disassociates. Overall the series handles depictions of sex work with sensitivity.
Longlegs (Movie)
Little girls are targeted throughout the movie, but there is no implied sexual reason, motivation, or actions for this. The serial killer hogties one of his potential victims at one point. She is fully clothed and the scene ends before anything further happens. There is no implied sexual content. A character reads a letter in which the writer makes a threat to cut off the character's mother's 'tits' if the character reveals information to the FBI.
Lord of War (Movie)
Brutal acts of violence are shown against women and children in war-torn countries, and although never directly shown sexual violence is strongly implied. Worthy of note: sex workers are sent to sleep with a man by his enemies. They know that the women have AIDs and hope that the women will infect him.
The titular character is subject to sexual harassment in various forms throughout the movie, including invasive questions about her sex life from police authorities (one when she first meets an investigator directly asking if she had sex with a male suspect), obscene phone calls, and unwanted pornographic junk mail.
At circa 1 hour into the documentary, it is alleged by the subject of the show that he was molested by his older brother as a child. The brother in question is then interviewed and dismisses the accusation. It is discussed that the subject of the show entered into two relationships with different men, both of whom were 19 years of age when they met him.
Twice, a man pressures a woman into staying with him in his hotel room despite her continually rejecting his advances. The first time he does he follows as she tries to leave and gets up close to her, almost pinning her against the door, before ultimately letting her leave. This woman later develops an attraction to this man and starts a relationship with him. Notably, he is a playboy who is at least double her age.
There is domestic violence off-screen with wounds shown on-screen. Sex is exchanged for employment. A woman is blackmailed by another woman and has sex with her (off camera) to keep her quiet. While it is not framed as being forced, it does feel like coercion.
The Lovebirds (Movie)
Worthy of note: the main characters come across a group of frat boys, and assume that they are probably date rapists. They say that their gathering appears to be a "Roofie Factory" and they refer to one of the men as "Little Brett Kavanaugh" and "Date Rape McGee." There is never any instance of any of it on-screen.
It is briefly mentioned that a minor character spent time in jail for “forcing himself” upon a minor.
Lucky Strike (Movie)
We learn that one of the characters has killed a man who was accused of rape. It is said that a man also touches a woman's leg to see her tattoo. Worthy of note: we learn that a woman gets beaten by her husband.
A character discusses how he was tricked into assaulting a man: he was under the impression he was entering a CNC agreement, but was catfished. A man threatens to make a woman miserable by 'enjoying her daughter'.
Lynn & Lucy (Movie)
A woman reads a magazine where the front cover talks about a rape case.
M (1951) (Movie)
Plot revolves around attempts to catch a serial killer who targets children. At one point, the murders are referred to as "sexual crimes," but the circumstances in which the children are killed and what specifically has been done to them are never mentioned.
Machete Kills (Movie)
A woman tells another character that her dad used to come into her room after a night of drinking.
A woman is chased into an alley by a car, strangled until she blacks out, and wakes up naked on a bed with the man who strangled her on top of her. The implication is that he raped her while she was unconscious. He yells at her that she needs a pump to stay safe. During a job interview, a man asks a woman how much she wants the job, while caressing her hair and shoulders. After that, a loud yell is heard, and we see the man on the floor holding his crotch. After a man helps a woman, she asks him where he wants to "do this", implying that she will repay his kindness with sex: he declines the offer. A man approaches a woman at a party and makes a comment about her being sexy. When she threatens him, he translates that as a sexual proposition. A man talks about a woman having been raped by football players.
Madeo (Movie)
A woman breaks into a man's house and ends up hiding in a closet, where she spies on him having sex with a teenage girl.
Mafia (Movie)
Early in the game, a mission (titled 'Sarah') consists in protecting a woman from street gangsters as she is walking home at night. They harass her (grabbing her against her will and threatening to rape her) before the protagonist beats them up. In several following missions, it is mentioned that these characters were rapists.
Mafia II (Movie)
Early in the game, the protagonist goes to jail. When he enters the prison, he mentions child molesters. After a while, he is assaulted by three men in the shower, attempting to rape him: he successfully fights them off. After his release, his friends make prison rape jokes. A long scene takes place in a brothel, where the protagonist and two partners spend the night and get drunk.
Mafia III (Movie)
Magnum Force (Movie)
A pimp pushes his way into a taxi which is carrying a female prostitute. He then forcibly searches the woman for money, including reaching into her cleavage and her crotch. He then murders the woman on the back seat (41:00-43:30). Although the murder is not sexual in any way, it is filmed in an overtly sexual manner (with the woman's flailing legs and crotch filling the shot) so it may resemble a violent sexual assault.
A man forces a kiss on a woman that she was clearly not expecting while also putting his hands on her cheeks.
An adult man and teenage girl have a very intimate relationship. At one point, the girl makes sexual advances toward the man, including touching him, despite his objections.
Mare of Easttown (TV Show)
S1E1: the episode opens with a young woman screaming because a man is watching her from outside her house while she is undressing. This is addressed again in the beginning of the episode. The episode closes with a shot of the corpse of a young woman undressed. S1E2: the episode closes with a girl saying that she thinks that an adult had a child with a teenage girl. S1E3: in the opening of the episode, detectives ask a coroner if the deceased girl has been raped: the answer is negative. They briefly discuss potential sexual assault immediately after that. Potential sexual relationships between the victim and male adults are mentioned several times throughout the episode. S1E4: a young prostitute in a car with a client gets assaulted early in the episode, (the scene cuts after she starts undressing) and it is revealed in the last scene of the episode that she was kidnapped and locked up in a basement. It is also revealed that a priest was accused of sexual assault on a teenager girl. S1E5: two women are locked up in a man’s basement. One woman who has been there for a year before the second is captured says that there was another woman locked up with her before: rape is implied. The potential rape/sexual assault of a teenager girl by a priest if mentioned again. S1E6+7: an incestuous sexual relationship between an adult man and his teenage niece is revealed.
Marihuana (Movie)
A man tries to pressure his girlfriend into having sex with him in a car: she consistently resists and eventually leaves the car.
Marmalade (Movie)
The female lead implies that she was sexually abused by a foster father as a kid: there are no graphic details (37:27-37:49). SPOILER: Later on, the man she described is arrested for the abuse of his many foster kids.
The Mask (Movie)
During some scenes in the movie, the main character kisses people on the mouth without their consent. In one scene in particular, a woman screams upon seeing him in his mask: as a response, he grabs and forcefully kisses her on the mouth. There is a scene where the main character suggests being intimate with the female lead, in a supposedly funny innuendo: she kicks him and runs away at first, but ends up staying with him. Another scene depicts a group of men chasing the same woman.
Matlock (2024) (TV Show)
S1E2: this episode mentions a man that people Creepy Jimmy for checking out teenage girls. S2E3: this episode features victim blaming. It also mentions #metoo. The case is about sexual harassment.
Mauvais Sang (Movie)
The male protagonist (in his twenties) has a love affair with a 15 year-old girl. At some point, he follows a woman in deserted streets at night and accelerates when she starts running to loose him. He eventually loose sight of her. Later, he kisses a woman while she is unconscious. A peeping tom spies on the main female character. She explains that he does so regularly.
S1E2: an older man touches a woman on her leg without her consent and continues to do so after she told to stop: she is seemingly uncomfortable (51:17-51:58). He makes sexual harassment a condition in an offer to get her a lawyer position in his company. Later, the same character grabs her shoulder and leg: she hits him and one colleague hits him until she asks him to stop (52:31).
