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{{trope}}
{{quote|''Mona's Mum was crying and her face was all red, but she wasn't thinking about anything much. Her dad had the same creepy crawly things in his mind that he ALWAYS has. Money, and tied-up women, and all the different kinds of drugs he sells. [[Squick|Yeuk]].''|Elaine from ''[[Lucifer (
In most media, [[Good People Have Good Sex]]. Thus, one of the easiest (and quickest) ways to show a character is evil is to have them engaging in a lifestyle that can easily be made to look deviant. In this case, have the character practice [[BDSM]] or similar. Sometimes, but far from always, [[Rule of Creepy|portrayed]] as [[Unsexy Sadist|creepy and unsexy]] as well as deviant.
More and more often, modern shows and movies allow a character (often a [[Brains and Bondage|smart one]]) to [[Casual Kink|be into BDSM]] and still be a [[Safe, Sane, and Consensual|decent character]]. However, the old prejudices are still common, and [[Double Standard]]s apply: If it's a woman who is into the practice, she might be portrayed in a somewhat respectful (if didactic) fashion. If it's a man, however, he's usually ridiculed (if he's the one being tied up) or else is portrayed as a dangerous lunatic one step away from becoming a serial killer/rapist.
And heaven help ''anyone'' who gets [[Chained to a Bed]].
It should be noted that some media dress their villains up in "S&M gear" in order to make them [[Stripperific]] (because they're [[Evil Is Sexy|villains]], after all), and don't actually have them engage in BDSM-related activities. It should also be noted that [[Evil Is Sexy]] is often the reason why '''Bondage Is Bad''' comes into play in the first place: Compare with [[Romanticized Abuse]] and its subtropes [[Bastard Boyfriend]] and [[Bastard Girlfriend]]. According to [[Dan Savage]], this trope is mostly about letting mainstream people have their cake and eat it too: Getting turned on by kinky stuff while patting themselves on the back for being better than kinky people.
Depending on context, Bondage Is Bad is often a subtrope of [[Sex Is Evil]], [[Evil Is Sexy]], or both. When it follows the [[Evil Is Sexy]] path, it still often portrays BDSM as a mentally unhealthy perversion (just like [[Real Life]] psychiatry did until 1990), thus combining the two tropes into an angsty form of [[Sex Is Evil and I Am Horny]].
The "how", "why" and "if" of why this trope is played is highly dependent on ''when'' the work is made. In the eighties, BDSM was highly socially unpopular: Major feminist organizations hated it, while psychiatry still believed even [[Safe, Sane, and Consensual|SSC]] BDSM to be abnormal. These views have gradually been abandoned. Since 1990, psychiatry acknowledge that [[SSC]] BDSM<ref>note that when this trope is used, SSC is invariably NOT used</ref> is often done between mentally healthy individuals, and more and more organizations who have already stopped spreading prejudice are now instead starting to fight it. Thus, the trope becomes subverted more and more often, and when it's played straight it's often reinforced with hints of [[Putting on the Reich|nazism]] or whatever.
Contrast [[Safe, Sane, and Consensual]], [[Brains and Bondage]], [[Casual Kink]] and the [[Obligatory Bondage Song]]. Compare [[Too Kinky to Torture]], where someone is so tough that torture gets them off. Compare [[Depraved Homosexual]] for similar prejudice. Compare [[Moral Guardians]] and [[Heteronormative Crusader]] for sources of such prejudice.
{{noreallife|this is All The Tropes, not Tropes After Dark.}}
{{examples
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* Gauron from ''[[Full Metal Panic!]]'' is into BDSM. He's shown in the novels to have a thing for erotic asphyxiation (as he strangles the female scientist in Khanka, and they [[Too Kinky to Torture|both enjoy it]]). And numerous times, he's described to get off when he makes others "submit" to him and "break their will." The author even jokingly [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] how Gauron is into S&M - in an episode of ''[[Lucky Star]]'' (that the author had a hand in), there's a doujinshi for ''Full Metal Panic'' shown, with Gauron molesting a [[Chains of Love|chained up]] and [[Bound and Gagged]] Sousuke. To further follow this trope, seeing how he's the domineering aggressive one, he's a [[Ax Crazy|dangerous serial killer lunatic]] that should be feared.
