Indy Ploy: Difference between revisions

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* The ''[[Firefly]]'' fanfic ''[[Forward]]'' continues the original series' fine tradition of Mal making it up as he goes. In the "Condor" story arc, it gets lampshaded by Zoe, who is relieved when Mal says their harrowing escape is being made up on the spot, and in the "Third Interlude" chapter, Jayne pulls an Indiana Jones-style vehicle boarding where he's improvising as he goes.
* Plenty of these in ''[[With Strings Attached]]''; indeed, the second half of the Fourth Movement is ''made'' of these.
 
 
== [[Film]] ==
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** Notably, at one point in ''[[Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull|The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull]]'' it doesn't work, where Indy tries to jump onto a truck and misses.
{{quote|'''Indy:''' Damn, I thought that was closer.}}
*:* Lampshaded later in the film:
{{quote|'''Mutt Williams / {{spoiler|Henry Jones III}}''': What's he gonna do now?
'''Mary Williams / {{spoiler|Marion Ravenwood}}''': I don't think he plans that far ahead.
'''Indiana Jones''': Scooch over, will you, {{spoiler|Son?}} }}
**:* Aaaaand then he pokes his head between them with a [[Ass Pull|goddamn]] '''''[[wikipedia:RPG-7|RPG-7!!!]]'''''
{{quote|"I'd cover my ears if I were you!"}}
*:* Hereditary. Witness Indy's dad in ''Last Crusade''. "I suddenly remembered my Charlemagne."
*:* Legacy. The line in question is a callback to Humphrey Bogart's line in [[Casablanca]]: [[Ironic Echo|"I don't plan that far ahead."]]
*:* In-universe, Indy seems to have picked up the "making this up as I go" line almost word for word from a group of older gentlemen while on a special mission during WWI (''Adventures of [[Young Indiana Jones]]'', Phantom Train of Doom).
*:* He even does this as a ''teenager'' - in ''[[Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade]]'', when fellow scout Herman asks how he's going to get the Cross of Coronado away from Fedora and his men, he admits that he doesn't know, but he'll think of ''something''...
* Han Solo (also [[Harrison Ford]]) from ''[[Star Wars]]'' survives mainly by thinking very, very fast. And when that doesn't work, running away even faster.
** Leia comes close. "Into the garbage chute, flyboy!"
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* Played with and Lampshaded in ''[[Harry Potter (film)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2]]'': After Voldemort learns they're hunting horcruxes Hermione says they need a new plan. Harry's response? "Hermione, since when have any of our plans ever worked?"
* In the ''[[Mission: Impossible (film)||Mission Impossible]]'' films, whenever something goes awry with plan, the improvision is usually high in the [[HSQ]].
* In ''[[The Wizard of Oz]]'', it is obvious that Dorothy's three friends really have no idea how they're going to rescue her from the Witch's castle, but then they are found by three guards, and manage to beat them up; they quickly decide to go with a [[Dressing as the Enemy]] plan.
 