Mean Streets (Movie)
There is a scene where a drunk man attacks a woman at a party, but he is quickly stopped by a group of people. The intentions of the man are unclear, so the scene may be upsetting to some viewers.
The Mechanic (Movie)
Worthy of note: The protege seduces a pedophilic target with his youthful looks, in a sequence that includes roofies, excessive drinking, and gets as far as foreplay in the bedroom before the protege finally attempts to assassinate the target. It plays out like a date rape scene. Shortly after, we are told a boss sexually abuses his very young female employees.
A woman works with an organization that helps people who were trafficked so it is mentioned several times. One of the targets of the movie is a man who trafficked underage girls. The information file of a case shows a man marked as a sexual predator.
Early in the movie, one character mentions a male boss who likes female interns "a little bit too much". At some point, two characters discuss the use of GHB (date-rape drug) and joke about it.
Miami Vice (Movie)
It is implied that several women in the beginning of the film are being trafficked into sex work.
Middle Men (Movie)
This film is about the beginning of the porn industry on the internet. At some point, two characters learn that the website they created features teenage actresses (16-17 year old). This is then a recurring theme of the movie. Early in the film, an antagonist is shown acting threateningly towards a female prostitute.
A woman walks into a house to find her husband bent over passionately kissing her adult daughter. Her daughter tells her mom that they have been in a relationship, even before her mother's marriage, implying a love affair with the step-daughter. One male character, after having a few to drink, gets a little handsy with a female character, harassing her by attempting to kiss and hold her in a way she does not want and he initially refuses to accept her rejection of his advances before he eventually leaves. Another female character is catcalled while working as a dancer in a club.
Mindhunters (Movie)
At 01:05:00, one of the characters mentions a victim of a serial killer who was sexually assaulted several times.
When a character thinks another character can read minds and detect misdeeds, he says "All that stuff you see between me and my female cousin is just thoughts! Just thoughts!" A character briefly describes being in prison and alludes to sexual abuse by a large prisoner who called him "Nancy." Nothing graphic is described. In a political advertisement, featuring victims of crimes that were prevented, a woman says "he was gonna rape me" (15:20). When discussing a fictional technology, a detective asks why it cannot foresee rapes (23:20). A young boy is abducted from a swimming pool. The event is referenced throughout the movie. Although the boy's parents never find out what happened to him, it is strongly implied that he was abducted and killed, potentially by a paedophile (01:14:00-01:15:30).
Misanthrope (Movie)
An actress gets sexually harrassed by an actor, who puts his hand near her bottom: she seems suprised and turns around.
Miss Bala (Movie)
A woman has her buttocks groped by a man at a nightclub. A man forces a woman to undress at gunpoint.
Sexual assault between student and professor briefly/vaguely discussed and an early scene where a man slaps the rear of his female co-worker in a public setting without her consent. Various sexual innuendos/comments (i.e. 'nice apples' in reference to a woman's breasts).
Molly's Game (Movie)
The film contains several occurrences of sexual harassment (mostly verbal) from men towards the female protagonist. At some point, a mobster enter the female protagonist's apartment and beats her up, in addition to putting a gun into her mouth. The lawyer of the female protagonist explains that she could end up in jail and mentions that prison guards would likely rape her.
Money Monster (Movie)
Monk (TV Show)
S3E14: a man catcalls a woman serving drinks "hot pants". S4E11: the main character gets amnesia and a woman lies about being his wife. Throughout the episode, the woman talks about being intimate in the bedroom. At around 33:50 they kiss for the first time. Fortunately, the main character has a memory about his late wife and stops before anything could get too serious. S6E6: a teenager hits on an adult woman several times and gets rejected by him several times. The woman is uncomfortable.
Moonrise (Movie)
A character recalls a man convicted of rape, describing him in a euphemistic fashion as being convicted for "the crime of making love to a woman who didn't want it." Another character has trouble respecting a woman's physical boundaries, touching and grabbing her when she doesn't want it and refusing to accept it.
S1E1: a man tortures and murders multiple children (off-screen). When the protagonist catches him, he asks him whether he likes his meat young. It is unclear whether he meant sexual assault. S1E5: a man distributes opium to rich young men so they can take part in evil pleasures. It is unclear what these evil pleasures are as it is not shown on screen. S1E6: it is mentioned how a man has committed a lot of crimes including rape. S1E9: it is mentioned how a man repeatedly molested women around him. S2E4: a woman, who disguises as a man in order to hide her identity, walks into a men's dressing room. She announces that she will be using it just like the other men. A naked man objects as he is aware that she is a woman. The other men have no problem with it. S2E7: a woman is harassed by a man. She is immediately saved by a bartender and protagonist.
Near the end of the movie, the main antagonist delivers a long speech about how he raped the main female character's mother.
Mr. Brooks (Movie)
S1E1 mentions a pedophile. S1E2 involves sex acts that are sort of coercive and designed to be able to drug someone. S1E3 mentions child molestation.
The Mule (Movie)
About 28 minutes into the movie, two DEA agents make prison rape threats to a man under custody.
A man smacks a woman on the buttock.
When the two main protagonists arrive in a prison cell, they talk about having to become "sex slaves." When their lawyer arrives, one of them thinks he is going to have to have sex with him: there is a misunderstanding fueled by innuendo including phrases like: "you're getting fucked either way" and "it's your ass not mine...you should be grateful...you should be down on your knees."
A man kisses a woman while she protests in two scenes; she is being held captive through most of the movie.
Mystery Team (Movie)
Mystery Train (Movie)
The film consists in three segments. In the second one, a woman in a restaurant is harassed by a man who comes sitting at her table and starts talking to her. She listens and gives him 20 dollars to make him leave. He then touches her hand but she quickly removes it, causing the man to quit the place. However, he waits for her outside of the restaurant with another man (it is nightime and the streets are empty): again, he verbally harassed her and both men follow her as she is escaping to a nearby hotel. She is visibly distressed and then asks another female customer to share her room because she does not feel secure.
The Naked Gun (Movie)
In the opening scene, the main character drives a cop car through a women's showers. Towelled and naked women are shown screaming and running away. Later, the same character looks up a woman's skirt when she climbs up a ladder. He also climbs along a roof and grabs a woman's breasts, then accidentally breaks off a roof statue's penis. He falls through the window of her apartment and charges at her with the penis. At some point, he frisks baseball players looking for weapons and touches their crotches.
There are multiple rape jokes regarding prison throughout, but nothing happens on screen. There are also multiple occurrences of people being forcefully kissed.
During a trial, it is briefly mentioned how an interrogator had grabbed the protagonists genitals as a torture method during interrogation.
Narcos Mexico (TV Show)
S3E7: a person is captured by the military. In an interrogation, soldiers threaten to rape him. S3E8: rape is implied. We see a person lying on a bed without moving, and an intruder putting his pants on. S3E10: a rapist and murderer detains a victim but is captured by police. There are talks about implied rape.
Near Dark (Movie)
In the beginning of the film, the main character meets a woman on the street and flirts with her, following which she asks him to give her a ride home. He agrees, but while they are on the way he stops the car and tells her he won't drive her the rest of the way unless she kisses him. She kisses him and then bites him to turn him into a vampire. The relevant scenes occur between the 10:29-12:05 minute marks and the two characters are portrayed as love interests throughout the film. When the vampires are in a bar, one of them grabs the waitress as if to forcefully kiss her and makes her sit on his lap as a ruse to slit her throat (between the 45:01-45:26 minute marks).
