Eye Scream/Comic Books

Examples of s in include:

"She just drew me a beautiful house. She drew it with this pencil... The one I've just sharpened. Open your eyes WIDE, Pearl! Beautiful... blue... oh..."
 * Used to be common in 1950s and earlier horror comics. Frederic Wertham's infamous Seduction of the Innocent described and probably named the "Injury to the Eye" motif, giving examples from comics of the time.
 * Dick Ayers was inordinately fond of eyeballs flying from heads in the horror comics he illustrated for Eerie Publications (not to be confused with the comic Eerie, from Warren Publications) in the 1960s and '70s.
 * A similar Joker example appears in Birds of Prey, where the Joker details his much beloved gag-gun (that shoots out a metal pole with a flag attached to it that says "BANG!"), puts it right up to a goon's eyeball and says "Wanna see?" then pulls the trigger.
 * Another Joker example, much like the one above, occurs when The Joker threatens to shot one of his goons, but a flag that says "bang" comes out instead. Said goon relaxes and says "It's not loaded..." right before The Joker pulls the trigger again, and calmly says, "Nope," as the flag gets fired and lodged in the goon's eye.
 * In The Dark Knight Returns takes a batarang in the eye.
 * Joker threatens a nurse with a freshly sharpened pencil to the eye to lure Batman in during Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth.


 * One of the creepier villains of The Sandman was The Corinthian, a nightmarish serial killer who escaped from The Dreaming and had toothed mouths in his eye sockets. He feasted on the eyes of his victims. (There's a different kind of eye squick entirely in a different scene -- where his shades get knocked off in a struggle and his additional sockets bite the fingers off one of his attackers. Oh, Lord.)
 * For added eyeball trauma, there was the issue where Doctor Destiny used Morpheus' dream ruby to control the patrons of a diner and eventually drove a teenage girl to stick skewers in her eyes. "I can see the glory!"
 * As the Sandman Companion points out, nearly every issue has some Eye Scream moment in some form. Gaiman admits being overly fond of/disturbed by the trope.
 * The Corinthian's own personal spinoff, Death In Venice, has less of this trope than you'd expect. Still, high points include the Russian soldier who the Corinthian swaps an eye with,, and Amedeo being
 * The father of DCU character Mister E gouged out his son's eyes with a sharpened spoon for having a girlie magazine under his bed. Is it any wonder the son has issues with women?
 * Later issues revealed that
 * In one of the X-Men books, Wolverine popped Sabretooth's eyeballs with his bone claws, complete with closeup.
 * In another X-Men comic, a pair of demonic sentient Binoculars, vacuum suck out a man's eyes and use them as its own.
 * In Grendel: Devil's Legacy, child-molesting serial killer and Tujiro saves the eyes of his victims as souvenirs.
 * In Watchmen, Heroic Sociopath Rorschach takes his first step toward that status as a kid: some bullies, one of them smoking a cigarette, mock him (accurately) about his mother being a whore, then when they start getting physical Rorschach grabs the cigarette and sticks it into the kid's eye.
 * Spider Jerusalem does the same thing to an obstructive, mouthy Transient in Transmetropolitan.
 * Early in X-Man Psylocke's superhero career, she filled in for her brother as Captain Britain. The tenure didn't go too well and during a fight with her brother's arch-enemy Slaymaster, he stabbed out both her eyes and then proceeded to beat her nearly to death. Mojo later gave her cybernetic eyes, which transmitted what she saw back to him, letting him turn the X-Men's adventures into TV shows, giving him godlike status in his home realm. She kept these eyes for the remainder of her time in her original body, keeping their function a secret.
 * In Spider-Man miniarc The Other, He gets better.
 * In a particularly memorable Hellblazer story arc, three of John Constantine's children (The result of a Deal with the Devil) set about destroying John's life, systematically killing his friends, family, and any and all of his remaining allies, John is brought to his knees by their use of HIS methods. It seems like John's met his match in them. When he finally regains his Magnificence it is illustrated by extinguishing his still-lit cigarette in his son's eye and telling him to "Let the grown-ups talk".
