The Dog Shot First



"Dunc T'racen: Alderaan shot first. Ulicus: Don't give Lucas ideas!"

- TheForce.Net forums

A form of characterization resulting from Executive Meddling used to prevent a hero character from seeming too sadistic. Normally, the original scene is a typical example of Shoot the Dog; in the recut of the scene, it's basically self-defense meets Karmic Death, even if the original shooting was in self-defense. Some call it Bowdlerising, some call it necessary, and it has spawned the "Han Shot First" meme.

Here's how it might play out:

Original scene:

Goodie and Baddie struggle on edge of building. Goodie drops Baddie off edge of building.

Edited scene:

Goodie and Baddie struggle on edge of building. Baddie winds up hanging from the arm of Goodie. Baddie shoots at Goodie while hanging onto his arm; Goodie, while dodging the bullet, is forced to let the Baddie fall.

Sometimes this trope comes into play without Executive Meddling; the writer assumes that the Viewers are Morons, and that they will lose sympathy with a hero who kills preemptively, even if, in the situation at hand, only a hero who was Too Dumb to Live would let the baddie live.

Not to be confused with The Dog Bites Back.

Anime and Manga

 * Inverted in Mazinkaiser, a reimagination of Mazinger Z. In the OVA, Dr. Hell When Go Nagai penned the Mazinkaiser manga,  in an abrupt, albeit iconic and stylized, sequence.
 * The 2011 Hunter X Hunter anime does this with a villain. In the manga, Hisoka kills several Hunter Exam competitors, mostly For the Lulz ("playing examiner"). In this version, they ambush him because they deem him too evil to become a Hunter. He still mostly kills them For the Lulz, though; they couldn't have actually harmed him much, given how powerful he is.

Comic Books

 * Cable is well aware of this trope when dealing with the Six-Pack (with added Deadpool).
 * In the original comic book, Spider-man accidentally killed Gwen Stacy when she was falling by failing to consider the speed difference between them, snapping her neck. Marvel constantly switches between the positions that either Spider-man couldn't have saved her no matter what he did (as she would have died from the fall anyway) or that she was already dead when her body was thrown off of a bridge.
 * In Infinite Crisis, Batman is holding a gun to the head of the Big Bad who has caused destruction and murder on a cosmic scale though Wonder Woman convinces him If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him. In the original release of the issue, one panel has a "CHAK" sound effect to indicate Batman chambering a round. Several fans assumes the effect indicated Batman was pulling the trigger and the villain only survived because of an empty gun, causing a small uproar. For the trade, DC opted to remove the "CHAK" entirely to avoid the confusion.

Film
"Elektra:You couldn't kill me, you'd miss me. (bang) Bond: I never miss."
 * Star Wars: The originator of the title comes from one of the changes made from the movie's original cut to the Special Edition. In the original, Han shoots Greedo when Greedo holds him at gunpoint, tries to take his money, and implies that eh, he might wind up dying anyway. In the special edition, Greedo shoots, misses at point-blank range, and gets shot in self-defense. The scene was later re-re-edited to make Han dodge the shot and fire at almost the same time as Greedo.
 * In one of the original scripts (dated January 15, 1976), Han indeed shot first.
 * Which makes it even more insulting when George Lucas made a statement, in 2012, claiming that Greedo has always shot first: "The controversy over who shot first, Greedo or Han Solo, in Episode IV, what I did was try to clean up the confusion, but obviously it upset people because they wanted Solo [who seemed to be the one who shot first in the original] to be a cold-blooded killer, but he actually isn’t. It had been done in all close-ups and it was confusing about who did what to whom. I put a little wider shot in there that made it clear that Greedo is the one who shot first, but everyone wanted to think that Han shot first, because they wanted to think that he actually just gunned him down."
 * Which is kind of silly as the bounty-hunter held a gun on him and had announced blatantly that he intended to kill him. It was perfectly within Han's character to shoot first(heck it was probably perfectly within the character of Sir Galahad) and anyone dumb enough to not shoot first has no business being a smuggler.
 * Interestingly, there is a picture here, of George Lucas wearing a "Han Shot First" shirt while Harrison Ford looks on, taken while shooting Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
 * Apparently the whole ordeal was due to changes demanded by the MPAA. The PG-13 rating was created after the original film, and when Lucas submitted the special edition cut to the MPAA he had to change the scene to avoid a PG-13 by not having Han shoot first. So at least one thing is not Lucas' fault, and this may explain the shirt. On the other hand, if this is the case, it means Lucas shouldn't be able to play the "new editions are my original vision" card, which he does constantly.
 * Lego Star Wars on the 360 has an achievement: "Shoot First". Later, Greedo is seen missing a dartboard at point-blank.
 * Ironically, the book Han Solo at Stars' End contains this quote by Han Solo: "I happen to like to shoot first, Rekkon. As opposed to shooting second." Ironic because it was released in 1979, way before the Special Edition.
 * It extends to the Star Wars Miniatures line, where Han has the 'Cunning Attack' ability, giving him an attack buff against an enemy who hasn't taken its turn yet.
 * In one of the card games, Greedo gets a desperation attack which allows him to shoot first, but if it fails he dies instantly (it's the only technique in the game that has this result).
 * It's even older than Star Wars, as it also features in the first James Bond film, Dr. No. In it, Bond confronts Professor Dent. The original script called for Dent to get shot right off the bat, but execs chewed them out ("Oh, sure he has a license to kill. Just Take Our Word for It!") and the scene was changed so that Dent actually fires a gun's worth of missed bullets into a decoy before Bond interrogates him and picks him off. Further still is that after this, according to some publications, Bond was originally scripted to fire the same amount of bullets into Dent that Dent had wasted on the decoy, judging by the line "You've had your six". Such action was toned down to Bond shooting Dent twice instead. Though Bond was never in danger, he still killed an unarmed man
 * They seem to be sending a message with more recent movies, that "Ha Ha. We don't have to do that anymore" but occasionally seeming to go over the top. The deaths of Carver and Elektra seem pretty brutal given Bond's usual personality. Elektra actually bothers to point out that Bond, as the ultimate Chivalrous Pervert, wouldn't dare shoot an unarmed woman:


 * In Elektra's case; she is both  for The World Is Not Enough, as well as she just had fun  . Elektra could easily be considered an Asshole Victim for that.
 * The new Bond movies with Daniel Craig portray Bond as almost ruthlessly cold-blooded. From the beginning of Casino Royale when he shoots an unarmed spy without even blinking to the end of Quantum of Solace when, it's clear that this Bond has his license to kill and he's not afraid to use it. A lot.
 * The Night of the Hunter: In the original book and movie, the children's father is hanged for a bank heist gone wrong (he killed two people). In the remake, the Big Bad murders him in his cell. This is just one of the many reasons that nobody likes the remake.
 * Inverted by the film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings: In the book, Gollum bites the Ring off Frodo's hand, leaves the hobbit writhing in pain, revels madly in his triumph, and falls into the Crack of Doom through his own fault. In the movie, Frodo, apparently still in the Ring's thrall, gets up and starts fighting Gollum for the Ring, knocking them both off the edge where Sam rescues Frodo. Peter Jackson figured it was more satisfying for the audience to see Frodo actually take part in the Ring's destruction, but it lacks the book's irony: Frodo ultimately fails in his quest, but his uncle Bilbo sparing Gollum's life out of pity all those years ago let Gollum live so that he would destroy the Ring. Gandalf's line that "Bilbo's pity may rule the fate of many" loses something.
 * The line doesn't lose much. Someone had to get the ring off Frodo before the Nazgûl got there. If not for Gollum, Sam would've been the only one there, and one simply does not know if he had it in him to do it.
 * On the other hand, if not for Gollum, Sauron wouldn't have known where the ring was, in the beginning of Fellowship. The entire trilogy would have been very different.
 * In live action version of Hogfather Mr. Teatime grabs Susan's sleeve, which tears and sends him falling down the tower. In the original, she briefly wonders whether he's crazy enough to try and kill the person he's holding onto, probably lampshading how this usually goes, decides he would be, and kicks him. Presumably this was changed because viewers couldn't read her thoughts in the live-action version, so they wouldn't have known her justification.
 * In the original film, Nikita, the title character is a drug-abusing psychopath who murders one cop in cold blood, stabs another through the hand with a pencil, etc. who is taken in and trained by the government into becoming an assassin, which causes her to change into a better person, providing the drama of the film. In the first television show based on the movie, La Femme Nikita, the title character is remade as a non-drug-addicted, non-psychopathic, remarkably centered street kid who is framed for a crime she did not commit before getting shunted into the secret government program. Inexplicably, it works.
 * The film version of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen replaced the original Invisible Man—a serial rapist and murderer, which only differs from Wells' original novel character in that the first is confirmed rather than implied—with a burglar who'd stolen some of the first Invisible Man's potion. Granted, this was one of the film's lesser outrages, was due in part to some legal wranglings, and, in any case, asking mainstream moviegoers to accept a sex offender as a PG-13 hero wouldn't have gone over well.
 * Inverted in the film of The Long Goodbye as compared to Chandler's original novel.
 * In Enough, the heroine, after being chased and threatened by her abusive husband, breaks into his house, removes anything he can use as a weapon to defend himself, plants evidence to make it look like he tricked her into coming and attacked her, all so she can beat him to death with her bare hands. After they fight, she has him at her mercy and can't actually go through with it, at which point this trope kicks in, he lunges at her again, and ends up getting knocked out the window to his death.
 * Seen in Watchmen, the film adaptation of the graphic novel of the same name. In Chapter VI (“The Abyss Gazes Also”) of the graphic novel, Within the meaning of the trope, the effect is at best ambiguous. The graphic novel’s Rorschach, but the movie’s Rorschach.
 * The last Harry Potter movie does this. In the book,
 * In the film Rules of Engagement there is a court martial trying to decide if Col Samuel L. Jackson overreacted by ordering his men to fire into a hostile crowd. At the end film footage is found showing that every member of the crowd - including women, children and a donkey—was heavily armed.
 * In the original ending of A Perfect Murder Emily shoots Stephen before he even begins his attempts to kill her and fakes a struggle to ensure her freedom, thus creating the "perfect murder". Test audiences didn't take to the ambiguity of the character so the final version has Stephen attack her (even giving him a Not Quite Dead sequence), Emily's struggle now genuine and her murder of Stephen now spontaneous and in visible terror for her life.
 * In the original ending of A Perfect Murder Emily shoots Stephen before he even begins his attempts to kill her and fakes a struggle to ensure her freedom, thus creating the "perfect murder". Test audiences didn't take to the ambiguity of the character so the final version has Stephen attack her (even giving him a Not Quite Dead sequence), Emily's struggle now genuine and her murder of Stephen now spontaneous and in visible terror for her life.