New Blood (TV Show)
S1E1: a protagonist is groped by an antagonist while he is working undercover as his employee. S1E3: the assault from S1E1 is referenced in a conversation about the antagonist's various crimes. S2E1: a man grabs a woman's arm and speaks to her in a threatening and demeaning way. S3E1: a man tries to cut another man's penis off in order to scare him away from investigating a crime (the man escapes before this can happen and nothing is shown).
New Tricks (TV Show)
The series overall has an intentional general atmosphere of casual and commonplace 1990’s sexist banter and workplace misogyny, with men (including the male main characters) leering at women when they cannot be seen, calling their boss "sweetheart," saying things like “nice tits” behind their backs, etc. Rape is mentioned casually and in passing in many episodes, in the context of discussing autopsy reports (eg, whether or not there was any sign that a murder victim was sexually assaulted), or officers saying they did not focus on something because they were too busy investigating a rape case, etc. The sex trade is frequently alluded to, with characters working in it occasionally being side characters, questioned as witnesses, etc. Pilot episode: a male character looking through job applications with a woman says of one of the applicants, "don't leave him alone with your kids." S1E1: a man steals women's underwear for a fetish, stalking young blonde women. S1E2: a police officer talks about a previous case in which a 14 year old girl claimed to have been raped, and it's heavily implied that her accusation was false. S1E4: a flasher is discussed as having been victim of a false accusation. This episode contains rape mentions because a serial rapist was convicted on DNA evidence obtained as an afterthought. S2E1: this episode delves a lot into the sex trade, with one of the male main characters clearly seeing no issue with soliciting prostituted women and implying that he has frequented many, which is treated as a joke. At the end of the episode, all of the main characters collaboratively enable a cover-up to prevent a woman in the sex trade's "list of clients" becoming public, specifically because this would embarrass men in law enforcement professions. S2E3: a young woman/girl falls in love with her kidnapper and has his baby - this is treated as romantic. The 'happy ending' of the episode is when he goes without any punishment. S3E1: the episode revolves around a man in the sex trade who takes compromising photographs of his female clients and circulates them without consent, online for money, sometimes resulting in blackmail. S3E5: male characters are spiked with an aphrodisiac drink without knowing it, and pleasantly surprise their wives with the results. A female character is revealed at the end of the episode to have been sexually abused when she was younger. The abusive man was murdered by other women in retaliation for this. S3E8: about 57-58 minutes in, a woman is grabbed by a male colleague and kissed against her will, to which she reacts in disgust. S4E1: the murder victim of this episode turns out to have been a paedophile who had historically worked with and abused children, including his own son, who committed suicide as a result. No sexual abuse or detailed descriptions of the abuse are given onscreen, but there is some discussion about the psychological impact of abuse. S4E2: an officer lies to a nurse that one of her patients is unwell in order to get her onto a dance floor, where he starts forcefully dancing with her until she acquiesces. S4E7: a man runs an illicit sperm bank, lying to his female customers (including one woman whose capacity to consent is somewhat doubtful) that the sperm is collected from male models, but in fact it is his own. This is not illegal and he faces no punishment. Instead, a main character concludes that “ignorance is bliss,” and the victims are never told. S5E3: a woman recounts being sexually harassed and groped by her former boss (who has since died). Old records show that the same man had likely also committed statutory rape of a 15-yr old girl. Male characters victim-blame both victims. It is suggested that there may have been other statutory rapes of young fans (groupies) by radio stars. One woman was 14 when she was raped by a character and calls herself stupid when she reflects on it. She thinks the perpetrator had also done it to other girls. None of the harrassment/assaults are onscreen, only described by characters. S5E5: a woman is told that her father used to patronise women in the sex trade, and it’s implied that he used his position as an officer to hit on or sexually prey on women. This is also the episode with incest - two characters feature who are adult siblings. It turns out that years ago, the sister had an abortion, the father of the pregnancy having been her brother. S5E7: a 15 year girl had slept with an older teenage boy, and her family had allowed it. She narrowly escaped sex trafficking. Domestic violence towards women in the sex trade is briefly mentioned. S6E4: in this episode, a Hollywood director was pressuring young actresses to star in porn films. A clip of video with a woman being slapped in the face by a colleague is shown repeatedly. BDSM footage is watched by characters as evidence, and they mention the possibility that it could be an extract from a snuff film. At one point, characters walk in on a couple making out and it becomes apparent that the man has paid for sex. The same woman talks about having been sexually assaulted before. A woman has killed a man in self-defence when he sexually assaulted her. S6E5: a woman used to be in the sex trade; she wasn’t trafficked but forced into it through financial desperation, and it is clear that it was a traumatic experience for her. S7E3: a paedophile is the prime suspect in the disappearance of a five year old. His crimes are not described but he was a teacher for ten years before apprehended, and “inappropriate behaviour towards young boys” is mentioned. In the end the reason for the child’s disappearance turn out not to be sex-crime related. S7E4: a serial stranger-rapist who has gotten away with it for decades is investigated. The episode includes interviews with visibly distressed victims who describe what happened. There is also a sub-plot where one woman, a genuine victim, makes a false accusation by accidentally mis-identifying the wrong man. The real rapist is apprehended at the end of the episode. S8E1: a tasteless joke about marital rape is made.
The Nice Guys (Movie)
It is implied that a 13 year old girl is having relationship with a man three times her age. Worthy of note : there is a scene in which a young teenager watches a porn movie with an adult woman.
S1E1: a woman is shown with bruises from her partner. Later in the episode, she is found dead. S1E2: the protagonist enters an abandoned house where a couple is having sex and goes next to them to get them out. S1E4: a male antagonist briefly and ironically mimicks trying to give a blowjob to the protagonist to mock him. S1E5: one of the main female characters explains that she does not feel well being the only woman in a military camp in the midst of the desert. Her husband then slaps her because he suspects her of spying on him. S1E6: a man instructs his bodyguard to torture his partner (on-screen).
During his first encounter with a woman, the male protagonist takes a bath and does not hide while he is undressing, which visibly surprises the woman. After that, she grabs his penis while he is in the tub without asking for consent. He is visibly shocked but then complies when she starts masturbating him: they kiss. When the protagonist is about to have sex with his girlfriend, she implies that she has been raped. In one of the final scene of the movie, an antagonist, who has been said to have forced his wife to miscarry (which caused her death), reveals that he 'hurt' multiple women while trying to replace her, impliying that he presumably raped and/or killed them. The protagonist tries to kill his mistress who betrayed him by strangling her with a phone cable, lying on top of her on a desk: he is stopped by security agents. Worthy of note: the main character arc implies that he was abused as a child by his father.
Worthy of note: the plot revolves around an escort girl service and the murder of two prostitutes.
Ninja Kamui (TV Show)
S1E2: a cop touches a woman's bottom without her consent. There is a male character that makes lots of sexual comments when he talks about fighting.
A husband and wife talk on the couch while they watch television. Jokingly, the man says 'keep running your mouth like that and I'll take you in the back and screw ya.' Could be perceived negatively.
No Good Deed (TV Show)
S1E1+3: minor rape jokes.
The film is about a teacher having an affair with a student.
The main character, a man trying to reconquer his ex-wife, grabs her by the arm when she is leaving the restaurant where he intended to meet her by surprise.
Worthy of note: a male character says that he needs to get a female character home, his reasoning being that there are too many men around with 'only one thing on their minds.'