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[The Wheel of Time]]'' series. {{spoiler|Mat due to way his luck-tweaking ability works, he does poorly at games of planning than of chance. For this reason, most of his better plans by default fall under this category.}}
* The "wizzard" Rincewind from Terry Pratchett's ''[[Discworld]]'' novels is not as concerned about where he's running ''to'' as what he's running ''from''. He notes this on several occasions. "Run!" "Where to?!" "From! The key word is from!" Which invariably leads to more running. By ''[[Discworld/The Last Hero|The Last Hero]]'', this is what he states as his religion (main tenet: whatever happens, you can run from it).
** However, when running away is not an option, Rincewind does come up with some clever plans, like in ''[[Discworld/Interesting Times|Interesting Times]]'' having the local Dibbler clone spread a rumor that the rebel forces are NOT bolstered by [[Suspiciously Specific Denial|3,200,009 vampire ghosts]], nor by the vast and invincible Red Army. {{spoiler|The vampire ghosts part is false. The Red Army turns out to be true, though mostly by an accident on Rincewind's part.}} Rincewind spreads such a bizarre rumor upon realizing that while telling someone that an enormous army is coming ''does'' frighten them, it's even ''more'' effective to tell them what they ''won't'' be facing and have the ''rumors'' spiral out of proportion.
** A more heroic, for lack of a better term, Indy Ploy is the MO of Moist von Lipwig in the ''[[Discworld]]'' novel ''[[Discworld/Going Postal (Discworld)|Going Postal]]''. Near the end, he makes a bet with the [[Magnificent Bastard]] [[Big Bad]] Reacher Gilt, and he has no idea how he'll win at first ... In his second appearance in ''[[Discworld/Making Money|Making Money]]'', he outlines a grand if somewhat vague vision of the future of currency, and wonders if he should write it down so he can work out what he's talking about later. In both books the apparent confidence with which he enters such things lead everyone else to conclude he had it all planned out.
*** This, apparently, is how good serial television works.
*** It is worth noting that not only does Moist NOT''not'' win his bet with Reacher, he very DELIBERATELY''deliberately'' doesn't win it. He's just using it as a ploy to get everyone heeded into the same room for his [[J'accuse!]] moment. {{spoiler|The best part being that the [[J'accuse!]] is the message he arranged to replace the real message with.}}
** Lord Vetinari of Ankh-Morpork seems to combine Indy Ploys and [[Xanatos Roulette]]s to devastating effect. It was once stated that, since you can't plan for every eventuality, Vetinari doesn't.
*** When in doubt he will order Vimes '''NOTnot''' to get involved with it. Say what you will about Vetinari, he knows how Vimes will follow this trope for him. Vimes is too [[Buffy-Speak|vimesy]] to use a [[Xanatos Gambit]] . I guess you could call him Vetinari's laser-guided Vimes.
* Commissar [[Ciaphas Cain]], [[Fake Ultimate Hero|Hero of the Imperium]] in ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'', often finds himself running headlong into situations he certainly shouldn't be running into in a universe as casually lethal as Warhammer 40K. He usually fights and flees his way out of these situations by simply making things up as he goes along, improvising weapons and tactics from his surroundings and from simple ingenuity. In one case, he halts a mob of bloodthirsty, rioting Imperial Guardsmen by jumping on a table, pointing at someone, and ordering them to get a mop, as the mess they had left was simply ''deplorable''. <small>"Whatever they'd been expecting me to say or do, this certainly wasn't it."</small>
** And, by extension, Cain's literary predecessor, Harry Paget [[Flashman]], who lies, flatters, and flees his way through adventure after adventure, escaping by dint of sheer luck and the skin of his teeth.
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{{quote|They debated long on what was to be done, but they could think of no way of getting rid of Smaug- which had always been a weak point in their plans, as Bilbo felt inclined to point out.}}
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
 
== [[Live Action TV]] ==
 
* ''[[Psych]]'': Pretty much the concept of the entire series
** The Old and the Restless
{{quote|'''Henry''': My son, the super sleuth, can't even get himself access into an old folks' home.
'''Shawn''': No, no, no, Dad. You have no idea what we're up against, okay? I tried everything. I tried the whole "I'm a travelling doula" bit, the "dingo ate my baby" routine, "hiding Gus in a sack" trick, which never fails... }}
 
{{quote|'''Henry''': Alright, look. What the hell are you guys doing here?
'''Gus''': This is the part where you get blindsided with Plan B. It's kind of fun when it's not happening to me. }}
 
* When he originally came up with the idea for ''[[Mission: Impossible]]'', creator Bruce Geller imagined EVERY episode's plan to go wrong at some point, leaving the IMF team to work from scratch. In the actual series, only a few Indy Ploy moments come up, mostly in the "Personal story" episodes.
** In the 1988 relaunch of the series, the pilot episode featured John DeLancie as an assassin who intentionally used Indy Ploys: he never chose how he'd kill his target until the very last moment, improvising his plans as he went along, specifically to not be predictable.
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* ''[[Frasier]]'''s many convoluted [[Farce]]-structured episodes often involved ''extremely'' fast-paced [[Disaster Dominoes]], [[A Simple Plan|Simple Plans,]] or [[Fawlty Towers Plot]]s that required the characters to frantically come up with new ideas as they were swept along with the action to keep their plans from descending into havoc. Naturally, because it was a comedy where no one gets killed, this only made the hijinks and misunderstandings infinitely worse, as [[Too Many Cooks]] spoil the broth, and they had to inform everyone else about all their new schemes and lies in addition to the list of volatile situations they were juggling. One would expect they wished twitter existed in the '90s, but on the other hand, they could often be downright ingenious at improv...
 