Literature

 * Layer Cake has this between the book and film in the protagonist's assassination of his treacherous boss. In the book, he first messily kills the guy's guard dogs and then shoots him in the head a few times for the fun of it. In the movie, the dogs live and the assassination is a single neat and bloodless shot to the head. Admittedly, the latter is presented in a pretty cool way.
 * Agatha Christie did something like this in adapting her novel Ten Little Niggers Ten Little Indians And Then There Were None into a play. The newer version has a happier ending and in doing so, changes the crimes of the surviving characters such that they are much less culpable. Or at least tried to- one of Lombard's crimes is abandoning a number of tribesmen who were his guides to die in the wilderness, which he explains as perfectly OK as that's how things work in Africa. He does this both in his Heroic Sociopath version in the novel and as a Gentleman Adventurer in the play (though in the latter, he does later mention that he left all the food, water, and weapons with his guides afters they got hopelessly lost, and was just incredibly lucky to be found once he set out on his own). In the 1945 movie version, it goes even further and changes Lombard to an impersonating friend of Lombard (who himself has committed suicide) who goes to the island looking for information on what drove his friend to it.
 * Subverted in Star Trek: New Frontier. Makkenzie Callhoun wants to kill some guy as revenge, but being a Starfleet officer, he cannot shoot first. So he outright provokes the guy into trying to kill him, so he can kill the guy in self-defense.
 * In a flashback, Calhoun decides to execute a man because the man ordered the deaths of his Captain's brother and daughter. He knows he'll be court-martialed, but commits to the act in order to spare his CO's sanity. As he's pressing the trigger, the victim pulls a phaser he'd lifted from a security guard. Everyone present assumes Calhoun saw the weapon, reacted in self-defense, and just happens to have lightning-fast reflexes.
 * In first novel of The Dark Tower, The Gunslinger, Allie is held as a shield and hostage by Sheb as the residents of Tull attack Roland. Originally, Roland kills her out of pure instinct. His trained hands react quicker than his mind. She screams at him not to shoot, but it's too late, and the guilt of her death sits on Roland throughout the rest of the story. In the revised edition, there is a convoluted subplot in which after Walter resurrects a dead man, he tells Allie that if she says "nineteen", he will tell her what he saw on the other side. Knowing will drive her crazy, but so will not. Later, during the shootout, she begs Roland to kill her because she has spoken nineteen to Sheb and can't bear the horrors that he whispered back to her. As she dies King says that "the last expression on her face might have been gratitude."

Theatre

 * In the original play of Little Shop of Horrors, Seymour . However, in the movie remake, . This was probably done to make the protagonist a little more sympathetic.
 * Also applies to a later scene, where . The movie changes this to . Both of these scenes led to the original ending, where, testing poorly.