The film opens with six brutal murders (stabbing and suffocating), including three women, one of which is gropped by one assassin while tied up and gagged, and the other slapped several times before being tied up. It is hinted, halfway through the movie, that the female protagonist (a Black woman in her twenties) got pregnant from a relationship with the protagonist (a racist middle-aged cop). She starts talking about it at approximately 01:10:00 into the movie, and their relationship is then discussed at length.
In the opening of the film, a woman has sex with a man she is visiting for work. He does not seem to be into it at all. Spoilers: a man discovers the body of a dead woman. He hides her and lives with her for a few days before dumping her (and himself) in a hole. A man vists a young woman whom he believes has been flirting with him online. In fact, he has been victim of a scam. He tries to approach her but when the woman rejects him and kicks him, he flees.
Opera (Movie)
A woman is repeatedly tied up by a killer, who often gropes her.
A police captain makes a joke about a serial rapist being on the loose. He also gives a man a rape whistle as a joke.
Our Father (TV Show)
Outer Banks (TV Show)
S1E3: two characters begin to get intimate and the woman consents to sex (about 23 minutes into the episode). However, she then says "no", stating that she is drunk. The boy gets really angry at her and starts shouting, making her feel bad for having changed her mind.
The Outlaws (TV Show)
S1E3: a guy justifies violence by saying he could be protecting a woman and child from getting raped. S1E5: a lawyer happily says they might have a client who is famous for child molestation. This is played for laughs. S2E5: a male lawyer hits on his lesbian client by saying "I know you say you're a lesbian, but would you ever try doing it with a bloke?"
In one of the early sequences of the movie (in a drive-in theater), several instances of sexual harassement are featured on-screen: - A woman angrily quits a car because her 'boyfriend' inapproriately groped her; - A very pushy man catcalls and harasses a woman (sniffing her hair, making inappropriate and unsollicited sexual comments, trying to kiss her) despite her repeated protests. He eventually leaves her alone; - Another man lifts up a woman's skirt to show her underwear; - A woman reluctantly joins her 'boyfriend' in order to avoid a fight with another man.
At the beginning of the movie, a man tries to initiate sex with a woman while she lightly resists, but he stops eventually (16:57). At several points a man tries to non-consensually kiss the same womany. At one point he climbs on top of her on a bed while she resists his advances (01:08:30). He does not manage to kiss her. At the end of the movie, the latter man is locked inside a room with her twin who is in chains and it is implied he might try to rape her (01:22:20).
Ozark (TV Show)
The male main character obsessively watches a secret video of his wife and her lover having sex throughout the series. His wife does not know about until later (to which she reveals feeling very uncomfortable). S1E6: the main character's teenage daughter has sex with a man over the age of 18. She admits that she is a minor before they have sex and it appears to be consensual but she exhibits uncomfortable facial expressions. In that same episode, the male main character has sex with his wife but does so in a way as to replicate the video of her having sex with her lover. He lightly spanks her and she appears uncomfortable with the encounter as she seems to piece together that this is what her and her lover did. An FBI agent sent to investigate the main character seemingly receives oral sex from a male prostitute. During the interaction he forces the man's head down and the man makes gagging and choking noises (although the encounter is consensual). The same FBI agent forms a fake bond with a closeted gay man with internalised homophobia in order to use him to get information. The gay man uses words such as 'faggot' to describe the FBI agent and they begin a rough but consensual sexual (and romantic) relationship. Overall, these scenes involve consensual sex but many of the interactions feel very tense and uncomfortable due to characters' facial expressions and the general atmosphere of the show. Many of the characters do not take into regard other's feelings during sexual encounters and there are multiple instances of physical fights and arguments in domestic settings. Additionnally, non-sexual torture is a recurring event in the series and a 21-year-old character develops a consensual, romantic relationship with a 68-year-old character.
P2 (Movie)
The main character is knocked out with a chloroform rag, and when she awakens she realizes the villain changed her clothes while she was passed out. The villain forces her to watch security camera footage of a man trying to drunkenly kiss her; the villain later describes this as the man trying to rape her. The main character sees footage of the villain touching her breasts while she is passed out.
S1E5: in a crowded room, one of the lead characters is touched without her consent and then when she pushes his hand off, he makes her touch his crotch. Later she finds out one of the younger women has slept with him because 'she had to' and was given a bracelet in return. It is applied that many of the women working for the company feel some expectation to sleep with the doctors they supply to.
Pale Flower (Movie)
It is not entirely clear whether a character is actually assaulted or not in an early scene, but what is clear is that there does appear to be unwanted touching initially at the least.
Paper Moon (Movie)
It is revealed that a woman lost her job because her boss wanted her to have sex with his friends (referred to as "putting out") and she refused to do so.
The whole movie eventually centers around human trafficking, especially the trafficking of young girls. Nothing is ever shown or discussed in detail, but it is implied that the girls are forced into this life.
Parker (Movie)
The female lead is taken hostage and one of the kidnappers loosens her blouse and swips little around her chest. She spits on him which prompts him in making threats that he is going to rape her. Fortunately, she manage to shoot him dead before anything really happens.
Passenger 57 (Movie)
The main terrorist pushes a stewardess up against the wall twice and threatens in a vulgar way to rape and kill her.
Payback (Movie)
A man threatens to rape a woman, but is killed moments later (58:40). Worthy of note: The same man is described as enjoying beating women for sadistic pleasure, and is shown to do so on a couple of occasions, albeit briefly.
The Penguin (TV Show)
S1E4: one character is forcibly undressed and hosed down methodically by hospital workers. A metal speculum is shown being taken off a tray and there is a sound effect.
The protagonist unintentionally kills a woman. He strips the clothes of the corpse and smells her body intensely; also smelling and touching her breast.
S1E4: a woman is found to be planning to avenge her sister's suicide after being raped by the episode's antagonist. Other sexual assaults by the antagonist are verbally detailed by the main characters during research, nothing is shown. S5E9: two coyotes (human smugglers) threaten a woman that she will be "earning" her passage across the border a different way. One man attempts to grab her, but she successfully fights back.
Phenomena (Movie)
Two men have a woman in their car while driving and one of them is trying to hold her still, but the woman escapes before anything happens.
Pieces of Her (TV Show)
The main character was physically and mentally abused by her father throughout her childhood, and it is implied that there was sexual abuse as well.
One female character is repeatedly grabbed and kissed by her lover's nephew, despite her systematic protests. There is also one instance of a male character insisting on a female character getting drunk (despite her repeated refusal to drink alcohol) as he stays sober. He does take advantage of her drunkenness to kiss her. When she passes out, he does not take further advantage of her and simply carries her to bed and lets her sleep. His nephew sleeps in the same bed, and he admits to letting her believe she might have slept with him.
A woman seduces a man with the intent of distracting him but it is quite clear from her face how uncomfortable she is.
Polar (Movie)
A character describes her sexual assault as a teen.
Police Story (Movie)
This film is about a cop protecting a female witness in a drug-lord trial. She is constantly chased, grabbed, pushed, kidnapped and mistreated throughout. Early in the film, the protagonist tries to convince her to accept his protection by hiring another cop to pretend he is a criminal trying to kill her. This fake killer breaks into her house while she is in her gown and acts like he is actively trying to kill her with a knife. During a comic scene in the police station , the protagonist tries to cope with different phone calls from people who need the police. One call is from a rape victim: she is ridiculed when she says that she was raped one year earlier and that she is seeking abortion pills.
In order to push a criminal to confess, female cops threaten to wrongfully accuse him of having raped a child. Female characters are slapped several times throughout the film.
Pretty Blood (TV Show)
An adult man interrogates a cat malino before sending him to a jupiter-like planet as his execution. The first goes through the second's criminal record while reading it out loud. One of the charges being taken towards a girl the second kidnapped.
