You've heard of the Forbidden Zone. Here's its Lighter and Softer counterpart.
The existence of a room that is forbidden to everyone else. There is usually no specific explanation: all characters are told is that they must avoid it. This can lead to characters seeking it out because it's a Forbidden Fruit. The reasons for its secrecy vary — maybe the room belonged to someone they once loved, who is now deceased. Maybe the room represents a painful part of their life for them. Or maybe it's sealed off for sinister reasons.
Usually, finding out the secret behind it may change the character's perception of the homeowner for better or for worse.
A forbidden room is often kept locked, and the protagonist might try to find where the key is hidden, or enter through the window. If they accidentally find the key, they are then almost certain to explore the forbidden area.
Can be Truth in Television, in that some houses have a sitting room which is only used on very special occasions, a study which only one person is allowed to enter, or a room which is forbidden to children because dangerous or inappropriate materials are kept there. An attic or basement is often an area off-limits to children.
Differences this trope has from Forbidden Zone:
- Forbidden Zones are often deadly, hence them being called "forbidden zones". These ones are sealed because of some sort of emotional value to another character.
- Characters may be sent to the Forbidden Zone as consequence. These types of rooms aren't meant to host anyone else.
- Usually, these rooms hide some sort of dark secret.
If the house belongs to a woman's new husband or boyfriend, this may be a clue that he is The Bluebeard.
Also, this often is an Inevitably Broken Rule; the plot demands going to the forbidden spots eventually.
Can be related to Madwoman in the Attic, This Is My Side, Room Full of Crazy, Basement Dweller, Boarding School, and Quirky Household. See also Empty Bedroom Grieving, Mysterious Teacher's Lounge, and Wondrous Ladies Room. Compare Secret Room.
Examples:
open/close all folders
Anime & Manga
- Dengeki Daisy: When Teru is staying at Kurosaki's apartment, she is forbidden from entering his Hacker Cave, which is always kept locked when Kurosaki isn't there. Teru is eventually able to get in anyway and discovers enough evidence to confirm that Kurosaki is Daisy.
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Tin Labyrinth: Doraemon and Nobita check into the mysterious Hotel Burinkin, a fully automated, futuristic tourist resort staffed entirely by robots, while their (human) host Sapio tells them the facilities at Burinkin are free of charge, but the basement is off-limits to guests. Nobita comments "Who'd want to visit some dank basement anyways..." but later as Doraemon inexplicably goes missing, Nobita tries searching for Doraemon only to stumble into the basement, where it turns out to be a creepy maze-like labyrinth accessible via a Cave Mouth (who outright talks to Nobita taunting him to enter "if he dares") housing some dark secrets.
- Lady!! has a lighter example. Lynn is forbidden from entering Sarah's room at the Marble Mansion because she's an Ill Girl who doesn't like socializing. Lynn tries to cheer her up by bringing her flowers from the garden, only to be screamed at, and she runs away in tears. Sarah later feels horrible for what she did and after Lynn returns safe and sound, the two sisters reconcile.
- The Secret Garden (1991):
- The garden of the Craven house was once beautiful and thriving until one day Lilias Craven fell from a tree and died. Mr. Craven was so heartbroken that he had the garden closed permanently because it reminded him of her. When Mary innocently asks him to let her have access to it, he starts furiously berating the girl. Afterwards, Mary decides to tend to it in secret. Also, unlike the book, the garden is also linked to someone else: Lilias's old friend Camila.
- Ever since she arrived at the house, Mary has continuously heard crying at night. Whenever she tries to investigate, she's stopped by Martha and Mrs. Medlock. One night, she manages to get lucky and discover the existence of Mr. Craven's son, Colin. Both Mary and Colin think the other are ghosts at first.
- Spy X Family: Anya has free reign of the Forger household except for Loid and Yor's bedrooms, as they don't want her finding out they're an undercover spy and assassin respectively(a fact that she already knows, being a telepath), or messing around with their equipment and hurting herself. Trying to sneak into Loid's bedroom during a game of "secret agent" gets her an uncharacteristically harsh scolding (which Loid promptly makes up for by joining in the game).
