Bound and Gagged: Difference between revisions
Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.2
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(Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.2) |
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== [[Comic Books]] ==
* ''[[Wonder Woman]]'', and no wonder (pun not intended, at least not consciously): Her creator may have into bondage himself, but he ''definitely'' wrote it into the job description.<ref>William Moulton Marston actually admitted once that the concept was stimulating, but he also claimed the idea was meant to be empowering - especially given the nature of [[Those Wacky Nazis| her usual enemies]] at the time - as it as he could depict her breaking free from men's attempts to restrain her.</ref> The original Wonder Woman has all those abilities... unless she was tied up (specifically by a man), at which point she became de-powered. So you can expect incredible amounts of bondage throughout the first couple decades of her comic. It's such a common occurrence - to the point of once suggesting that the villains threaten to ''untie'' her - that the [
* [[Faux Action Girl|D-List Superheroine]] ''[[Empowered]]'' ends up like this so often that villains, [[Innocent Bystander|innocent bystanders]], and ''her own teammates'' regard her as a laughingstock and she occasionally points out the shortcomings of gag design to the [[Punch Clock Villain|mellower]] [[Mooks]]. (Very heavy on the [[Fetish Fuel]], this series. In fact, it's part of its origin.)
* Part of the [[Every Episode Ending]] in ''[[Asterix]]'' comics is [[Dreadful Musician|Cacophonix]] being Bound and Gagged to prevent him singing at the big feast.
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