A woman tells her father that her former lover (the protagonist) raped her several times a few days earlier. This is a lie used to cause him discomfort: the sexual encounter in question was shown beforehand and was consensual. At some point, a man touches the bottom of a woman in an elevator without asking her: she seems to enjoy it and they talk together once they leave the elevator.
Prodigal Son (TV Show)
Although there is no sexual assault, there are some murders with sexual undertones throughout the series. One of the main characters is a psychopathic serial killer who is obsessed with his adult children. It is revealed that he would drug his son as a young child with chloroform and groom his son to help him torture and murder his victims. Again, no sexual violence, but the relationship is abusive in a unique way and could easily be read as a metaphor for child sexual abuse. S1E9: a woman aggressively comes onto a man and tells him "we're going to have sex." as a statement and not a question. He never actually consents to it and is nervous and clearly uncomfortable, and is seen stumbling backwards while she advances on him. She slaps him across the face without any prior negotiation/warning, kisses him, throws him down on his bed, and rips his shirt open all while he awkwardly protests and clearly does not want it at all. The scene stops there when she finds he is wired with a mic and they are interrupted by his team (about 18 minutes into the episode). S2E12: a woman kisses a man who she previously had consensual sex with, but he is physically unable to move away and clearly does not consent to be kissed.
The male protagonist has sexual relationships with many older women. He is not interested in these relationships and is only doing so in order to solicit money to fund his musicals. He catcalls women from his balcony.
The Protege (Movie)
A man pulls open the over shirt of a preteen girl, then gathers bedding with the intent to assault her (1:36:43-1:37:00). He is killed well before that can happen.
Psych (TV Show)
S2E3: a man sniffs a woman he has previously flirted with. She is uncomforable with the sniffing. S2E12: a teenager harasses an adult woman by flirting with her. She is uncomfortable. S4E2: one of the main protagonists slaps another man on the butt without asking. S5E2: a police officer mentions a case that involves a serial rapist. S5E9: a woman potrayed as "crazy" makes advances on the protagonist and starts to kiss him though he is not interested in her. S5E12: a relationship between an adult woman and a teenage boy is mentioned. The father of the boy mentions that his son was "taken advantage of". S6E2: a group of characters are drugged and one character speculates that this was because someone was trying to take advantage of him sexually. The other characters dismiss this. S7E2: a man grabs another man's buttocks non-consensually. This episode also centers around women who are murdered for rejecting an antagonist, who makes some misogynistic comments about his motivation for murder.
S1E7: a woman rips the shirt off the male protagonist and caresses his chest. She then tasers him. S1E8: it is implied that the mother of the male protagonist was kidnapped, raped and impregnated by the antagonist. They do not go into detail and this is not further discussed.
Psycho II (Movie)
A woman is watched through a peephole while she showers, similar to the first Psycho movie. A waitress is sexually harassed by a customer and has uncomfortable comments made about her sex life. Two teens break into the main characters basement to have sex.
During a very short scene, a drunk man grabs a woman by her shoulder while asking for her name. She clearly feels uncomfortable about it. Worthy of note : later in the movie, a woman gets slapped many times during an interrogation. A man also hit her with a book.
A window washer washes a window with a woman's office on the other side: it is mentioned that he has repeatedly washed the window in the past and does so specifically so that he can see her (01:45-02:41). A man watches a woman sunbathe topless through a telescope (05:58-06:50). Worthy of note: a woman mentions being hit by her boyfriend.
The Rainmaker (Movie)
A woman victim of domestic abuse talks about how her husband mistreats her by being obsessed with sex. A prostitute is briefly seen being groped. A woman says that she had to have sex with different people in the company to improve her rankings.
Reckless (Movie)
A woman is violently kidnapped by two men, who blindfold her and tie her to a bed. They cut all her clothes off in a very intense scene and take pictures of her naked body. One of the kidnappers later reviews these pictures with obvious interest. When she needs to urinate, they pull her trousers and underwear down and force a plastic bucket between her legs. At one point, she initiates some passionate kissing with one of the kidnappers in a desperate attempt to manipulate him. Although the men never force themselves upon the woman, the implicit threat of rape is present for much of the movie. The woman spends the majority of the movie tied up and unable to defend herself against whatever the kidnappers may decide to do to her, and this uncertainty is used as a major source of narrative tension. The men also kiss each other, and it is implied that this is not consensual, but is one of the kidnappers' own desperate attempt to manipulate his partner.
After discovering the dead body of her teenage daughter's lover, a housewife takes desperate measures to protect her family from scandal.
S1E3: a domestic violence situation and sexual assault is implied. A man changes in front of two other men as a means of a powerplay to make them uncomfortable. S1E6: a date is used as leverage for a covert operation. S1E7: an undercover agent must pretend to be a boy toy for someone. He makes a joke about filing a complaint with HR, since he has been trying not to have sex with the CIA asset, since she has been trying to coerce him into sex. It is revealed halfway through season 2 that someone was assigned to be in a relationship with someone/is a honeypot. They have a lot of sex before she knows about it.
RED (Movie)
A man asks a woman to fix something for him so that she will bend over in front of him.
Red Heat (Movie)
It is mentioned that a character is wanted for rape and that his father was convicted of raping women during World War II. A male character receives an injection in his buttocks from a female nurse who then slaps him on the buttocks when he complains about the injection.
Red Notice (Movie)
One of the characters say something completely normal and the other person who is talking to him makes it seem like it was about sexually assaulting someone. A man says that he had a boned when a woman beated him. A woman puts an electrode in a man's genitals.
A rape joke is made early in the film. Rape is also mentioned (and ruled-out) as part as an investigation about a murdered woman.
A graphic joke is made about the fact that a character was raped in prison.
Resurrection (Movie)
Two female ghosts undress in front of a woman: they then begin kissing her without her consent.
Someone threatens to rape a man’s girlfriend: she is captured but no sexual violence occurs.
The Ripper (TV Show)
This documentary is focused on the crimes of the Yorkshire Ripper and the investigation aimed at identifying him which occurred during the 1970s. The Ripper's crimes were directed exclusively at women and based in sexualised misogyny; in particular, the show features discussions around sex workers (esp. violent crimes against and denigrating attitudes regarding them) and the domestic violence which occurred in the Ripper's childhood home. Moreover, the series continually addresses the misogynistic attitudes of the investigators themselves, as well as the negative impact which these attitudes had on the efficacy of their campaign. These issues are analysed critically by the show itself.
There is a brief scene (a few seconds) which includes sexual harassment in a club.
River's Edge (Movie)
Worthy of note: the naked body of a murdered teenage girl is shown throughout the film.
A man being led away in handcuffs by police screams (56:13): "He was raping my wife, he fucking raped my wife" No sexual assault is seen or discussed beyond this.
It is mentioned in the first part of the movie, that a 17 year old girl may be prostituting. Shortly after, the film deals with the case of a 13 year old girl who was orally raped by a serial rapist. The case is briefly mentioned again near the end of the film.
There is a scene where a woman is screaming as she is seemingly assaulted. It turns out to be a trap, she pretended to be assaulted to get someone to approach.
A school shooter threatens to kill students unless the teacher removes her shirt and bra: she complies. A boy tells about having his pants and underwear pulled down in front of a big audience in an assembly hwne he was younger.
Run Lola Run (Movie)
A male cop makes several suggestive comments towards a female cop he works with. A man accidentally touches a woman's chest as means to hold her back, he immediately removes his hands when he realizes.
