They Were Holding You Back

"The Alpha: Scott, I think you're getting the wrong impression of us. We really just want to help you reach your full potential. Scot: By killing my friends? The Alpha: Sometimes the people closest to you... can be the ones holding you back the most. Scot: If they're holding me back from becoming a psychotic nutjob like you? I'm okay with that."

- Teen Wolf episode 10.

Alice is a very fortunate woman, she's the best at her profession in the world, has a group of supportive friends and a loving family. True, she probably longs for adventure and excitement or wider recognition, but that's a minor concern compared to the bliss that is her life. Bob knows of her skills and sorely needs them, so he makes a generous offer for her to join him and help in his (potentially evil) goals, sweetening the deal with the promise acclaim, power and wealth. Of course, she'll refuse because she's happy where she is. In fact, she probably quit Bob's team not long ago precisely to get that happy family life.

So how does Bob get her into the fold? He kills these happy people to remove all her links to mundane life. Usually he's smart enough to frame one of his enemies, or at least make it seem like an accident, that way he can channel Alice's rage and despair towards his cause. If Bob is especially malicious and grand in scope, he may even give Alice a Doomed Hometown and make her Conveniently an Orphan.

You can expect the fireworks to start once the secret is revealed. Alternately, Bob might instead kidnap one or all of her friends and family in order to more directly control her, or as a backup since their murder can will backfire. If Charlie wanted to make Alice pull a Mook Face Turn / Heel Face Turn (or at least leave/betray Bob) revealing this Villainous Demotivator is sure to work.

A more sinister variation happens when Bob is a Poisonous Friend who wants to "help" Alice by killing her Living Emotional Crutch and Morality Chain. The reason? "They were holding you back from achieving your true potential."

Subtrope to The Call Knows Where You Live.

Anime & Manga

 * Black Cat (manga)..
 * Yu-Gi-Oh!: This is how Dartz groomed each of his "Three Musketeers" to be vengeful bringers of the Apocalypse. It backfires on him when one of them discovers the truth about his tragic past, but Dartz has already acquired more than enough power to stop him.
 * In Battle Angel Alita, when Yasugun comes to his sensei to talk about fear of death, he is told that a perfect machine he is striving to be should feel no emotion and if its his sister that is the source of the doubt, he should kill her.
 * Naruto has a curious case: Sasuke's only goal from the beginning was to kill is brother, Itachi, to avenge his clan. As the series progressed he started to develop bonds with his teammates, only for the Sound Four to arrive and give him a beating and a Hannibal Lecture, to convince him that his bonds are holding him back and he should leave the Leaf Village to search for power.
 * In Kara no Kyoukai:, is convinced that the only thing holding Shiki back from a murderous existence is Mikiya, and attempts this along with Murder the Hypotenuse..

Comic Books

 * In the comic book American Way the US government wants a college football coach to come back to work for them, training their super hero squad. The coach refuses for the sake of his wife, so the US government kills her so he'd come work for the gov't. Except it turns out they just gave her a million dollars to move to Wisconsin.
 * David Cain once found two very promising martial arts-practicing sisters who he believed would be able to give him a suitable heir. Problem is, neither was dedicated enough to become that potential perfect mate. So he killed one of the twins and enraged the other to release the full power of her training as Lady Shiva.
 * In the early issues of the new Batman and Robin series, Damian Wayne's mother Talia put control devices in his spine and manipulated his body in order to have him kill Batman (Dick Grayson). Her reasoning was that Dick was holding Damian back by making him Robin, though it was clearly more along the lines of unhappiness that Damian was not obeying her since when using the machine she even commented that "this is what it's like to have a son who does what I want." Damian refused her "help" after Dick freed him from the control, and his mother has since cut ties with him via Cloning Blues now that he's siding with his father's legacy.
 * This was somewhat the reason why the second Zoom attempted to kill Wally West's wife Linda (and succeeded in in Geoff Johns' Flash run. He felt that Wally needed a great personal tragedy in his life to strive to become a better hero, and Linda being alive in a happy relationship with him was preventing this from happening.