Video Games

 * World of Warcraft lets us know that the bandit kingpin VanCleef was originally the leader of a guild of stonemasons who turned to thieves when the nobles of Stormwind refused to pay them for rebuilding the capital. Even though it was made clear enough that the corrupt nobility was to blame, this apperantly made the Alliance look too cruel, so an RPG book of additional information changed the event into VanCleef demanding insane amounts of gold for the work and flipping out when the king refused to pay him extra. Then, the whole thing was changed again into a plot by Onyxia, who was manipulating everyone involved with magic - the Stonemasons into asking for more than the agreed-upon price and the nobles into trying to pay them less.
 * According to all the information found within WoW and the official site, the Stormpike dwarves went into Alterac Valley, disregarded pleas to go away and started digging the local orcs' graveyards for archeological treasures, which spawns a small war in the area. Once again, the RPG books try to make the Alliance seem less grey-moraled by saying the Stormpikes have lived practically three miles away for hundreds of years or something like that and the Frostwolf clan (who are typically portrayed by Blizzard as quite peaceful) invaded for no apparent reason. Thankfully this is ignored in World of Warcraft.
 * The original story of Anduin Lothar's death is that Doomhammer ambushed him while the later was on its way for negotiations. This is later retconned into Doomhammer challenging him to honorable combat and winning. Blizzard in general is fairly liberal in changing their lore as they see fit.
 * In Warcraft III, as part of Arthas' fall to the Dark Side, he slaughters the people of Stratholme before they can become plague zombies to spare them and their countrymen from that horrible fate. It's a very morally ambiguous event designed to illustrate his potential for evil. In World of Warcraft, thanks to the Caverns of Time, you can participate in this event with your own character. In this retelling, however, most of the people he kills are already zombies or are cultists, and most of the rest reveal themselves to be evil time-traveling dragons. Needless to say, this completely shatters the ambiguity of the event. (Although while you're busy killing undead in the city, Arthas is back at the entrance slaughtering any of the still-human citizens who naturally respond by fleeing the city.)
 * Well slaughtering a bunch of sick citizens wouldn't make for a very challenging dungeon.

Web Comics
"Tuuk: I blew up a ship of thirty-seven... In my defense, they shot at me first. Rameth: I killed my parents... In my defense, they abused me as a child. Gulroth: I set fire to an orphanage... In my defense, um... I... uh... well, you know how it is."
 * A strip in Irregular Webcomic takes this trope to its logical extreme. Later also re-made the infamous scene to Take a Third Option: Han shot first... but he didn't want to.
 * Parodied by Sluggy Freelance in a pair of strips.
 * Critical Miss does its own version.
 * Looking for Group: "That orphanage attacked me. It was self defense."
 * Spacetrawler: This page.


 * Dork Tower takes an odd option with Han Solo vs. Faust.

Web Original
"Darth Vader: What you're doing, you?.. You shot first! Han Solo: Yeah. Why wouldn't I? Darth Vader: I, eh... I don't know the answer on that."
 * Parodied by The Angry Video Game Nerd when talking about his old reviews he mentioned that he shot Jason Voorhees' head off in his review of Friday the 13 th. In his re-done version, Jason shoots first before The Nerd blows his head off.
 * In his Star Wars games review, he offers a solution to the original issue. Have Luke run Greedo over with a landspeeder.
 * How It Should Have Ended took the Star Wars case head-on:

"as The Wanted Smuggler. He's an outlaw on the run."
 * He'll Shoot First by Jedi-Art-Trick on DeviantArt - an awesome take on the Star Wars incident. It's a Western style poster:

Western Animation

 * Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker. In the uncut original, The Bowdlerised television broadcast turns this into
 * It's been said this is the recurring method the DCAU writers used to avoid censorship from Standards and Practices. "If you order us to change something, we will follow your orders to the letter while making it substantially more horrific".
 * Though the edited scene also removes.


 * The 1944 Looney Tunes cartoon Hare Ribbin' has two different endings, both too violent to be shown on kids/family TV but one being slightly more messed up. The ending that was originally shown in theaters at the time had Bugs Bunny handing the dog a gun so he could shoot himself in the head and commit suicide. The "director's cut" ending (which is currently only available on the fifth volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection DVDs) had Bugs pulling out a gun and shooting him in the mouth. That's probably as messed up as Bugs can get in a Looney Tunes cartoon.

Real Life

 * Mark Bowden's book, Killing Pablo, mentions that Colombian policemen would summarily execute drug dealers and say they died "during a shootout with police."
 * Similarly, some police officers have been known to carry "throw down" guns, unregistered weapons (often confiscated from another criminal) that can be planted if they shoot someone who turns out not to be armed. In New Orleans they're called "ham sandwiches".
 * This tradition goes back years with the NOPD, and officers used to carry "drop knives" for the same purpose. The apocryphal cautionary story tells how a veteran sergeant arrived at the scene of a shooting, turned over the suspect's body, and discovered that thanks to over-eager recruits he had apparently been threatening officers with four knives.
 * One of Tucker Max's books has a story about meeting an FBI agent on a flight, and the agent tells him about people he knows in Border Patrol, who will shoot immigrants from 100 yards away with a rifle at nighttime, then write in their report "Subject was threatening agent with a rock".
 * One Baader-Meinhof ganger, after the German reunification, shot himself in the head. Twelve times. Yeah...