You have lost me here.
I have no idea what you are trying to say here.
Art imitates life.
If you watch a disaster movie, or monster movie or show you will notice a significant amount of time is spent trying to convince the "super skeptic" of the group that what is happening is actually happening. Often, these skeptics will literally see a monster, demon, alien, rogue planet, asteroid, etc. - and they still deny till the last minute. In the mean time, the people coddling this behavior end up hurt, or killed. And, the irony is the super skeptic usually lives through most or all of the disaster.
That is a motif in movies because it happens, and will happen. Think about Zombie movies, for example: people who know what is going on double tap "Hungry Nana" in the head; those who are oblivious (despite profuse talk from "crazies") end up trying to reason with and hug "Hungry Nana." They get bitten, and/or put others in danger because of their ignorance.
Or, a movie like Final Destination 1&2, where Clear and Alex clearly have insight on what is going on, but are always in danger because everyone else is ignorant of the precognition connections given to them - even by "death himself."
Even movies like "The Darkest Night," where cloaked reptilian aliens attacked earth, the earthquakes, alarms and disolving of terrans is just enough to make people scared and run. By then it is too late. Even throughout the movie a couple of characters did reckless things because they couldn't accept that these entities were real.
Ignorant, incredulous people get other people hurt and killed in disaster situations, especially those with an abundance of hauteur.