Fan Works
- Dungeon Keeper Ami: When Ami needs to warn people not to snoop in her dungeon, she gives them necklaces that heat up when approaching a forbidden zone, on the threat of being given a Forced Transformation if they do trespass.
Films — Animation
- Beauty and the Beast (1991): The Beast tells Belle that she's allowed to go anywhere in the castle except for the West Wing, where he keeps his wilting magic rose, along with mirrors and portraits of himself that he destroyed. She ends up eventually going there nonetheless, leading to him lashing out at her and Belle trying to run away.
- Encanto:
- While never said aloud in the film, a deleted scene reveals that Abuela's room is off-limits to everyone else in the family.
- Bruno's tower is off-limits to the Madrigals due to the stigma around his name and disappearance.
- Klaus (2019): In Klaus's workshop, there's one area that's covered by sheets. Jesper uncovers it without knowing what he's doing wrong, and Klaus unsuccessfully tries to stop him. When the two of them see what the sheets are covering, a set of shelves with two wooden dolls, Klaus yells at Jesper to leave. Later, it's revealed why Klaus was covering that part of his workshop; the wooden dolls represent him and his late wife. The two of them hoped to have children but were unable to, and the empty shelves represent this.
Films — Live-Action
- The Cat in the Hat: A temporary one. Joan is hosting a work event at her house that night and orders Conrad and Sally not to set foot in the living room while she's gone, for fear of them messing it up. The Cat convinces them otherwise, and while the living room does get messed up (along with the rest of the house), it's nothing the Cat can't fix.
- The Conjuring: Soon after discovering the Creepy Basement full of junk, the father forbids his children to go down there.
- Rent-a-Kid: The movie opens with the three Ward children seemingly being adopted by a rich couple, who forbid them from entering one specific room in the house. The youngest daughter, Molly, enters the room anyway and suddenly finds herself outside where her brothers, the couple, and orphanage director Cliff Haber confront her, scolding her for screwing up the siblings' chance of getting adopted. It's All Just a Dream fortunately.
- The Shining: While talking to Dick Hallorann about their shared experiences with the Shining, Danny inexplicably mentions the hotel's room 237. Hallorann seems shocked at first and then commands Danny to stay out of that room. Later Danny, and then Jack, enter the room where they have an encounter with the sinister ghost of an old woman.
- The Skeleton Key: Protagonist Caroline is giving hospice care in an old Louisiana mansion where she's been given a key that works on every room in the house... except one. There's a locked door in the attic that's gotten her attention and drives her curiosity, and when she keeps prying and picks the lock, she begins to uncover a sinister history of Hoodoo rituals. Turns out, her becoming curious and discovering the room was part of the villains' plan, as they could not weaponize Hoodoo magic against Caroline if she did not believe in the religion.
Literature
- Bluebeard: Bluebeard welcomes his new wife into his home, but warns her never to use the keys to open one specific room. While he's away on a business trip, curiosity gets the better of the wife and she opens it, discovering that her husband is a Serial Killer and the rooms contain the bodies of his dead ex-wives.
- "Bluebeard's Wife" by Ursula Vernon: The title character's Berserk Button is an invasion of privacy due to her snooping sisters, so when her new husband tells her never to enter the room at the top of his tower, she simply leaves the key in an urn and remains Happily Married until his death. She assumes, quite incorrectly, that it's something like her father's private study.
- In the children's novel The Door That Had Never Been Opened Before, three kids (two siblings and their cousin) live together in a large manor house that has a mysterious door that was left with an instruction to never open it, but no one knows why since Great Grandma Grunion, the woman who built it, is long dead. Eventually, the kids open it anyway and find it leads to an Acid-Trip Dimension called the Land of Never Before.
- The Famous Five:
- Uncle Quentin's study is strictly off-limits to the children, especially in Five Go Adventuring Again, when George takes Timmy into the study at night, and some of Uncle Quentin's papers are stolen on the same night. The study also contains the entrance to the Secret Way, which makes it more difficult for the children to explore it.