 * At the end of "Confessional", Father Tolly commits suicide by putting two pencils to his eyes and headbutting the pew in front of him.
 * In "Hunger", John and an african shaman "share a vision" - by the shaman plucking out one of John's an his eyes an exchanging them. One could argue that John was hallucinating, the ritual also featuring a herbal drug ("Christ. I hate psychedelics"), but he promptly complains "Why does primitive magic always hurt!"
 * In Cerebus, Minds, Dave Sim uses the "Injury to Eye Motif" to Cerebus, the main character.
 * Two Green Lantern Corps storylines, "Ring Quest" and "Eye of the Beholder," has this in spades. At the end of "Ring Quest," . In "Eye of the Beholder," in which Green Lantern rookies are targeted with psychological warfare, when (spoilered because some people would probably like to sleep tonight).
 * Kyle Rayner has a frequent tendency to go for the eyes when fighting his enemies, especially when he can't use his ring.
 * Shows up in superhero deconstruction The Boys... as a power of one of the two sympathetic superheroes, Starlight, who can emit a flare of blinding light.
 * Wily Pete of Empowered has found that, since he is a walking body of flame, only one part of the human anatomy lasts long enough for him to get his jollies. And one wonders why Thugboy has some issues. Even if you somehow survived this, his load slowly boils your brain.
 * This happens to Mindf** k when her brother
 * Chaos & Control from The Savage Dragon would hardly be as memorable without the Eyescream. For those too squeamish to look, Chaos is a big, horned monster. Control is a little guy who controls it by sticking its horns into the sphincters he has where his eyes should be.
 * Rose Wilson, while under the influence of Psycho Serum, gouges her own eye out to prove her loyalty to her father Deathstroke.
 * A Running Gag in The Goon. One of Franky's favorite moves is "KNIFE TO THE EYE!".
 * Also played straight with.
 * Preacher: It's not shown, but the story behind Herr Starr's mutilated eye is enough to evoke sympathy for an often monstrous character... when he was a little boy,.
 * To be more specific,.
 * And during War in the Sun, Jesse Custer loses his left eye entirely -.
 * In the Planetary issue "The Torture of William Leather," part of the eponymous torture is done with needle lined goggles.
 * In the Hitman/Lobo crossover, Tommy introduces himself to the 'Bo by tapping on his shoulder and calling him "Miss". Just as Lobo turns to kill the bastich who called him that, he gets shot in both eyes.
 * In an issue of Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight, Willow is being tortured by . He begins by popping at least one eyeball with a scalpel.
 * In Identity Crisis, Green Arrow sticks an arrow through Deathstroke's blind eye.
 * Kay from Fables can see every evil thing somebody has ever done. Going by what trope this is, you can probably guess his means of dealing.... And since he's a Fable, his eyes keep growing back, and he keeps cutting them out.
 * Not shown, but suggested in The Invisibles when the Conspiracy is subjecting King Mob to Cold-Blooded Torture. Sir Giles reads an excerpt from the handbook on how one should take care when removing the eyeball so as not to sever the optic nerve, thereby allowing the victim to see everything.
 * Marvel's Thor gouged out both of his own eyes with his fingers as a sacrifice for knowledge during his Avengers: Disassembled tie-in.
 * DCU Anti-Hero Vigilante (not to be confused with the cowboy themed Vigilante that appeared in Justice League Unlimited) gouges out . Vigilante, who doesn't follow Thou Shalt Not Kill, only "spared"   because he had promised Rose Wilson   that he wouldn't kill him.
 * Several times in the Punisher MAX comics by Garth Ennis. Castle gouges out Pittsy's eye with his finger, he cuts out Rawlins' eye during torture, and he stabs Barracuda in the eye with a penknife in a fight. Given the brutality of that series, there are half a dozen other instances.
 * In Punisher MAX during the Kingpin arc, an unfortunate Mook winds up having his skull squeezed until his eyes pop out of their sockets. If that wasn't nauseating enough, readers are treated to several panels of him fumbling around with his eyes dangling by the optic nerve. He eventually manages to get them back into his head just in time to run into The Punisher
 * One mainstream comic by Garth Ennis has a deranged man paying homeless people to lure other homeless into the sewers and kill them, heaping them into a giant pile of decomposing corpses that he uses like a nest. A fairly level-headed and pacifistic social worker confronts him and is so disgusted and horrified that she claws one of his eyes out in a blind rage. The man doesn't seem much bothered by it.