* Many villains in ''[[Violence Jack]]'' wear S&M gear as regular clothes and like to capture, tie up, and sexually torture any female character they can get their hands on. This is especially prevalent in the Harlem Bomber arc, where the villains have their own S&M dungeon to make captured girls into sex slaves. Plus, the woman who runs it, Rose, is a [[Whip It Good]] [[Psycho Lesbian]] dominatrix who rapes a girl's friend in front of her as a way to desensitize her to sex. The [[Big Bad]] of the series, Slum King, also has two quadruple amputee sex slaves that he keeps on leashes and treats like dogs.
* ''[[Air Gear]]'': Arthur is a [[Depraved Homosexual]] masochist who displays sexualized behavior towards his antagonist Agito. He also frequently releases heart marks whenever he's reveling in the feeling of pain.
* Episode 20 of ''[[Black Butler]]'' features Sebastian chained to the wall and being whipped by an evil angel decked out in S&M gear and describing the excruciating sweetness of the pain being inflicted upon him.
* [[Complete Monster]] [[Depraved Bisexual|Katsuragi]] of ''[[Sakura Gari]]'' ties Masataka up with rope before raping him, uses physical force on Masataka if he pisses him off, and tortures him by whipping him.
* ''[[Legend of the Blue Wolves]]'': [[Depraved Homosexual|Captain Continental]] uses bondage on Jonathan, beats him up, and whips him, when attempting to force him to sexually submit to him. Jonathan refuses so the Continental simply ties him up again and rapes him. In the beginning of the movie he also whips a subordinate for not addressing him as "sir" before engaging in sexual activities with him.
* ''[[Monochrome Factor]]'': Kou, in the anime adaptation, is implied to have a bit of a bondage fetish, present for no other reason than to creep Aya out after she beats him up and he begs for more.
* In ''[[Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt]]'', this is played straight with [[Big Bad]] Corset, who [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|has a corset]] he tightens up and is a [[Combat Sadomasochist]]. Subverted with [[Badass Preacher|Garterbelt]], who explicitly practices self-flagellation and is Corset's rival of sorts. Likely played straight with Stocking, who throughout the series [[Too Kinky to Torture|likes it kinky]] and at the ass-end of the series {{spoiler|becomes a villain.}}
* Many of the phantoms in ''[[Tokko]]'' are shown wearing bondage gear like ball gags and leather masks.
* Sadi-Chan from the Inpel Down Arc of ''[[One Piece]]'' is a jailer dressed in a [[Dominatrix]] outfit who uses BDSM methods to torture inmates - often killing them in the process.
==
* Anyone in ''[[Preacher (Comic Book)|Preacher]]'' who has a fetish of some type is going to be a villain.
* In ''[[Zatanna]]'' where an S&M club is shown to be frequented by demons, supernatural serial killers, and psychotic mob boss who trades in human souls. However [[Paul Dini]], the writer, included a bondage club in an issue of ''Detective Comics'' that was portrayed in a much more positive and tolerant light and [[Batman]] was even shown to be a friend (as much as Batman is ''anyone's'' friend) of the owner, having helped her out during a riot at the club weeks before. So the club in ''Zatanna'' is probably less Bondage Is Bad and more [[Author Appeal]] and possibly a homage to the kinky Cenobites of ''Hellraiser''.
* The [[Red Skull]]'s daughter, Sin and her boyfriend Crossbones are really into the extreme kind. To the point of getting off on torture.
* Averted with the Whip, a dominatrix-themed heroine from the ''[[Seven Soldiers]]''. Unfortunately she doesn't survive her debut story.
* Blue Eyes from ''[[Sin City]]'' is apparently into bondage (or at least thinks it's a common enough kink amongst men) and is an evil assassin. On the other hand, Gail is a [[Hooker with a Heart of Gold]] who has a pair of handcuffs.
* In the first album of ''[[Lucifer (comics)|Lucifer]]'', [[Casual Kink]] and Bondage Is Bad are both expressed as attitudes held by characters: Jill has a speech about how she's not into BDSM herself but doesn't mind it as long as it's [[SSC|consensual]] - while Elaine writes a [[Show Within a Show|story within the story]] where her way of establishing the bad guy as bad is to state that he fantasizes about three creepy things, one of them being tied up women. (The other two are money and selling drugs. It should be noted that since this is in the first issue, Elaine is still an immature and inexperienced 12-year-old psychic.) See page quote.
* DC attempted to introduce a new [[Superman]] villain named "the Masochist," a young woman clad in a leather outfit with the phrase "Hurt Me!" written on the chest. Some [[Internet Backdraft]] lead to DC changing the character's name to "Anguish" and removing all of the bondage and S&M imagery from her costume.
