Weak-Willed



"Lisa: Watch yourself, Dad - you're the highly suggestible type. Homer: Yes, I am the highly suggestible type."

- The Simpsons

Heroes and willpower go together like bread and butter. She may be a Determinator with Heroic Resolve or Heroic Willpower, even perhaps capable of Fighting From the Inside to shake off Mind Control.

Then there's characters who just need an amateur hypnotist with a bit of twine and a bottle cap to be hopelessly under their control. These characters are Weak Willed, they may be just as confident and resolute as anyone else, but they have absolutely no defense (or maybe a negative defense, if such a thing is possible) to mind control.

It's not just against mundane party game hypnotism, but also brainwashing or Psychic Powers. The Jedi Mind Trick can leave them in a day long haze, and Charm Person will make them lifelong love slaves. At times, they may boast they have an iron resolve that can't be broken, before being comically "switched on" to Minion or The Renfield just by glancing at the goofy swirly eyes. Their new master may even be unsettled by how readily they took to the conditioning.

A common variant is the "easily suggestible" -- their weakness to brainwashing stems from a chronic wishy-washiness; if they're incapable of putting up resistance to mundane used car salesmen, how can they hope to fight off Hypnotic Eyes?

Truth in Television to a certain extent, since some people are more susceptible to hypnosis than others. But in Real Life, 'highly suggestible' means about as susceptible to hypnosis as the average TV character is, since hypnosis is a lot less powerful than it's made out to be. But also interestingly inverted in Real Life, as hypnotizability is actually positively correlated with higher intelligence. (Many of the mental characteristics that allow hypnosis to work, such as attention span, imagination, mental flexibility, and understanding of language and concepts, are more prevalent in the more intelligent. People with IQs below 80 are often considered effectively 'unhypnotizable.')

If it's a friend rather than an enemy doing the hypnosis, expect it to devolve into a Pygmalion Snapback or Teach Him Anger. Compare Extreme Doormat and Empty Shell.

Anime And Manga

 * One Piece's Monkey D. Luffy is so suggestible that the hypnotism doesn't even have to be aimed at him. He was hypnotized by a chakram on a string from over a hundred feet away, when the guy doing the hypnotizing was trying to hypnotize his underlings, not Luffy, and was surrounded by so many people that Luffy should barely have been able to see the chakram, let alone concentrate on it hard enough to be hypnotized.
 * This is especially interesting when you realize that he's a Determinator with one of the strongest wills and most stubborn mindsets in the series. He's just really easily hypnotized. Of course, he's also the quintessential Idiot Hero, and the Rule of Funny always applies.
 * Of course that hypnosis made him much, much stronger. So maybe he wanted to take advantage of the enemies' techniques.
 * Or, he really is that suggestible, considering earlier he fell asleep just by looking at the chakram. Also notable is that the first hypnotist we see in the series is almost as susceptible to his own hypnotism powers as Luffy is.
 * Later on: "This tea is delicious!"
 * There's Jun Yamamoto from Special A, who is so weak-willed that when he was younger,  No, really.
 * Gilbert from Pandora Hearts has been brainwashed multiple times as a kid, as a grown up  It's a wonder how he's able to keep Oz alive.
 * Wolfram from Kyo Kara Maou is subjected to this. Justified though because

Comic Books

 * Superman has a rather undeserved reputation as this, due to the frequency with which people brainwash him. It's not as though he's exactly weak willed, and in fact often breaks out or at least partially resists their control himself. It's just that he's such an attractive target for brainwashing that it happens a lot.
 * And it's also one of the few holes in his otherwise-invulnerable powers. While he's not weak-willed, his lack of any special protection against mind-control or magic makes it seem like a glaring weakness compared to his other capabilities (and, well, relatively speaking, it is.)
 * Despite her very strong personality Lois Lane was surprisingly vulnerable to hypnosis, at least in the Golden Age, with a tendency to fall very quickly and very easily into a trance. In 1940/41 alone she was hypnotized in five different stories.
 * The Squadron Supreme, a Captain Ersatz of the Justice League who existed to job to Marvel heroes, were retconned to be Weak Willed due to their universe's absence of mind-controllers, in order to justify the way they were mind-controlled in every single one of their encounters with the mainstream Marvel heroes.
 * Donald Duck in the comics is prone to boasting he's immune to hypnosis and subsequently being extremely easily hypnotized. In one story by Carl Barks he was even hypnotized by a children's toy he only imagined to have the power to do so. In another by Don Rosa, he fell asleep immediately as soon as the hypnotist started speaking about sleepiness.
 * Actually used as an advantage in an issue of Justice League Europe in which The Flash (Wally West) is the weakest-willed member of the team, and therefore he's the only one who's able to pick up an extremely weak telepathic distress call from another dimension.

Film

 * The original Jedi Mind Trick only works on "the weak-minded." This means sometimes it works and sometimes you're going to hear "mind tricks don't work on me - only money."
 * In one of the Abbott and Costello films, a psychologist tries to hypnotize Lou Costello. Lou proves to be completely immune, but the psychologist accidentally hypnotizes himself. Then Lou wakes him up, and managed to accidentally hypnotizes him again mere seconds later.
 * In Disney's Aladdin, Jafar uses this on the Sultan.
 * Mina Harker in [Bram Stoker's Dracula]] (directed by Francis Ford Coppola). It seems all you have to do is wave your hand in front of her face and she's in a trance.

