Not Brainwashed: Difference between revisions

Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0
(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0)
 
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* ''[[G Gundam]]'' had Domon's mentor, Master Asia, turn against him. Domon didn't give this much thought at first, since he had seen many people become [[Brainwashed]] by the Devil Gundam before then, and was mighty displeased to discover that Master Asia was serving the Devil Gundam purely by choice.
* This trope appears in the last story arc of the live-action adaptation ''[[Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon]]''. Queen Beryl, who up until this point has been brainwashing her four lieutenants, resigns herself to certain death and releases Jaedite from her spell, so he can escape. His personality doesn't change at all: he reveals that he's always been her willing servant, and he intends to remain by her side no matter what.
* In ''[[Inuyasha]]'', Sango's brother Kohaku is brought [[Back Fromfrom the Dead]] with [[Easy Amnesia]] to work for Naraku. He kills women and children while under Naraku's influence, but then regains his faculties. His sister's attempts to "break" his brainwashing at this point convince him that the best way to protect her (and make up for what he's done) is to continue working for Naraku in order to find a way to permanently destroy him.
* ''[[Hellsing]]'', {{spoiler|[[Battle Butler]] Walter}} is seen de-aged and on the side of the Nazi Vampires. When Alucard fights him, everyone assumes that he's been brainwashed. While it's left slightly ambiguous, it's heavily implied that not only was he doing it all of his own free will, but he had also been the cause of various security breaches earlier in the series.
* In ''[[Saint Seiya: The Lost Canvas]]'', [[Woobie]] Alone is chosen as the vessel for [[Everybody Hates Hades|Hades]] and subsequently begins to [[Kill'Em All|kill everyone]], planning to end all life on Earth. {{spoiler|Turns out this has nothing to do with the influence of Hades, as he was never possessed; being chosen as the vessel for Hades simply gave him the power to execute a plan that was his own from the very beginning.}}
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* Ruthlessly exploited in ''[[Harry Potter]]'' books: Many of villains got off by pretending to be brainwashed (including the Malfoys). Later Harry cannot believe that Stan the bus driver is not under [[Mind Control]] when attacking him. (Stan IS surprisingly blank-eyed, and it's not verified one way or the other.)
** Stan was previously a good-natured but pretty slow bus attendant who claimed he would be the next Minister of Magic when he was trying to chat up some Veelas. That said, he seemed ''very'' unlikely as Death Eater material, even if he did decide to join. On the other hand, Harry and his friends believed that Cornelius Fudge was under the Imperius Curse which was why he was stubbornly ignoring signs of Voldemort's return (Dumbledore doesn't think this is true though and Fudge later does accept what's going on, so yeah...) There's also debate as to whether or not {{spoiler|Umbridge was possessed by the horcrux locket when she wore it. While Harry figured that it would be impossible to tell since she was already so foul, [[Word of God|Rowling]] stated that the locket saw her as a kindred spirit and aided her rather then hindered her.}}
* [http://wikinfo.org/index.php/Tarra_(Doctor_Who) Tarra]{{Dead link}} from "[[Faction Paradox|The Ancestor Cell]]", at least in [[Chivalrous Pervert|Fitz's]] conception. He thinks she's led on by Kellen, but it's obvious she's leading the rich kids on and is the [[Man Behind the Man]]. Her "first name" is {{spoiler|[[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Mother]], the title of a [[Faction Paradox]] agent, a vicious [[Cult]] engaging in [[Temporal Paradox]]es and whose goal is to destroy the structure of time itself. }}
 
=== Live Action TV ===
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** There is also one in ''[[World of Warcraft]]''. The players are sent to assassinate Emperor Dagran Thaurissan, the [[Evil Emperor]] of the Dark Iron and rescue the captive Princess Moira Bronzebeard. It however turned out that {{spoiler|she took a liking to him and [[Happily Married]], much to the player's surprise.}}
** In the Stonecore, there's a rock giant that you're tasked by Therazane to kill named Ozruk. At first, she sent agents to free him from whatever magic binds him to this Twilight's Hammer dungeon. "No such magic was placed upon him."
* In ''[[EarthboundEarthBound]]'', Ness's "friend" Porky is often seen with brainwashed humans, even claiming to have been brainwashed and subsequently freed following the Happy Happy Village incident. Halfway through the game, he finally just flat out admits that he is actually working for Giygas of his own volition.
* In ''[[Super Robot Wars]]'' Original Generation 2, much of the early plot revolves around surviving members of the "School" on the opposing side trying to "save" one of your pilots from obvious brainwashing. Of course, she's on your side entirely by choice, and ''they're'' the ones undergoing brainwashing.
* ''[[Kamen Rider Decade]]''; on {{spoiler|1=DiEnd's world}} it turns out that {{spoiler|Junichi}} is working for the villain and is not under his control as everyone has believed.
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* ''[[Walkyverse|It's Walky]]'''s final arc deals with several mind-controlled former teammates... and one who, it turns out, switched sides by choice.
{{quote|"He wasn't hypnotised, merely disgruntled."}}
* In ''[[Erfworld]]'', Jillian [https://web.archive.org/web/20130830160431/http://www.giantitp.com/comics/erf0105.html concludes] that Wanda rejects her [[Last Second Chance|urging to desert Stanley]] because she is bound by a loyalty spell. When an ally with spell-detecting abilities informs her that Wanda is ''not'' under any loyalty spells, she flatly refuses to believe it. But she comes around for the most part when Wanda [[Pillar of Light|tries to kill her]], though.
* In ''[[Order of the Stick]]'' #640, after {{spoiler|Vaarsuvius}} takes great pleasure in killing an opponent (and their entire extended family) it is revealed that the [[Deal with the Devil]] they made had no effect on their alignment or actions—essentially, the character merely revealed [[What You Are in the Dark|their true self.]]
** In fact, the character was told the spell ''could'' effect their alignment, with the implication that it was possible and up to them to resist any such effect. This example seems to overlap with [[More Than Mind Control]] in that the character was told this in order to facilitate them giving in to their worst impulses (like arrogance, cruelty, and mass-murder).