Unlocking the Talent

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A character who is brilliant or otherwise skilled, but isn't out using their skill- perhaps they are unnoticed/underappreciated, lazy, or just plain crazy. Perhaps they don't even know how skilled they are. They might just be an Almighty Janitor. Generally this is the main character of the work.

Cue the plot, teach them to use their ability. This involves someone "helping" them to recognize/develop their skills, usually some variety of Mentor.

By the end of the work, they've used their skill to achieve a better and brighter future, having conquered the initial handicap to display their true potential. The central premise is that their flaw is something to either fix or work around.

Compare Brilliant but Lazy, where the person's fault is laziness and this may not be "fixed" by the end of the work, especially when they aren't the main character. Contrast Bunny Ears Lawyer where the flaw isn't overcome but ignored or incorporated. May lead to a Family-Unfriendly Aesop if the character in question is bullied into something they don't want to do, especially if the character doesn't like the end result.


Examples of Unlocking the Talent include:


Film

Live-Action Television

  • Tora Ziyal from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Tragically subverted. Due to a harsh life, she was late to art and characters and the audience don't learn for even longer that she was being mentored until after she'd earned a prestigious university place by merit (she didn't want her father pulling strings for her). Experts considered her art to be a callback to both a great Bajoran artist and a great Cardassian artist. Her dream was to use her mixed heritage and the fact people could see both Cardassian techniques and Bajoran techniques in her work as a way of trying to bring the two enemy worlds together. The university professors even thought she had the talent to pursue that dream. And then she's murdered.

Video Games

  • Liara T'soni from Mass Effect, who develops her biotics after Shepard recruits her.
  • In Die Anstalt, Lilo appears at first to be a dimwitted autistic, having difficulty solving a jigsaw puzzle with only two pieces. But as you treat him, you'll find that he's capable of solving advanced algebra problems. Only his psychological trauma prevents him from doing so.

Web Comics

Real Life

  • Former American Football kicker Martin Gramatica grew up playing soccer, and didn't try out as a kicker until his senior year in high school. He ended up being a decent NFL kicker, and was selected to a Pro Bowl and won a Super Bowl ring.