- Also in Five Go Adventuring Again, this is downplayed when the children explore Kirrin Farm House to find the Secret Way, and Mrs Sanders tells them not to enter the bedrooms where the artists are staying. Later, the Five enter the Secret Way from the other end, and discover that it leads to Kirrin Farm House, and right into these forbidden bedrooms.
- In Five Go to Smuggler's Top, Mr Lenoir's study is forbidden, in that he diligently keeps it locked. George desperately tries to enter it to rescue Timmy who is trapped in a secret passage, and sneaks in when Mr Lenoir briefly leaves the room; only to find herself trapped there when he returns.
- In Five on Kirrin Island Again, the children hunt for Uncle Quentin on the island, as he has stationed himself there to carry out an important experiment. As the key is in the lock, they check to see if he is in the mysterious tower he has had built there, but he is not. When Uncle Quentin suddenly appears, the children ask him where he was, telling him that they looked everywhere, including in the tower. On hearing this, Uncle Quentin explodes with fury, telling them that the tower is extremely dangerous, and connected to his experiments, and they must never enter it again.
- Goosebumps: In the book Stay Out of the Basement, Margaret and her brother Casey Brewster are forbidden from going into the family basement by their father Doctor Brewster who is a botanist. He claims that he has experiments down there that he doesn't want to be disturbed, but he actually doesn't want the siblings to find out that he's a living plant that has taken their real father's place.
- Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone: During his speech at the start of the school year, Professor Dumbledore declares that one of the rooms on the third floor is off-limits "to anyone who does not wish to die a most painful death". When Harry, Ron, and Hermione enter by accident, they find out Dumbledore wasn't joking, as the room is home to the vicious three-headed dog Fluffy. They eventually learn that Fluffy is there to guard the entrance to the lengthy passageway that leads to the Philosopher's Stone.
- Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff: In Balthasar's fortress, Josh and Biff are mostly allowed to go where they please. However, they're explicitly barred from entering one particular room that's sealed with an imposing iron door. Balthasar always carries the key on his person. It turns out to contain the demon Catch, who kills Balthasar and all but one of his wives when it gets loose.
- The Magician's Nephew: Digory has been forbidden by his Aunt Letty to enter Uncle Andrew's study on the top floor. In the first chapter, appropriately titled "The Wrong Door", Polly and Digory blunder in there when they explore the attic tunnel, leading to their adventures.
- In the fairy tale Mary's Child, a pair of poor parents give their young child to be raised by the Guardian Angel. When she turns fourteen, the Angel gives her thirteen keys to unlock the doors of the Land of Happiness but forbids her to open the thirteenth door. She opens twelve of them but gives in to temptation and secretly opens the thirteenth. Behind it are three angels sitting on thrones surrounded by bright light, and when she puts her finger into the light, it turns golden. The Angel returns and discovers the girl has opened the forbidden thirteenth door. When the girl attempts to lie that she did not open it, the Angel casts her down to Earth.
- Northanger Abbey: The Tilney family takes Catherine on a tour of the Abbey upon her arrival, only to tell her that no one goes into the one wing they didn't visit anymore. Upon being told that the wing only contains the rooms of the late Mrs. Tilney, the Wrong Genre Savvy Catherine immediately assumes she's discovered a mystery to be solved about the woman's death. In fact, she just died of an illness and General Tilney doesn't like people going in there because he's never gotten over her death.
- In Now You See Me by Lesley Glaister, one room in Mr Dickens's house has a plank nailed across the door, as Mr Dickens's wife Zita supposedly burned to death in there. Later, Lamb removes the plank simply by pulling it away, and discovers no trace of a fire in the room at all.
- The Secret Garden:
- When Mary arrives at the Manor, she is forbidden to go anywhere in the house apart from in her wing. This is to prevent her from discovering Archibald Craven's son Colin, and she does discover him when she hears him crying.
- After the death of his wife, Archibald Craven forbade any access to her beloved garden and had the key buried because her memory was too painful for him. Despite this, Mary starts visiting it in secret and making sure it's healthy.
