No Eye in Magic: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:reflection-doesnt-kill01_8204kill01 8204.jpg|link=Percy Jackson & the Olympians|frame|Percy will never take [[Product Placement|his mp3 player]] [[Taken for Granite|for granite]].]]
 
 
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Basically, certain magic ''requires'' the caster to make eye contact with the object of the spell in order to work properly.
 
This is because spells that produce significant effects on thoughts, individuality and/or physicality of people or objects (like [[Mind Control]], [[Mind Reading]], [[Evil Eye|Evil Eyes]]s or [[Taken for Granite|Petrification]]) can involve a massive amount of power that must be applied in a very controlled manner. [[Science Marches On|As luck would have it]], the optic nerve is pretty much a direct pathway to the brain, so these spells can be better focused and more effectively received through the eyes. This means, some magic is more powerful if you're looking directly at your target; in fact, some magic might not work ''at all'' if you're not looking at your target. (This is taken to its logical extreme with [[Eye Beams]]).
 
Because of this line-of-sight requirement, the object of the spell can usually avoid it by hiding behind a conveniently-available large object, covering him/herself with something, or simply not looking back at the caster. Blind characters will sometimes [[Disability Immunity|be immune to this]], depending on the nature of the spell (for example, the power of a Gorgon or Basilisk requires the victim to see the attacker, so blind people will be immune). Following the same idea, indirect eye contact is usually considered safe; that is, these spells generally don't work via reflection, or can at lessen the effects. An auditory variation might involve avoiding the effects of a [[Compelling Voice]] by listening to recordings instead of the actual source.
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== Anime and Manga ==
* In ''[[Bleach]]'', Kaname Tousen, being blind, is immune to {{spoiler|Aizen's Perfect Hypnosis}}, and when this is brought up, reveals {{spoiler|he's been working for Aizen the whole time}}.
* ''[[Code Geass]]'' is a subversion. Many Geass, each with different abilities, work through eye contact, but it doesn't need to be direct-- fordirect—for example, at one point Lelouch uses dozens of small mirrors to catch a glimpse of his target's eyes. Also Jeremiah Gottwald's own geass allows him to cancel other geass effects within a certain range and will reverse any geass effect used on him, independent of eye contact.
* ''[[Darker than Black]]'' has a mild case of [[Body Motifs|eye motif]], so this happens.
** In the first season a body possessor needed eye contact. Among other things, he discovered that head movements are limited when another guy presses him into a fence using tight strangling wire.
** Second season, one Contractor, August 7, is a [[Reality Warper]] who can pretty much do anything so long as he's looking at you. He's not very competent though, and is defeated in about 5 minutes or less after the [[Anti-Hero]] just throws his [[Badass Longcoat]] over August's head and [[Shock and Awe|electrocutes him]].
*** That's probably less incompetence on August 7's part and more super competence on Hei's. After all, {{spoiler|August 7 shows up just fine at the end of the season.}}
* In ''[[Saint Seiya]]'', Perseus Algol exhibits a similar petrification power to the mythical Medusa-- notMedusa—not through his own eyes, but through the image of Medusa in his shield. This power could affect his victims through cloth or blindfolds, because it acted directly on the retina. The recipient could protect themselves with Dragon cloth's shield, however, and it doesn't work on the blind either, which leads to a very unpleasant [[Eye Scream]] moment.
* Because Erza's right eye in ''[[Fairy Tail]]'' is fake, any spells that work through eye contact only have half the effect on her. She still sees illusions but also recognizes them for what they are automatically, and any [[Taken for Granite|Medusa stares]] are easily reversed on her.
** Evergreen can turn people to stone with eye contact, but it doesn't work if she or her target is wearing glasses.
* In ''[[Naruto]]'', genjutsu cast by the [[Evil Eye|Sharingan]] seem to work this way.
** Not all of them though -- Itachithough—Itachi is able to hypnotize Naruto (who specifically avoids looking in his eyes) just by moving his finger.
* Two seprate ninja powers in [[Basilisk]] are based on eye contact. The Dojutsu turns an attacker's aggresion against themselves, leading to some spectacularly bloody suicides. Oboro's mystic eyes have the power to nullify another ninja's abilities as long as eye contact is held.
 
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** Which is a bit bizarre, because Names can change, but you only ever get one look at someone's soul.
* Some of the spells in the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' series are like this. For example, in [[Harry Potter/Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone|Book 1]], the main villain put a spell on Harry's broom during a Quidditch game, to make him fall off. Hermione stops the spell by accidentally knocking over the caster, which causes him to lose eye contact with Harry.
** In ''[[The Chamber of Secrets]]'' the basilisk can kill someone just by looking at them in the eye -- fortunatelyeye—fortunately, the only people we see who have encountered it in this generation manage to not quite look it in the eye: they see it in a puddle of water, through a camera lens, or in a mirror, so it doesn't ''quite'' kill them, instead stunning them into petrification. One girl fifty years ago wasn't as lucky. {{spoiler|She now haunts the very bathroom she died in, as Moaning Myrtle.}}
*** Weirdest of all, one person was petrified by seeing it ''through a ghost''. The ghost was petrified instead of killed because he was [[Captain Obvious|already dead]].
** There is also Legilimency, the ability to extract emotions and memories from a person's mind, which usually works via eye-to-eye contact. Dumbledore, Snape and Voldemort are expert Legilimens, and scattered through the series (even before we knew what Legilimency was) we can find instances where Harry felt they could "read his mind". Almost a "missed" example, but once or twice Harry does look away from their gaze; initially the reader would just assume he felt uncomfortable under scrutiny -- [[Foreshadowing|now we know better]].
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