== [[Oral Tradition]], Folklore, Myths and Legends ==
* [[Classical Mythology|Heracles/Hercules]] was a ''master'' of this, especially in the course of his Twelve Labors. When he found out that the Nemean Lion's hide was impervious to weapons, he strangled it. To fight the Hydra, which could grow its heads back, he (or one of his friends, at his request) seared the stumps [[Kill It with Fire|with a torch]]. And to clean up the enormous and never-cleaned Aegean Stables, he uses his strength to ''alter the course of two nearby rivers''.
** There were originally only ten tasks, those last two were disqualified for exactly the ploys he came up with. Of course, since the tasks were meant to kill him the ploys still work.
* Hercules' cousin Theseus was no better. In what was likely the crowning achievement of his career - slaying the Minotaur - he volunteers to be one of the 40 sacrifices demanded by Minos, but doesn't seem to have much of a plan as to just ''how'' he plans to slay the beast, or how he plans to escape the Labyrinth (that was designed by Daedelus to be completely escape-proof) - if he manages to do so. Fortunately for him, [[Rebellious Princess|Ariadne]] falls in love with him, giving him a "clew" (ball of thread to help him retrace his path) and in some versions, a sword (but not all versions; in some, he fights the beast with his bare hands) enabling him to do the job and escape.
* Sir Gawain from [[King Arthur|Arthurian mythology]] once held off a massive angry mob while using a chess board as a shield. Not to be outdone, the damsel he was protecting started chucking the pieces at the mob. She knocked a few people out before the whole affair was through.
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* [[Truth in Television]] for every [[Tabletop RPG|GM]] who's ever [[Schrödinger's Gun|avoided]] [[Off the Rails|railroading]].
** Most players too. Your plan will go horribly wrong at the first step, or you don't even bother with a plan in the first place; either way, you'll end up winging things.
** Also the standard plan for most Shadowrunners In-and-Out of Universe.
* Adorjan's Excellency in ''[[Exalted]]'' specifically can't enhance anything that's planned out in advance, meaning that anyone using said Excellency has to use these on a regular basis.
 
 
== Mythology ==
* [[Classical Mythology|Heracles/Hercules]] was a ''master'' of this, especially in the course of his Twelve Labors. When he found out that the Nemean Lion's hide was impervious to weapons, he strangled it. To fight the Hydra, which could grow its heads back, he (or one of his friends, at his request) seared the stumps [[Kill It with Fire|with a torch]]. And to clean up the enormous and never-cleaned Aegean Stables, he uses his strength to ''alter the course of two nearby rivers''.
** There were originally only ten tasks, those last two were disqualified for exactly the ploys he came up with. Of course, since the tasks were meant to kill him the ploys still work.
* Hercules' cousin Theseus was no better. In what was likely the crowning achievement of his career - slaying the Minotaur - he volunteers to be one of the 40 sacrifices demanded by Minos, but doesn't seem to have much of a plan as to just ''how'' he plans to slay the beast, or how he plans to escape the Labyrinth (that was designed by Daedelus to be completely escape-proof) - if he manages to do so. Fortunately for him, [[Rebellious Princess|Ariadne]] falls in love with him, giving him a "clew" (ball of thread to help him retrace his path) and in some versions, a sword (but not all versions; in some, he fights the beast with his bare hands) enabling him to do the job and escape.
* Sir Gawain from [[King Arthur|Arthurian mythology]] once held off a massive angry mob while using a chess board as a shield. Not to be outdone, the damsel he was protecting started chucking the pieces at the mob. She knocked a few people out before the whole affair was through.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
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{{spoiler|(''cue Ubercharge and the BLU team getting their asses handed to them'')}} }}
** This phenomenon happens quite a bit in-game as well, since people are rather unpredictable, you finish just about every round discovering new ways to play.
 