Film

 * In the Wolverine movie, this is apparently why Victor kills Kayla.
 * In Star Wars it is elaborated upon in the Expanded Universe that Palpatine had plans to kill off Padme anyway, he felt that Vader's love for her was holding him back.
 * This is very, very common in Sith training in general. Removing the "weakness of compassion" by killing a loved one is usually the last step in becoming truly devoted to the Dark Side. See Jacen Solo.
 * Despicable Me would have Dr. Nefario
 * Speaking of the above, Megamind has this when Minion
 * A less malignant version of this is what drives the main conflict of The Adjustment Bureau: the Bureau doesn't try to kill Elise but aims to keep her and David apart because David's drive to become a politician and make a positive difference in the world was his means to cope with the loneliness he felt after losing his parents at an early age (also due to the machinations of the Bureau). According to the Bureau, if David and Elise remain together, David won't become President and change the world for the better. Likewise, Elsie would fail to become one of the greatest ballet dancers in the world.
 * In the French film With a Friend Like Harry..., Harry tries to clear all obstacles to his favorite writer's progress, including family.

Literature

 * This is what the villain of Decorator intends to do to Erast Fandorin in the end.
 * Thufir Hawat in Dune.
 * The origin of one protagonist in Vladislav Krapivin's Crystal-verse series. One secret society is dedicated to protecting and teaching kids with unusual abilities, which Dark and Troubled Past makes more obvious, and they run a boarding school, so they only watch the bureaucracy of social services and push some levers... Either that, or find children they want to acquire, remove their parents making it look like an accident, then ride in on a white horse when bureaucrats "for some reason" deny custody to other relatives. Good news is that well intentioned extremists prefer "humane" methods of making people vanish: interspacial travel in the setting is anisotropic, so even if exiles know anything of this fringe discipline and somehow can make proper equipment in the world where they were dumped, good luck with finding a way back.
 * In Windmills of the Gods by Sidney Sheldon, the heroine turns down an offer from the President to become a US Ambassador. Unfortunately for her, the villain really wants her to take the job, so arranges for her husband to die in a tragic car crash, so that she will be free to accept.

Live Action TV

 * Earth: Final Conflict starts with this, when Boone's wife is killed by . The killer does consider it a favour, too... then again, the killer committed their own spouse to an insane asylum so they wouldn't interfere with the killer's work for the Companions.
 * The ending of Harpers Island reveals that
 * In Law and Order: Criminal Intent this is done to Goren by
 * Very narrowly averted in an episode of Burn Notice, in which Tom Strickler offers Westen a chance at his old life back, if he does some morally questionable jobs, which he eventually agrees to. Then Strickler
 * In La Femme Nikita, Michael's wife and child are killed by a terrorist and Michael joins Division to enable him to track him down and exact revenge.
 * In Supernatural, Azazel states that this is the reason Sam's fiancee had to die.

Video Games

 * Appears in Knights of the Old Republic, where the player can make a minor character do a Heel Face Turn if it's proven to him that his Sith sensei offed his girlfriend for "limiting his potential".
 * Another Star Wars example: In The Force Unleashed 2, Darth Vader tells Starkiller to give up on his love interest Juno because she is holding back his progress in the Dark Side, his exact words being, "Rise above this, she means nothing" and, "She was holding you back." Vader tells Starkiller this after Vader had just mortally wounded his girlfriend right in front of his eyes, and this does not bode well for Vader winning back his apprentice.
 * In God of War


 * In The Darkness, the titular creature prevents Jackie from saving, claiming that   was a restriction on his personal freedoms.


 * The sequel reveals that
 * In In Famous, Kessler killed Cole's future wife Trish because having a family will hold Cole back against the Beast in the future.

Western Animation

 * In the last season of Codename: Kids Next Door, a mysterious splinter cell takes interest in Numbuh One. In one of the final episodes, they manipulate events so that, breaking one of his last emotional ties before declaring that "He's almost ready".
 * In Young Justice, Harm did this to himself, so that he could become pure evil since the Sword of Beowulf will only bestow power on a "pure" individual. It ultimately failed; shatters Harm's "purity" and the Sword rejects him.