* [[Harley Quinn]] seems to be a fan of S&M in the ''[[New 52]]'', both as the dominant and the submissive. To give an obvious example, one issue starts with her waking up in her rather messy apartment with last night's date behind her, duct-taped to the wall; two pages later, she sees a patient dressed in a gimp outfit; her treatment consists of "integral psychotherapy" through "introspection and dissection", a fancy way of saying she hogties him. Unfortunately, this leads to a horrific nightmare where she's in bed with her current boyfriend Mason, who turns into "Mistuh Jay" mid-embrace.
== [[Film]] ==
* The Cenobites from the ''[[Hellraiser]]'' films. This was made during the height of the '80's disapproval of bondage, and writer/director Clive Barker is very interested in the transgressive.
* In the [[Cheech and Chong]] film ''The Corsican Brothers'', The Evil Fuckaire (yes, that really is the name of the villain in this movie) is not only flamboyantly gay, he's also into whips and chains.
* [[James Bond (film)|Xenia Onatopp]] from ''[[GoldenEye (film)|GoldenEye]]'' was really into S&M. [[Out with a Bang|And crushing men's chests with her thighs.]]
** And gets a Meaningful Name along with it.
* In ''[[The Man Who Knew Too Little]]'', Wallace Ritchie encounters a septuagenarian dominatrix and immediately assumes she's Dr. Ludmilla Kropotkin, the "evil lady torturer". Subverted though in that she isn't. The actual Dr. Kropotkin is completely normal looking and unassuming.
* In ''[[The
* ''[[
* In ''[[
* [[All There Is to Know About "The Crying Game"|The rapist pawn shop owner and police officer]] in ''[[
* In the horror-comedy ''[[Waxwork (
* One of Sol's high ranking henchmen in ''[[Doomsday]]'' is a gimp.
* ''[[
* ''[[Batman Forever]]''; Two-Face has two [[Perky Female Minion]]s, [[Drew Barrymore| Sugar]] and Spice, who wear [[Dominatrix]] outfits.
== [[Literature]] ==
* Doctor Hong from ''[[Island in The Sea of Time]]'' by S.M. Stirling. After Nantucket is transported into the Bronze Age she is just a doctor with an S&M fetish (admittedly one that has been declared ''persona non grata'' at every pain club on the East Coast) that becomes the chief physician of [[Big Bad|William Walker's]] renegade empire-building islanders. Once Walker has used his twentieth century know-how to obtain power for himself she begins to torture people for fun. She eventually claims to be an avatar of the goddess Hecate and begins a cult dedicated to mass torture as a form of sacrifice to the gods (although it also teaches useful medical knowledge). In addition to torture for religious and recreational purposes she also has some practical uses for her skills, such as castrating slaves to make them more docile.
* Inverted in the ''[[Night Huntress]]'' series. The hero Bones blindfolds the heroine Cat and ties her wrists to the headboard. She has multiple [[Immodest Orgasm
* In the ''[[Outlander (
* There's some hints of this in [[The Culture]]. In ''[[The Culture/The Player of Games|The Player of Games]]'', the protagonist reacts to porn involving bondage with surprise/unfamiliarity, seemingly implying it doesn't exist in the [[Fetish Fuel Future]] Culture, and sees it as indicating cruelty and inequality. Note that the culture producing this porn also has scenes of rape and torture televised (although like the bondage porn, it's on censored tv only available to the country's leaders).
* A lot of Alasdair Gray's work involves deeply flawed and often unsympathetic protagonists who are also sado-masochists. The flaw and the kink may or may not be related, but they're usually both there. One novel features a character who claims to be a "rational sadist", which apparently means his ideal partner is not a masochist but a weaker sadist - someone who wants to hurt him but can't. The word "consensual" never comes up.
* Repeatedly in the ''[[The Otherworld
*
* In [[
* In ''[[Dragonriders of Pern|Dragonquest]]'', [[Old Retainer|Rannelly]] is horrified to find bondage marks on Kylara's wrist, courtesy of Meron. Kylara herself thinks about their respective tastes. As anyone who's read this book knows, these are two of the more villainous characters in the book.
* In William Gibson's ''[[Neuromancer]]'', the [[Complete Monster]] Peter Riviera can't get off sexually unless he's betraying his partners. So he dates girls in oppressive regimes, makes sure they turn political, then turns them in to the secret police and watches as they are tortured. The book makes it sound like he's evil because of his sexual preferences, no mention made of perhaps roleplaying betrayal ethically instead. Also, Molly's experience killing someone as a meat puppet prostitute.