Rush Hour 2 (Movie)
In a fight a man pulls off another man's towel. Later, after losing the flight, two men are stripped and dropped off naked in public.. A man watches a woman get undressed through binoculars.
Rush Hour 3 (Movie)
After going through an airport, two men are forced to undergo a cavity search as a means of intimidation. A man enters the dressing room at a theater and pretends to be a costume designer. He has the women strip naked and inspects them.
A woman tells one of her captors that he will be very popular in prison, and references him being sexually assaulted by many men.
Sade (Movie)
The film centers (and romanticizes) on the Marquis de Sade and thus contains numerous mentions of rape and scenes of sexual assault.
Saints Row: the Third (Video Game)
Due to the comedic nature of the game, there are some topics of sexual violence that are treated as a joke. A particular scene in the game revolves around rescuing a man who was being kept as a sex slave in a BDSM dungeon. Another scene involves rescuing prostitutes who were locked in cargo containers.
Samurai Cop (Movie)
The film contains plenty of verbal sexual harassment (and violence) targeted against female cops and nurse. The female lead refuses the lead male's advances several times verbally, then goes home with him and has a 'romantic date' that leads to tender sex scenes.
Saw (2004) (Movie)
A policeman makes a brief reference to paedophilia.
Saw 3D (Movie)
A man checks out his female coworker without her consent.
Saw II (Movie)
A man insults a woman by telling her the only door she knows how to open is her legs.
Saw III (Movie)
A woman is stripped naked for a trap.
Say Nothing (TV Show)
S1E1: a mother is seen bathing when a group of masked men break into her home and rip her from the tub, forcing her to walk out in a towel. Two teenage girls are cornered by a group of grown men. One of the men begins to beat one of the girls with a wooden block. S1E5: two women are forced to strip naked on screen after being arrested. S1E6: two women are forced to strip naked off screen after being arrested. They are also forced to stay in a men’s prison. A girl is attacked and strapped down by a group of men and women and force fed with a tube down her throat. The scene is not sexual but is very violent.
It is strongly suggested the male lead has had an incestuous relationship with his sister.
Scrublands (TV Show)
Spoilers: It is said that a priest is a pedophile, but this is turns out to be a lie.
Sea of Love (Movie)
Search Party (TV Show)
A man lies about who he is to have sex with someone, He later tries to physically force a woman to kiss him and have sex with him. She gets away before it happens.
Sentinelle (Movie)
The film revolves around revenge for rape, but the rape itself is only discussed and never shown.
Serial Mom (Movie)
The underage daughter of the title character was in a one sided relationship with a 22-year-old. Also, a cop flirts with two presumably underage girls. This is played off as comedic.
The Serpent (TV Show)
Throughout the series, men and women are drugged (often undressed) and killed. S1E1+2: a woman's drink is spiked and she is consequently kidnapped and murdered. S1E2: the male protagonist, who has just recently started a romantic relationship with a woman, suddenly says that he has to 'take what he wants' while grabing her by the neck and engaging sex. S1E4: the protagonist spikes the drink of his girlfriend (she willingly drank it as a 'test'), undresses her and hesitates to kill her with a pillow: he does not. Later in the episode, he touches an unconscious naked woman (drugged), with whom his friend has just slept with. S1E5: the protagonist punches a woman in the stomach and brings her to his room (presumably to kill her). A man intervenes and stops him. In the final scene of the episode, an antagonist is surprised by a woman in a room set in the dark. He threatingly comes near her but nothing happens. S1E6: one antagonist suddenly pins a woman to a wall, threatening her while speaking very close to her face. He eventually lets her go. S1E7: a woman is drugged, kidnapped and murdered. The protagonist goes to his ex-girlfriend's house, who is visibly afraid of him. He enters and stays despite her protestes. He ends up getting really close to her and threatening her. S1E8: the protagonist threatens his girlfriend (on-screen) and beats her up (off-screen).
Set It Off (Movie)
A boss agrees to give his new employee an advance only if she has sex with him first.
The film features a lot of brutality towards women: there are mentions of women being raped and killed in flashbacks in the beginning and the middle of the movie.
Sexy Beast (Movie)
One male character says that he was sexually assaulted by a steward on a plane: this is a lie in order to escape the legal consequences of having smoked a cigarette inside a plane. During the heist sequence of the film, there is a brief close-up of pictures that are hinted to be taken from a snuff movie (they show women being mistreated).
Sharper (Movie)
There is no onscreen sexual violence or assault, but the film includes multiple confidence tricksters having adult relationships with their unknowing targets, so it could be inferred that offscreen rape by deception forms part of those relationships. A young and vulnerable woman is wary of a strange man, telling him that she has a knife and to not 'try any shit,' when she gets into his car and goes to his place. They have an unhealthy relationship in which he is financially and emotionally controlling her.
A woman is cornered in an alleyway by two armed men; whether they plan to rob her or sexually assault her is unclear, but they comment on her attractiveness. She quickly overpowers her attackers and leaves. Later in the film, a woman drugs a man and leaves him tied naked to a headboard in her hotel room. The maid who comes to change the sheets is horrified and thinks the man is trying to get her to sleep with him. A character later comments his surprise that she was so scandalized, implying that a hotel maid should be accustomed to sexual harassment and assault from guests.
Sherwood (TV Show)
This show contains onscreen male violence against women, but it is not sexual or sexualised at all. "Rape by the state" is mentioned in one conversation, in the context of describing undercover police officers having sexual relationships with unsuspecting civilians. One female character is an undercover officer in this way, and her husband does not know (he never finds out in the course of the series).
Before interrogating a man and torturing him (water boarding) off-screen, a man acts threateningly towards a man held prisoner by invading his personal space (he is standing and his crotch being very close to the sitting man's face). Halfway through the movie, the female protagonist invites a man to sleep with her at her place, but she then understands that he is actually a threat to her. She asks him to stop: he complies, but when he realizes the situation, he tries to kill her, ending up on top of her and choking her: another man intervenes and saves her. A man threatens another man's daughter with sexual violence.
Sick Note (TV Show)
Throughout the show, a boss repeatedly makes sexual passes at an employee, who seems fairly oblivious to the situation. For example, he schedules one-on-one "meetings" in an attempt to either seduce or assault her, and she never questions: in S1E4, he shows someone his genitals. S1E1: the episode starts off with two men discussing whether or not they would have nonconsensual sex with the dead boy of Marilyn Monroe. S1E5: a woman gives an hospitalized man a handjob even though we do not know for sure if he is fully conscious or not. S2E7: a man harasses a disguised cop thinking he is a woman. When he does not accept his offer, he calls him a 'bloody lesbo'.
Sight Unseen (TV Show)
S1E5 includes a hazing where a girl is topless. S1E6 mentions allegations of attempted sexual assault. S1E7 includes sexual harassment
A prisoner throws sperm at a woman's face whilst also shouting abuse. The main antagonist of the movie (a man) forces female characters to moisturise under threat of violence. One man asks an uncomfortable woman if she was sexually assaulted in her youth. A man asks a woman questions about breastfeeding, which makes the woman uncomfortable. Worthy of note: nude bodies of murdered women are shown on screen.
The breasts of a dead female body are fondled.
The main character recounts having sex with her half-brother: some scenes are shown in flashback (no nudity).
A Simple Plan (Movie)
One of the characters gets drunk and grabs a woman’s bottom while she is at the bar. She is visibly upset and calls him out as he walks by: nothing else happens.
Sin City (Movie)
A police officer talks about a girl who has been raped and killed.
