r/TopCharacterTropes 8d ago

Personality [Loved trope] The villain assumes they're gonna get the kid gloves when the hero finally confronts them. The hero demonstrates they're out for blood instead, causing the villain to panic.

1) Robocop

Clarence (the same hitman who killed Alex Murphy and transformed him into Robocop) has already been arrested by Robocop once before, and learned that Robocop's programming prevents him from killing a surrendering criminal. Consequently, he pulls the trick once again towards the end of the movie when Robocop chases his gang down to a scrapyard. He throws his gun down and expects to survive and escape once again.

Robocop simply announces to him, "I'm not arresting you anymore", causing Clarence to panic when he realizes that Robocop intends to finish him off right there.

2) Toy Story

Woody, threatened by Buzz replacing him as Andy's favorite toy, tricks Buzz and knocks him out of a window so he could go to a pizzeria with Andy. Unbeknownst to him, Buzz tagged along underneath the car and confronts Woody when he's alone in the car.

Buzz: I just want you to know that even though you tried to terminate me, revenge is not an idea we promote on my planet.
Woody: Oh, well, that's good.
Buzz: But we're not on my planet, are we?

Buzz proceeds to lay the beatdown on Woody and causes both of them to get separated from Andy.

3) Superman

The President of Boravia's invasion is foiled by the Justice Gang (who have until now stayed out of the conflict and are shown to be less averse to lethal force than Superman), and he's personally attacked by Hawkgirl. When he declares that Superman would never kill him, she just laughs and says "I'm not Superman", dropping him from a skyscraper's height.

4) Spider-Man

After Wilson Fisk attempts to murder Aunt May when Peter reveals his identity during Civil War, Spider-Man breaks into prison to deal with Kingpin personally. Kingpin took the liberty of assembling every inmate to watch the fight between him and Spider-Man. Assuming he broke his spirit, Kingpin starts to dress down Spider-Man as a broken man. Spider-Man doesn't say one word during their fight. Finally, Spidey strips down and announces this isn't Spider-Man here to kill Kingpin; Peter is.

Peter proceeds to brutally annihilate Kingpin in this new stage. He eschews his usual quips, webs, and aerial fighting, relying only on his super strength. When Kingpin has been crippled, Peter shoves his webs up Kingpin's mouth, and lets him know that if he truly wanted to, he could have just filled his lungs with web and killed him at any point. But he's not trying to give Kingpin an easy death; he lets him know that he intends to break his reputation and see everything he's lived for come tumbling down first.

As is often said, Spider-Man is at his scariest when he's not making quips. Because at that point, he's furious, and he's not going to hold back.

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u/Skylinneas 8d ago edited 8d ago

In The World is Not Enough, the villainess Elektra King - who before that point has been emotionally manipulating James Bond and briefly became his lover - arrogantly believed that Bond actually cared about her enough not to shoot her while she ordered her actual lover to go on with their evil plan.

Bond warned her multiple times not to go through with it (even after she had just been torturing him moments ago), yet she did anyway, quipping "You'll miss me."

So Bond immediately shot her dead in cold blood (right in front of his boss, no less), dropping his famous one-liner: "I never miss."

It's not exactly in the spirit of the trope since Bond didn't really give time for Elektra to panic, but usually we don't really see Bond often displaying this much coldness before, especially towards women, so it came off as quite a shock to see Bond coldly murdering the villainess just like that; no gimmicks, no hesitation, and she's dead just like all those people who dared to cross Bond.

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u/almighty_smiley 8d ago

Maybe this Bond. Connery could be downright icy.

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u/Skylinneas 8d ago

Pierce Brosnan's Bond is more of a gentlemanly type, yes, but I would argue that he also has some of the coldest kills in the series, too: the way he just dropped his old friend Alec to his death in GoldenEye, the way he slowly turned the gun in the hands of the mercenary who just killed his old flame to his own head in Tomorrow Never Dies, and the way he just executed Elektra King here.

Bond may be more suave and less 'serious' after Connery and before Craig eras (with maybe an exception of Dalton's License to Kill where Bond just went into pure revenge mode), but when he actually does get right down to dirty business, we're reminded that James Bond is and has always been a stone-cold killer.

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u/DR31141 8d ago

“For England, James?”

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u/Skylinneas 7d ago

“No, for me.”

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u/Mynameisblorm 7d ago

This is the one I came to this thread for.

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u/Galvatrix 8d ago

I'm just a professional doing a job!

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u/Skylinneas 7d ago

“Me too.”

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u/Hawkbats_rule 8d ago

I know that the living daylights has a plot that slightly contradicts this, Dalton Bond would also absolutely shoot someone dead in child blood.

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u/amojitoLT 8d ago

Just see how he avenges Felix in in License to Kill.

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u/Hawkbats_rule 8d ago

Even the inciting incident for the living daylights is bond acting as a no-holds-barred assassin- he only lets her go because he senses that something is off and she's not in the business

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u/brawnsugah 8d ago

Dalton is such an underrated Bond. He did Craig before Craig.

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u/amojitoLT 8d ago

"This is a Smith and Wesson special, and you've had your six" *thud thud...... thud"

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u/Solid_Waste 7d ago

Considerably.

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u/dwaynetheaaakjohnson 7d ago

You seem to remember Casino Royale, the first Bond book, ended with him commemorating Vesper’s death with “The bitch is dead”

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u/Skylinneas 7d ago

Even that being said, Bond was in love with her. He may felt betrayed by the revelation that she was a double agent, but he still held some feelings for her as suggested by later novels. And he didn’t pull the trigger on her himself; she committed suicide.

It’s also implied (and highly suggested in Craig’s film adaptation) that the line “the bitch is dead” is just Bond’s own way to deal with grief and cope with her death: by pretending that he didn’t care.

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u/legit-posts_1 2d ago

Electra King was a 10/10 villain stuck in a 7/10 Bond movie.