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* ''[[Narbonic]]''{{'}}s Helen Narbon is an avowed fan of this approach: "It's times like these I almost question my usual strategy of doing whatever dumb thing pops into my head."
** Subverted later on when she implies that [[Chessmaster|pretty much everything that's happened for a little over half the comic all part of her plan]]
* This trope is precisely why Rumisiel gets [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|Crowning Moments Of Awesome]] in ''[[Misfile]]''. Even when his schemes work there is still an element of [[What Were You Thinking?]].
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* Meta example with ''[[Homestuck]]'' - [[Andrew Hussie]] had a basic idea for the characters and plot when he began it, but most of what you see and read was made up along the way. ''[[Problem Sleuth]]'' takes this even further, having had only its setting and main character designed in advance, and the rest made up by Hussie and the readers.
** In-universe example with [[The Lancer|Dave]]'s approach to handling his [[Time Master]] powers:
{{quote|<code>'''span style{{=}}"color|:#e00707|;font-family:monospace;font-weight:bold;">TG: the thing with time travel is}}'''</codespan>
<code>'''span style{{=}}"color|:#e00707|;font-family:monospace;font-weight:bold;">TG: you cant overthink it}}'''</codespan>
<code>'''span style{{=}}"color|:#e00707|;font-family:monospace;font-weight:bold;">TG: just roll with it and see what happens}}'''</codespan> }}
* Xeus from ''[[The Beast Legion]]'' makes such a move when he takes on a plant mongrel in [http://www.thebeastlegion.com/issue-03-page-37surprise-counter-attack/ this page].
* In ''[[Freefall]]'', this is Sam Starfall's stock in trade. After all, [http://freefall.purrsia.com/ "Improvise is one of the few battle plans that survives contact with the enemy."]
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* In the [[Whateley Universe]], most of the fights that Team Kimba get into fall into this trope, since so far they haven't planned out any of the major confrontations that have dropped onto them. Chaka lives by this trope, when she's not actually thinking things through enough to be [[The Chessmaster]].
* [[Leeroy Jenkins Video|LEEEEROY JENKINS!!!]] is an example of the '[[What Were You Thinking?]]' variety. While the video was staged, along with Leeroy's blinding incompetence, the creators said it was based on a real (although presumably less over-the-top) event.
 
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
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'''Phineas''': You know, willy-nilly barging ''is'' a plan of sorts.
'''Candace''': *[[Oh Crap|looks terrified]]* }}
 
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
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** Not entirely uncommon among serial authors. Often, one will have the big events plotted out (character deaths, villain appearances), but will come up with the intervening comics as he or she makes them.
* A few real books were written this way (the author just making it up as he goes along in one draft with no revisions), such as the novel ''Hawaii''.
** As well as the entire ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]''. Tolkien had a vague idea of the ending, but he had no idea how to get there until he got there. Every big event, from beginning to end, was designed while it was being written. The only scene he even tried to write ahead of time was the climactic scene inside Mt. Doom, and the final one was still written only when the story got to it.
** [[Rumiko Takahashi]] never really plans ahead. She just comes up with the story by a chapter by chapter basis.
* This was actually how American football's signature feature, the forward pass, came into being. In the early 20th Century, many colleges were considering abandoning Walter Camp's football code in favor of rugby. In a game between the University of North Carolina and the University of Georgia, a punter threw the ball towards a teammate down field while trying to avoid getting creamed by an oncoming rush. The receiver made a 70-yard touchdown (including the pass) to win the game for the UNC Tarheels, 7-0. This was witnessed by one Johnny Heisman, who related the story to Camp. Seeing a way to open up the game and make it more exciting to fans, he agreed to legalize the forward pass. Along with the abolition of the Flying Wedge Formation and the adoption of heavy protective padding, changes designed to fix the ''other'' problem of players being killed and crippled, the forward pass is credited with saving the game of American football.
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