 * In one Catwoman story arc where Black Mask had captured the title character's sister and brother-in-law, Eye Scream was just the beginning of the torture that he had in store for them:
 * In The Ballad of Halo Jones, it's apparently standard military training to learn how to put an enemy's eyes out with your thumbs.
 * A heroic example occurs with Kylun in the pages of Excalibur when the evil Necrom attempts to lure him into a trap with an image of his dead girlfriend. Kylun isn't fooled, and as Necrom is sneaking up behind him to drain his life he lashes out with one of his magical swords, slashing Necrom across the face and putting out one of his eyes. Kylun attacks Necrom, the guy who actually killed his girlfriend in the first place, but the villain sensibly flees the battle.
 * Judge Dredd loses his eyes to Zombie Dredd during the "City of the Damned" arc. And he keeps going. Because he is a Judge. And it is his duty.
 * In "The Final Solution" arc of Strontium Dog, Johnny loses his eyes when he tries to scan the Lyran monster to figure out how to kill it and return the mutants to Earth.
 * In The Walking Dead the Complete Monster the Governor suffers a particularly vicious torture fest, including having one of his eyes dug out with a spoon. Later
 * And then there's the super-disturbing story about a guy who got really stoned and ate his four-year-old son's eyes.
 * In Titans 33, Deathstroke gets his eye torn out.
 * In Sin City, Marv beat Manute so badly that he tore an eye out.
 * Not as gruesome as the above examples, but in Devil's Due's G.I. Joe vs. The Transformers, Snake-Eyes confronts Starscream, who badly burned Snake-Eyes' face and cost him his voice the last time they crossed paths. Snake-Eyes gets his revenge by slashing open Starscream's optic and shoving a live grenade into the open socket.
 * Usagi Yojimbo: In the "Treasure of the Mother of Mountains" story arc, Usagi fights an oversized thug. Usagi manages to gouge the thug's left eye before the thug's buddies overwhelm him and take him prisoner. They continue to trade eye-related insults for the rest of the storyline until Usagi escapes from imprisonment, the thug tries to take him down - and Usagi intentionally slashes out the thug's right eye and leaves him there instead of striking a finishing blow.
 * Frequently featured in Frank Miller's Give Me Liberty.
 * Happened once in Johnny the Homicidal Maniac where Johnny was torturing people, one was a guy with his eyes nailed to the wall above him, out of their socket, but still attached to his head.
 * Deathstroke from the Teen Titans comic lost an eye when his wife shot him for endangering their son Jericho (which led to Jericho getting his throat cut and losing his voice). And as mentioned above, he loses the other eye in Titans #33.
 * In one story, Superman got a shard of Kryptonite lodged in his eye (among other places) courtesy of Livewire.
 * Has happened twice to Marvel Family villain Captain Nazi. Catman jabbed him in the eyes with hypodermic needles during Villains United, and when he showed up in the Batman books a few months later with nifty gadgets that let him see, Red Hood blasted them with a stun gun.
 * Kaare Andrews' cover to Incredible Hulk vol 3 issue #44 depicts an eye being threatened by a worryingly close scalpel.
 * Elf Quest's aptly-named One-Eye got his name after a human gouged out the other one with a sharpened stake. Not seen, just referred to as part of his back story. In a later storyline the human warlord Grohmul Djun punishes an inattentive guard by putting his eye out with a shard from the elves' Palace.
 * Doctor Strange lost his left eye when the demon Ghaszaszh Nyirh blasted it with a bolt of energy. He wore an eyepatch for a while, until Agamotto restored his eye (or more accurately, gave him someone else's).
 * Anathos inflict this to Shimy in Les Legendaires by burning and piercing her eyes with a Flaming Sword. Because he didn't like the way she was looking at him.
 * Anathos inflict this to Shimy in Les Legendaires by burning and piercing her eyes with a Flaming Sword. Because he didn't like the way she was looking at him.