The antagonist blackmails his uncle into forcing his (adult) daughter to marry him. After he accepted, the antagonist goes to the woman's room and tries to kiss her despite her clear refusal: he persists and she flees. Later, a similar scene occurs when they are both alone in her house.
A sex worker in a brothel is implied to be unhappy about her work, and it is implied that she has been treated poorly by customers.
Smokin' Aces (Movie)
A man says that another man should be raped when he is found.
A woman has her clothes forcibly removed by a man while another takes pictures.
A man asks another character whether they were sexually assaulted whilst held captive.
Spiderhead (Movie)
Prisoners who sign up to be part of drug trials in exchange for a nicer prison and amenities consent to be drugged with a drug causing their libido to increase, leading to them willingly have sex with each other. While they technically can decline to be drugged, it is shown that they are threatened with removal from the program and sent back to regular prison if they choose not to be drugged.
About halfway through the movie, the main male character talks to one of the female protagonist, who is willing to leave his place. Getting close to her, he tries to convince her to stay while touching her face and getting threatening. The woman is visibly distressed, but nothing further happens: she then leaves.
Spy (2015) (Movie)
The film contains many instances of cat calling and non-consensual grabbing and kissing attempts. At the beginning of the film, the main character is given a rape whistle. Twice, images of male genitalia are displayed on screen. The main character warns another woman that a man has spiked her drink with GHB. After that, the victim implies that, based on the main character's appearance, she cannot be sexually assaulted. There is a scene where the main character is tied up, and a man takes the opportunity to touch her buttocks, then positions his pelvis at the level of her neck. The main character is visibly uncomfortable and does not consent to these actions.
Stay Close (TV Show)
S1E2: a man spikes a girl's drink. The latter uses color changing nail polish to discover the drugs and then switches the drink and drugs him instead. He is over 18, she is a teenager. A woman tells the story of her boyfriend, who offered a private strip show to his friends, and who broke someone's fingers after they tried to touch her despite her refusal.
Step Up (Movie)
A high school girl has relationship with “much older guy” who presents as a young adult in a band.
Stir Crazy (Movie)
In one of the first scenes (04:31-05:33), a main character implies that the weed he has is for his girlfriend that will let him "have her mind and her body [and also of] two of her girlfriends. At the same time (06:19-06:48), another main character insists to a woman he doesn't know that she has "nothing under that coat".
A woman who is being stalked is told by her stalker that he knows of a sexual relationship that happened with her teacher in highschool who also stalked her. She later reveals that she ended up telling everyone she lied because no one believed her, but it did actually happen. It is mentioned many times through the film to make people question if she is crazy or truly being stalked.
Sugar Hill (Movie)
Sugar (TV) (TV Show)
Around the 15 minute mark, a woman explains a situation in which a man attempts to blackmail her using a video of them having sex. The video is from a hidden camera and taken without her consent: he attempted to use the blackmail to rape her, and it is explained that he has successfully done this to many other women. S1E2: there are talks about victim who was raped and murdered. And then a man who was killed and is a human trafficker.
A character mentions her ex husband assaulting her.
At the start of the movie, a woman walks towards a group of men while naked (or just wearing a trench coat): they whistle and cat call.
Surveillance (Movie)
A police officer forces a woman to kiss him. Near the end of the film, the killers near the end restrain their victim and grope her before killing her.
There is a long scene in which a male officer searches a suspect for weapons, feeling and grabbing at him. It may be uncomfortable for some viewers. In another scene, a man tells officers that a woman is being raped. When they go to check, there isn’t actually a rape happening. However it is implied the officers went to the wrong place and that someone may still be in danger elsewhere.
A man bribes a columnist with a sexual favor from a womn who is visibly uncomfortable.
Sydney (Movie)
The main character is a sex worker: there is a scene where she does not get compensated for her work.
A man leers at a female passenger on a train, she is clearly uncomfortable and he slowly licks his lips while looking at her (05:10). A few moments later her momentarily grabs her thigh as he walks past (05:45). Later in the film, the same man deliberately touches the breast of another woman with the barrel of a machine gun and then claims that she is a sex worker and makes a number of derogatory sexual comments towards her (52:35). A subway police lieutenant mentions "sexual molestation" among the crimes they deal with on the subway.
The Tall Man (Movie)
There is a mention of a man seducing and molesting a young teenage girl.
Tangerine (Movie)
The film follows two sex workers so it contains several scenes of paid sex as well as some assaults (e.g. : a man pulls open a sex worker's clothes to expose her).
Tango & Cash (Movie)
At 33:48, two men are shown walking through a cell block while various prisoners shout threat at them, including threats to rape them. A man makes a verbal threat of sexual assault regarding a woman who is kidnapped (01:33:50): he is soon killed.
Tekken (Movie)
There is a past non-graphic mention of rape which leads to the main character learning that the rapist is his father.
S1E1: a man stares at the legs of the main female protagonist on a train and makes her feels uncomfortable. He later acts threateningly towards her but she eventually is seduced by him in the next two episodes (they have consensual sex). S1E2: a woman hints that a girl was the result of a rape committed during wartime.
Therapy (Movie)
Thief (Movie)
Mentions of prison rape (~40 min).
One policeman mentions suspecting that a man's intent in an attack might have been sexual. During a re-enactment, a drive-through movie theatre shows a very brief scene of two young people kissing in bed. The man attempts twice to take off his partner's underwear despite her refusal. The movie largely focuses on a murder case and does not linger on the subject of sexual violence.
A man spies on and then grabs a little girl before being stopped. It is implied, and characters later speculate, that he was attempting to molest her. A man makes repeated sexual comments towards his nurse. Rape and child molestation are repeatedly brought up throughout the film. A man threatens to have another man's girlfriend raped.
It is revealed in the second part of the movie that the murder victim (a father) had been sexually assaulting his daugther since she was 14. This becomes a central part of the plot and is thus discussed frequently throughout the rest of the film.
Thoroughbreds (Movie)
One character is mentioned to have done jail time for statutory rape for having sex with a minor when he was 23 (31:08).
There is some muffled cat-calling in the background during a very short segment.
Thumper (Movie)
Timecop (Movie)
Antagonists grab and attack a female character, who screams as she is pressed up against a window and touched in a sexual manner (14:00).
Timeless (TV Show)
Most of the women of the movie are hinted to be prostitutes. A man grabs a woman's breast without her consent: she does not seem distressed at all and even smiles, but she asks him to stop. A janitor stings woman's butts (dancers) with a needle as they are heading on stage.
The Town (Movie)
A bank robbery victim recalls that they were threatened with rape and murder if they talk to the FBI (12:17). During an FBI interrogation, an officer implies that the suspect's father is regularly raped by rival gangs in prison (1:17:53).
A man tries to feel up his date in the car, but she stops him. He tries again and she tells him to stop again, but then they are interrupted. A cop asks a doctor if a female victim was raped. The doctor says no, but says that she did have bite marks on her back, stomach, and breasts.
Tracers (Movie)
The main female protagonist states that her brother beat up a guy who crawled into her bed and started molesting her.
Traffic (Movie)
A man has sex with a 16 year old girl.
Tragedy Girls (Movie)
A man tells two high school girls that he is going to rape their severed heads. Worthy of note: One of the teenage protagonists attempts to use sex appeal to distract an adult male. However, he does not appear to notice.
Trainspotting (Movie)
A character (in his twenties) meets a teenager (15 years old) at a bar and has sex with her, presuming she was an adult. It is implied he would not have done it if he had known otherwise. In one scene, a woman removes a man's underwear while he is passed out in order to look at his genitalia.