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* Played straight in ''[[Angel]]'', where several of the employees of the demonic law firm Wolfram and Hart are into BSDM. Of course, the lawyers at Wolfram and Hart are evil for a lot of reasons, but not their interest in BSDM.
** In the DVD commentary of the episode "Conviction", [[Joss Whedon]] actually notes his use of this trope, and states for the record that he does not believe bondage practitioners are actually evil.
** The Groosalugg, who's from the alternate dimension of Pylea, knows only of conventional slavery. When he has to visit a brothel to acquire a paranormal prophylactic before sleeping with Cordelia, he's understandably alarmed to see a man in chains. Angel sets him straight...kinda.
* ''[[
* Averted in ''[[
* In ''[[Wire in The Blood]]'' season six, in the episode "Unnatural Vices", the story logic is that if you get into BDSM you are a serial killer or in very dangerous company. A character gets "outed" as being into BDSM and it means the end of their job as a teacher. A cop is also outed and it not only damages their career, they too end up the victim of a sadistic killer. It is suggested that BDSM is part and parcel of the policeman's relationship being loveless and destructive. To cap it off, this relationship ends up driving his ex-girlfriend into the arms of the killer.
* Mackenzie Crook's psychotic gangster character in ''[[Skins]]'' is depicted as a bondage freak.
* ''[[Law
** Also subverted sometimes, with the detectives or their captain making references to the existence of SSC (Safe, Sane & Consensual) BDSM play and the importance of not mistaking such play for abuse.
** There was also a first season episode of the original ''[[Law
* S&M appears a few times on ''[[Sex and
* In ''Uh-oh'', a [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|children's game show]], the character who dumps slime on incorrect contestants is known as The Punisher, and is released from a cage every episode. He, however wears something similar to a gimp mask and other non-dominant apparel. Whether this is [[Did Not Do the Research]] or [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]] is up for debate.
* The writers of ''[[
** Making this both bigoted and a case of [[Did Not Do the Research]] as there are literally hundreds if not more people involved in emotionally fulfilling relationships who are into fetishism of one kind or another. As far as the lead characters are concerned, these fetishes serve only to as a way for the participants to objectify one another instead of engaging another person emotionally.
*** The only thing that can really be said in defense of these portrayals is that the murder victim who took part in these fetishes was in each case keeping the fetish secret from their significant other; engaging in an affair to indulge the fetish rather than communicating their sexual needs and desires to their chosen life-partner (ostensibly the person with whom they should be able to find emotionally fulfilling experiences). Whether this is ''another'' layer of prejudice or a justification for dismissing the particular fetishist as emotionally stunted is a whole new debate.
* Blair and Chuck, the two most morally ambiguous main characters on ''[[Gossip Girl]]'', apparently used handcuffs a lot when they were dating. And apparently a bidding paddle can be put to other uses...
* ''[[Being Human (
* In the fifth season of ''[[Dexter]]'' one of the serial rapists/murderers he and Lumen are hunting is shown having (consensual) sex with a tied up woman. Though in fairness, he seemed more interested in just plowing her. The woman actually had to remind him to finish tying her down in mid-coitus.
* ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]'' has Crowley, a [[Depraved Homosexual]] sexually sadistic demon.
* [[Darkseid]], while possessing the body of [[Smallville
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* Dark Eldar in ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'' show this with Mandrakes and Hagashîn. Then again, they're evil for lots and lots of different reasons. BDSM simply comes with their general gig as sadomasochists who literally feed on pain and suffering.
* ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' had the ''Book of Vile Darkness'' supplement, with rules covering all sorts of evil activities like [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|mass sacrifice, trafficking with fiends, devouring souls and BDSM]].
** Loviatar, the goddess of pain in the ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'' setting, is literally the GOD of this trope.
** Zon-kuthon from ''[[Pathfinder]]'' would dispute that claim.
== [[Theatre]] ==
* ''Iron Curtain'' has Miss Hildret, a stage director from East Berlin who carries around a crop and gets turned on by torture. She is open to inserting a few more gags into the play, [[A Worldwide Punomenon|having quite the collection herself]].
== [[Video Games]] ==
* You wouldn't think this would come up in a parody game based around raising slaves, but ''[[Slave Maker]]'' has bondage being a sex act frowned upon by both major religions, hits your slave's Morality stat when practiced and requires a high Obedience score to do. To be fair, the game's creator isn't big on the harder sex acts, so this is probably a matter of personal preference than anything else.