Literature

 * The entire Cavewight race has this problem in The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. Combined with the fact that they're physically large and powerful, this got them warped by the Big Bad from a race of peaceful miners into his Ax Crazy shock troops.
 * The Imperius Curse from Harry Potter works this way; it will enslave weak-willed to do the caster's bidding. In this case, however, it also depends on the intention behind the caster, because if they don't mean it, it will be easier to break the curse.
 * It's probably more accurate to say that it affects anyone who's not strong-willed; Harry was the only one out of his entire class able to throw it off (with difficulty).
 * It's possible that Ron falls under this trope—he seems to fall under Veela magic more easily than the average guy, was the easiest for Voldemort's locket to manipulate, and when Imperiused by Moody was actually still partially affected at the end of class (he couldn't stop skipping for a while).
 * Artemis Fowl is mesmerized more easily and more frequently than any other character in the series.

Live Action TV

 * In The Dick Van Dyke Show Rob was hypnotized into acting drunk when he heard a bell; but the subject of the hypnosis was Buddy, not Rob, and he wasn't even in the room when the hypnosis happened.
 * Star Trek: Voyager ("Spirit Folk"). The Doctor is being held prisoner by the inhabitants of a holodeck program left on too long, who were weirded out by the crew coming and going like ghosts. To get some answers, someone suggests they try hypnosis on him. Being an AI Hologram himself, he dismisses it as childish...and he promptly gets completely hypnotized.
 * Not to mention how he's reprogrammed into becoming evil at the push of a button in "Equinox."
 * Sarah Jane Smith from Doctor Who may be one of the Doctor's most independent companions, but she's also been hypnotized or brainwashed more often than almost any of them.
 * Not as much as Amy Pond though.
 * Morgana in Merlin is easily hypnotized or entranced.

Tabletop Games

 * The Will Save of Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition (and to a lesser extent, its descendant, Will Defense, inf 4th Edition) dictates whether or not a character is Weak-Willed. It's based on the Wisdom stat and a class may or may not get a bonus to it. This lead to classes that prioritized Wisdom and with a good bonus (Monk, Cleric, etc.) to being very strong willed, while classes that prioritizes other stats and gave no class bonus (Fighter and Rogue, especially) being almost legendarily prone to this trope. A very real possibility was for the party's Min-Maxed warrior to turn on the party's Squishy Wizard the moment an enemy cast Dominate Person. Barbarians actually get a bonus to Will Save while raging to try to prevent just such a scenario.

Toys

 * Lewa from Bionicle is not explicitly stated to be Weak-Willed, but he often finds himself the victim of things like Evil Masks and Puppeteer Parasites as part of a Running Gag. On at least one occasion, he has eventually managed to free himself through willpower (with a bit of help from his friends), so he could be considered a downplayed example.

Video Games

 * Kain from Final Fantasy IV has built up a bad reputation due to the apparent ease his enemies have in brainwashing him to do evil. It actually only happened once - with a gap in the middle of the story where the signal was bad.
 * Subverted in the end of the game, as evidenced by the "Read the lead member's mind" thing you can do in the DS version, where Zemus, the guy who tries to control him again, this time by making him hate Rosa for choosing Cecil. He fights it off with ease.
 * And in the sequel, it's, not Kain, who gets brainwashed by the Mysterious Girl. You do end up fighting Kain as an enemy a lot in the base chapters, all the time claiming he's not being controlled this time.

Web Original
"Todd: Apparently they have power over the phenomenally weak minded."
 * Played for Laughs in Suburban Knights after gets controlled by


 * The Nostalgia Critic has a rather worrying tendency to get manipulated and controlled really easily. For example, he would have done anything Sage as the Devil told him to do if it meant getting his mind erased of Sequel Month.

Western Animation

 * Donald Duck in the DuckTales (1987) series' episode "Spies on Their Eyes"
 * Gutsman from the Mega Man Animated Series.
 * Homer Simpson. One episode has him er... 'resist' the most powerful mind control techniques of a commune, until they change the lyrics to the 1960's Batman score from "Batman" to "Leader".
 * The Transformers Animated version of Wreck-Gar doesn't even need to be hypnotized first. If you tell him something, he will do it. If you tell him he is something, he will believe it whole-heartedly, until somebody else tells him he is something else. This is mitigated - somewhat- at the end of his first appearance... when it is suggested to him that he be less suggestible.
 * Beast Boy from Teen Titans, as shown in the page pic. He isn't a total pushover, but for some reason is really suggestible to Mad Mod's swirly TV screens. Must be because he is the dullest of the five, as well as some deep-rooted inferiority issues due to his relationship with his father figure, Mento. Or possibly just because they're on TV screens.
 * His one-time girlfriend Terra too, who relies on others to make choices for her, even if it's the evil Slade. Appropriately enough, Beast Boy manages to man up himself and get her to strengthen her willpower too, which leads to her redemption.
 * Sam from Totally Spies! is mind-controlled inordinately often. In comparison, vain Clover ends up dealing with some sort of Body Horror.
 * Bullwinkle is generally Too Dumb to Fool, but he was once put under the control of "The World's Greatest Hypnotist" by a snap of the fingers. The best part? Said hypnotist was the villain in disguise, who had no hypnotic powers or skills of any kind.
 * The Secret Show: Wanting to be called back into active duty, retired U.Z.Z. Agent Zach Meadows impersonated Dr. Hypno, a criminal from his days who hypnotized his victims and he was the only one who managed to defeat her. Once he was exposed, he explained he could only affect people with low intelligence, which explains only Victor being affected. Unfortunately, the real Dr. Hypno didn't like being impersonated and came back from retirement to settle a score with the impostor.