Bondage Is Bad: Difference between revisions

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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.BondageIsBad 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.BondageIsBad, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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== Comic Books ==
* Anyone in ''[[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 (Creator)|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 (Franchise)|Batman]] was even shown to be a friend (As much as Batman is ANYONES''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]] thatwho has a pair of handcuffs.
* In the first album of ''[[Lucifer (Comic Book)|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 (Comic Book)|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.
 
 
== Film ==