- In the Shivers (M. D. Spenser) novella, The Locked Room, the titular room is one of these. Said story is a Whole-Plot Reference to the Bluebeard mythos where the protagonist's divorced mother re-marries a man named Bill Beard and moves to Bill's lavish mansion, with Bill's private study locked at all times. Turns out Bill was an immortal murderer from the 18th Century and the room contains portraits of his slain wives, together with locks of their hair, but anyone familiar with the Bluebeard story would've figured out that twist easily.
Live-Action TV
- Goosebumps (1995):
- In the episode "Monster Blood", Evan's great-aunt Kathryn tells him not to go in the room upstairs in her house. He goes into the room out of curiosity but gets caught by Aunt Kathryn, telling him that it's forbidden to enter. Evan and his new friend Andy go into the forbidden room, while Aunt Kathryn was out of the house, and find a can of Monster Blood.
- In "Shocker on Shock Street", Erin and her friend Marty are being guided around her father's animatronics workshop when she asks him about a particular room. He very expressly forbids them from ever entering that room. It's because he built Erin and Marty there and was trying to prevent them from realizing that they were robots.
- House of Anubis: Students of Anubis House are forbidden from going into the attic or cellar. This extends to Victor's office if he doesn't allow them entry, or if he's not currently there. This is because of the secrets Victor hides there, such as artifacts from the original owners of the house and the chemicals he uses to create elixir. The kids rapidly break these rules in order to start solving the mystery, with the attic and cellar in particular being used constantly by Sibuna. Of course, they need to be sneaky while they do it, as getting caught means putting their plans in jeopardy. That said, for all of Season 2, it's an open secret that they're in the cellar, as this is where the challenges for the mask take place. This forces Victor to also sneak around at times, while Sibuna are only punished if they're caught directly, as otherwise, it would force them to address the situation they're all in.
- In the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Requiem for Methuselah", Rayna has been told by Flint to never enter a specific room, something which troubles her quite a bit. His reason is that it is where her previous Android versions are kept.
Video Games
- Baten Kaitos Origins: For almost the entire game, a guard in Verus's mansion prevents Sagi and company from entering a certain room, saying it's Verus's private quarters for communicating with his guardian spirit. One NPC alludes to having his perspective of Venus changing due to seeing what's inside, but it's not until the very end of the game, after you've defeated Baelheit, that you can finally see what's inside. It's a torture chamber, all of the equipment showing signs of recent and regular use, a reflection of how Verus was Evil All Along.
- The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim:
- Played With when it comes to the "Pelagius Wing" of the Blue Palace. It's been abandoned due to its unsavory association with the long-dead ruler Pelagius the Mad, as well as claims that it's haunted by his ghost. While the court wizard claims it's been completely sealed for centuries, the servants admit that they go in there every year to clean up cobwebs. When the Dragonborn enters it, he’s whisked away to Pelagius' own mind, and there meets Sheogorath, who tasks him with trying to help restore Pelagius' sanity.
- Most of Dragonreach is open, even the Jarl's personal quarters, but there is one door in the basement of the castle that is locked, and to which only the Jarl and his court wizard have keys. This is because the door leads to a room in which someone interred an Artifact of Doom called the Ebony Blade, which is a conduit for the evil god Mephala.
- Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing includes a short story about a time warp in the front closet. The owners lock the closet, and simply say that it's used for storing tax documents. When years pass, the owners hire a house sitter, who decides to pick the lock to the closet, only for the portal to open into King Richard, who sees the infeidel and pulls him in.
- The lab's Culture Experiment room in Resident Evil 2 is impossible to access on an initial playthrough, requiring both characters to register and supply one half of the credentials to unlock the door. If the character from the alternate "B" scenario opens it up, you'll find the place filled with all kinds of creepy biological experiments, evidence that something really messy happened inside that released a trio of Super Lickers, and either a submachine gun or ammunition for one found on a U.S.S. agent's mutilated corpse. The highly unsettling music really drives home the "'You're not supposed to be in here" vibe of the place.