* One of the many reasons ''[[
** In the sequel Travis meets up with [[Our Banshees Are Louder|Cloe Walsh]], an assassin bound inside a container. She is possibly the most utterly ''evil'' assassin in the game (considering that she seems to have more control over herself than Matt Helms while still being just as sadistic), and one of the first things Travis says to her is "You're lucky I don't have a bondage kink."
* ''[[
* In ''[[Phantasmagoria:
* ''[[
* ''[[Prince of Persia
* Bondage Queen is one of the possible Evil endings in the [[Raising Sim]] game
* About three quarters of the enemies in ''[[
* Cain in ''[[Galerians]]'' fits the "villain who dresses in S&M wear, but doesn't actually engage in it" bill. Probably because he [[Squick|looks fourteen]]... and is technically even ''younger'' than that.
* ''[[Watchmen:
* ''[[
* The most visible antagonist of ''[[Castlevania: Curse of Darkness]]'' is Isaac, a bondage and self-mutilation obsessed demon.
* The Dark Mistresses in ''[[Dungeon Keeper]]'', but [[Tagline|"Evil Is Good"]].
* ''[[Duke Nukem
* In ''[[Max Payne (
* Ivy of ''[[Soul Series
** Not to mention that she's also a [[Chaste Hero]] because Soul Edge is in her blood and she does not want to pass this on.
* ''[[Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater]]'':
** Although where Volgin's interests lie are not really true BDSM, but more that Volgin simply gets off on causing pain and suffering.
* Silver Mantis from ''[[
* Catalina in ''[[Grand Theft Auto
* Games in the ''[[Mortal Kombat]]'' franchise with pre-fight dialogue often have Kombatants making [[Double Entendre]] remarks (or blatant flirting) but [[God Save Us From the Queen|Sindel]] has a few that suggest BDSM, which does match her character...
* In the original ''[[Battletoads]]'', the [[Big Bad| Dark Queen's]] outfit is unmistakenly [[Dominatrix]]-themed. She switches to far-less suggestive [[Evil Sorceress]] robes in the later relaunch.
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* ''[[Girls
* In ''[[
* In ''[[
* ''[[Collar 6]]'' more or less averts this as a whole due to [[Conveniently
* ''[[
* ''Our Home Planet'' has [https://web.archive.org/web/20131003082536/http://www.ourhomeplanet.net/profile_queen.html Queen], an evil mercenary clearly supposed to evoke the dominatrix figure.
== [[Web Originals]] ==
* Riley of ''[[The Guild]]'' is an over-the-top stereotype of an FPS Gamer suffering from [[Testosterone Poisoning]] (despite being a woman). This extends to being an abusive dominant in her relationship with Zaboo.
* Averted with [[Image Boards|4chan's]] [http://1d4chan.org/wiki/Ardarvia Ardarvia], the Iron Maiden, a homebrew deity of BDSM and love. She is [[Lawful Good]], and her followers tie themselves up, or even [[It Makes Sense in Context|amputate their own limbs, as a sacrifice for her.]]
** The religion goes so far as to include the concept of [[Safe, Sane, and Consensual]] as one of the cornerstones of the faith.
* Subverted and inverted in the ''[[Chakona Space]]'' stories, foxtaur society generally disapproves of male-on-female bondage, since vixens are supposed to be the stronger sex (no word on how other sex combinations are treated). But after Garrek is pheromonally raped by his sister he finds it very therapeutic to tie up a four-breasted vixen and mount her repeatedly, consensually of course.
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* ''[[ReBoot]]'': When Megabyte rebuilds Hexadecimal, he gives her what looks like a black leather corset and other dominant clothes. He then keeps her as a tightly restrained prisoner, and it's revealed that she could have escaped whenever she wanted to but "likes being tied up". The characters are both villains, of course. [[Brother-Sister Incest|And siblings.]]
* ''[[Fern Gully]]'': In the the [[Villain Song]] "Toxic Love", the villain Hexxus alludes to S&M with the lyrics "Hit me one time / Hit me twice / Oh! Ah! Ohhh! / Well, that's rather nice..."
* Played with in a ''[[
* Inverted with Mr. Slave on ''[[South Park]]''. He's a gimp (always dressing like one) and dangerously promisculous, but a decent sort otherwise.
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Evil Tropes]]
[[Category:Sex Tropes]]
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[[Category:Designated Acceptable Targets]]
[[Category:Double Standard]]
[[Category:Bondage Is Bad]]
[[Category:Alliterative Trope Titles]]
[[Category:Rule of Creepy]]
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