Trapped (Movie)
The villain kidnaps her child, and then uses that to sexually harrass both verbally and physically. The heroine pretends to have consensual sex, but then pulls out a hidden scalpel.
Trespass (Movie)
The female protagonist is forced to the kitchen where a man tells her that she is going to “serve him like she served his brother”. She is also bend over the counter as the man continues to talk to her.
True Romance (Movie)
When being interviewed by the police, a character is goaded by the officers, who imply that he will be raped in prison, and tell him that it will make him a better lover in future because he will "know what it feels like to be a woman".
The True Story (TV Show)
S5E5: this episode is about the serial killer who inspired the movie Scream (1996). His crimes include rape and torture, and are discussed throughout the episode.
Tschugger (Movie)
Sexual harassment, sexual assault and paedophilia are frequently used as jokes throughout the show.
Tulsa King (TV Show)
S1E5: the main character's daughter tells him about a man who came to her home while she was alone. Nothing specific is said, but it is strongly implied that she was assaulted/threatened. The perpetrator is dealt with.
S1E4: a woman tries to sell two underage girls into prostitution. They find out on time and escape before anything happens. S1E23: a poor family sells their daughter as a maid to a richer family. Immediately after, a tragedy happens and the girl gets separated from the rich family.
Uncut Gems (Movie)
The protagonist is stripped naked and shoved in the trunk of a car. A man insistently asks a woman to make out with him: she eventually agrees.
Under the Bridge (TV Show)
A girl is missing, and her underwear and pants are found while searching for her. It is implied she may have been sexually assaulted, however upon autopsy, it is revealed she was not. A father is arrested after being accused of incest by his daughter. This is a false accusation that the daughter was encouraged to make by her friends. A teenage character discusses that she was sexually assaulted by her mother’s boyfriend, and the mother took the boyfriend’s side afterwards.
In the beginning main character spies on topless neighbour and a girl in a bathing suit. Other character uses a drone to spy on a woman.
One witness at the trial mentions prison rape.
All mentions of rape, sexual abuse, or sexual harassment are handled extremely well. It is never detailed or explicit, and both hosts are sensitive about the survivors, their stories, and the sexual crimes themselves. There are content warnings given twice at the very beginning of every episode.
Vera (TV Show)
S1E2: an older man has historically had a sexual relationship with a teenage girl, but this was in the past, before the episode starts, and the affair is not shown onscreen. Conversations about the affair are not sexually descriptive. S3E2: two teenage girls are kidnapped, and it is suggested in conversations that they may have been trafficked for the sex trade, but this turns out not to be the case. S4E1: two of the female characters, one of whom is a young teenage girl, have been raped prior to the events of the episode. The rapes are talked about, but not in explicit detail, only as something that has occurred and the psychological impact they have had. In one scene, the teenage girl is shown being harassed by her rapist and pushing him away (at the time, the audience is unaware that he is her rapist). Ultimately he faces no consequences. Two adult women characters are in the sex trade, and some of the male characters are described as having been their 'callers,' but none of these calls are shown onscreen. S9E4: there is some discussion about a teenage girl being "procured" by older men in the sex trade, but nothing is shown onscreen.
Violent Night (Movie)
It is mentioned that a teenage boy was the subject of a sexual harassment allegation: this is played for laughs. A heist leader tells his (female) subordinate to crush a man's testicles: she does not want to. Another guy pulls down the man's trousers and threatens to castrate him.
The protagonist is told in detail several times that he is going to be sent to prison and raped.
Walking Tall (Movie)
There is a prison rape joke at the very end of the movie.
Wednesday (TV Show)
This show contains multiple scenes where men or older boys are physically violent toward the titular character. An adult manipulates teenagers through supernatural means to seduce each other as a means of getting revenge against an entire group of people. The main female character kisses someone she thinks she loves but who is actually evil. S1E1: someone loses a testicle when the protagonist defends her brother from being bullied. An older boy asks the main character: "have you ever been with a normie," before attempting physical violence.
There are several mentions of the main characters possibly being drugged and/or sexually assaulted during a night out. No sexual assault actually occurs, but the movie leaves you wondering for an hour before revealing this. There is also a scene revealing that there are cameras set up in the private rooms of a hotel.
Season 4 involves a cult, and a peeping Tom is mentioned.
A character who is a stripper quits her job when her boss wants the strippers to have sex for money. A policeman wants oral sex from one of the men as a bribe but ends up accepting money.
One of the protagonists, an escaped convict, is implied to have a history with crimes that are sexual in nature.
The film involves 8 identical siblings. In one scene, one of the siblings has sex with a man, under the guise of one of the other siblings, unbeknownst to the man.
Wheelman (Movie)
The protagonist's ex-wife is kidnapped to pressure the him to commit a crime. On the phone the kidnapper threatens to rape his ex-wife, but later it is verified that that was only a threat; the ex-wife tells on the phone that nothing happened to her.
White Collar (TV Show)
S1E2: this episode features a man sort of groping a woman he took hostage. S4E7: a woman seduces a man at a bar so that she can blackmail him. S5E10: this episode reveals that a character seduced a character long term, just to get something out of him. Worthy of note: S3E2: Danny Masterson is featured in this episode.
The film contains several instances of misogynistic/sexist behavior like catcalling and insulting women.
Whiteout (Movie)
A man wearing only a towel asks a female police officer for a body search.
A male cartoon baby smacks a woman on the bottom. A female character is pressured into playing patty-cake with her captor, and an investigator catches them and takes pictures. The intention of the scene is to be a tongue-in-cheek euphemism without being overtly disturbing. A female cartoon very aggressively chases after and tries to force a kiss on a man.
Why Women Kill (TV Show)
A sexual relationship between an adult and a teenager (he is 18 but still in high school and living with his mom) is played as a problem only because it is a scandal as a consenting relationship between two adult men. When someone tries to get them to cut the relationship off, the person is shown as a manipulative shrew, instead of someone trying to protect a teen from an adult predator. At no point does the narrative present the relationship as abuse.
The film revolves around an anonymous person sending often very explicit letters to their neighbours.
Widows (2018) (Movie)
A woman becomes an escort out of financial desperation.
Wild Cards (TV Show)
Season 1 features an actor sleeping with a producer to get casted.
Wildland (Movie)
A man makes an inappropriate sexual advance towards his teenage cousin, though nothing comes of this. A man bursts on his teenage cousin whilst sh i's in the bath, refusing to leave when she asks him to.
A group of men harass a woman, ripping off one of the legs of her trousers to expose her leg.
A woman is threatened by her lover and told to remove her underwear but is not assaulted. A character says the word "rapist" in a list of kinds of criminals. A woman is drugged by a doctor; off-screen her pregnancy is terminated against her will.
Woyzeck (Movie)
The Yards (Movie)
The male protagonist is said to have had an incestuous relationship with his female cousin (a main female character) when they were teenagers. Worthy of note: near the end of the movie, another male character abuses his girlfriend who is leaving him (at some point, being on top of her in stairs). He ends up killing her.
Yes, Madam (Movie)
The opening scene involves a character attempting to flash the protagonist. Two characters start stripping and restraining a female character: it looks like they are going to assault her, but then they just take the platter of food she is carrying instead. An antagonist tries to take off some of the protagonist’s clothes, and then she beats him up.
Zero Day (Movie)
Zodiac (Movie)
A man is accused of and later charged with molesting children; this all happens off-screen, but child molestation is referenced several times throughout the second half of the film.