- Terranigma: The blue door in the Elder's home in Crysta. What is behind it is the Box that holds the Crystal Spear at the beginning, and in the Light Side equivalent of Crysta: Storkholm, is the box that holds the Hero's Pike and Armor.
Webcomics
- Homestuck: John's dad keeps his bedroom locked and off-limits at all times. John only gets to see it when a hole is knocked in the ceiling, leading to the Faux Horrific revelation that the room is completely boring and his father is an ordinary businessman who's been faking his love of clowns.
Web Videos
- Daisy Brown:
- Daisy's father kept her out of the basement. He claimed it was due to black mold, but he actually had a secret that he never wanted her to know about. As a result, Daisy was terrified of the basement. However, Alan once locks her in there when he gets particularly cruel one day, and she's forced to explore it, finding more monsters — with Daisy having only been aware of Alan himself. There are also other dark secrets down there, such as the very lab he uses to make monsters and the body of a man he dismembered.
- Daisy was forbidden from going outside because "people can't be trusted". So she grew up very sheltered, even developing a fear of cars. However, Alan started to kick her out of the house for long stretches of time, forcing her to sit outside and watch said cars go by. In this instance, there's nothing particularly dangerous or secret about the outside world; it was more of a control and isolation tactic from her father. She later takes Lithop, the female monster, and flees the house for good.
- Minilife TV: In Chris and Ian's house, there's a door with a sign saying "KEEP OUT!" that leads to a room where Chris works on a secret project that he doesn't want Ian to see until it's done. In the episode "Dream Sequence (Again)", it's revealed that it's an animation studio and he makes stop-motion animations there as a hobby.
- "Rooster Teeth Shorts": "Secret Door" is about Gavin trying to find out what's behind a mysterious door in the Rooster Teeth offices, which his co-workers insist contains nothing important. Turns out it's where they keep his clones.
- PONY.MOV: In SHED.MOV, Fluttershy requests her friends to "stay out of her shed". This piques their curiosity to see what's inside it. By the end of the short movie, the Mane 6 regret ever doing so.
Western Animation
- The Dragon Prince: After the death of King Harrow, the king's former bedroom is seen as off-limits to most of the castle, out of respect for the late king. It's more of an unspoken rule, as Viren faces no opposition when he goes in there but is clearly distraught at going in (as no one has touched the room since the night the king died). It stops being this when Ezran, as the new king, takes the throne.
- Face Like a Frog: The basement of the house is off-limits, with an entire Warning Song being dedicated to not going down there. When Max finally does go into the basement, he finds out that it contains a train that goes to Hell, but also makes a stop at Miami Beach.
- Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends:
- In The Trouble With Scribbles, Bloo comes across a secret door in the house, which Frankie and Mr. Herriman explain to him is forbidden to open, and no one in the house is willing to tell him what is behind said door. When his curiosity becomes too great, Bloo opens the door, and the room is revealed to house a massive quantity of Scribbles, a species of Imaginary Friend created by babies that take the form of literal scribbles. While pretty harmless, the only trouble they are capable of creating is in their numbers due to the sheer quantity of them being enough to flood the entire house.
- "Land of the Flea" features this at the end, with all of the imaginary fleas being shut up in a room filled with fur and the same "Stay Away, Do Not Enter" sign being placed on the door. The Stinger even shows Bloo obsessed with it as he was previously, never mind that he already knows what's in this one.
- The Simpsons: The "Treehouse Of Horror VII" segment "The Thing And I" has Homer and Marge telling Bart and Lisa to never go into the attic. Naturally, curiosity gets the better of Bart, and he enters, to discover his Evil Twin Hugo. Then it's revealed by the placement of the scar where Dr. Hibbert separated Bart and Hugo that, to no one's surprise, Bart is the Evil Twin, and he subsequently gets locked in the attic and Hugo is allowed to live freely.
- SpongeBob SquarePants: Played for Laughs in "Knock, Knock, Who's There?"; Mr. Krabs allows SpongeBob to watch every part of his house while he's at a convention, but with a condition to "Do not step foot into me bedroom!" SpongeBob instead floats through the bedroom on a balloon and when it pops, he walks with his hands.