Villains Want Mercy: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:VICTory 5590.png|link=Mega Man 1|frame|...and so begins [[Once Per Episode|a tradition that will go on]] [[Video Game Long Runners|'till the end of time.]]]]
{{quote|All torturers are cowards at heart. They like to have those weaker than them at their mercy, so they could hide their own fears and insecurities. Men who enjoy hurting little girls always beg for their lives in the end.|Adha|The Lord of Darkwood}}
|Adha|[[The Lord of Darkwood]]}}
 
Sometimes when the heroes defeat the [[Big Bad]], he [[Graceful Loser|goes down gracefully]]. Sometimes he tries to [[Load-Bearing Boss|take the heroes with him]]. Sometimes the villain is so [[Badass]] he just [[Determinator|won't stop fighting]] until he's [[Deader Than Dead]]. This trope is not about those villains.
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Compare [[I Surrender, Suckers]] if the villain uses the surrender to trick the hero. When the hero does this, it's [[Ain't Too Proud to Beg]].
{{examples}}
 
{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] &and [[Manga]] ==
* In ''[[Death Note]]'', part of [[Villain Protagonist|Light Yagami]]'s [[Villainous Breakdown]] is calling out to anybody to help him, because, after slaughtering countless of innocents (alongside the criminals he [[Motive Decay|initially set out to punish]]) he JUST. DOESN'T. WANT TO DIE.
* ''[[Dragonball Z]]''
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* Dub-induced example in the ''[[Sailor Moon]]'' anime: As Telulu's giant plant [[Hoist by His Own Petard|is trying to eat her]], she screams for the Senshi to help her. Strays into [[Nightmare Fuel]] when she lets out a desperate "I'LL BE GOOD, I ''PROMISE!!!''" as the plant explodes, killing her.
* Invariably done by many villains in [[Berserk]] when they find themselves at the end of his colossal sword, especially the demonic Apostles in a particularly ironic case of monsters [[Mugging the Monster]].
* ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'': During the Battle City arc, Weevil Underwood convinces a kid, who he later double-crosses, to sabotage Joey's deck before dueling him, giving Weevil a pretty serious advantage. [[Cheaters Never Prosper| Joey proceeds to win anyway]], and demands Weevil's two Locator Cards and Insect Queen, Weevil begs for mercy, to which Joey remarks that he [[Should Have Thought of That Before X| should've thought of that before he cheated.]]
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
 
== Comic Books ==
* ''[[Paperinik New Adventures]]'' issue 11: "Trauma". The titular villain puts [[Donald Duck]] as Paperinik through physical and mental hell, but when Paperinik fights back through sheer courage, turning the tables AND terrifying Trauma, he instantly [http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xpbpaf7e9xo/TXBlQcJdGzI/AAAAAAAACaQ/TTpJimPRdZA/s1600/10-62.jpg begs the hero for mercy]... which he grants... only after snarking how pathetic Trauma's being.
* At the end of the first arc of the second volume of ''[[The Darkness]]'', villain Cousin Paulie uses various attacks and manipulations to get [[Anti-Hero]] Jackie Estacado as his superhuman enforcer. Once Jackie figures out a way to remove the threats, he promptly blasts his way through all of Paulie's minions before trapping him in his room. When the lights go out and Jackie's darkness-based powers come to full bear, Paulie begs for mercy. Jackie's response?
{{quote|'''Jackie:''' It all happens in a bad dream. Paulie's life collapses like a house of cards in a tornado. The Darkness shows it to me in detail. I see dead pigs an' bloodstains. I see mass suicide and bubonic plague and Ebola and SARS and Russian roulette. I see dead people hanging by a thread and screaming for a lifeline. And Paulie Franchetti, he sees it a million times before he dies.}}
* [[Spider-Man]] goes through this a lot, with villains who want - but don't deserve - to be spared:
** Prior to [[The Clone Saga]], Spidey goes gunning for the Chameleon, who had used synthetic androids disguised as his parents to find his identity, causing him to sink into a horrible [[Heroic BSOD]] when he found out. When he finally corners the villain and is about to crush him (ironically, with the tombstone that had been placed on the grave where Kraven buried Spidey alive years earlier) the Chameleon begs for his life. For a few tense seconds - for both of them and the readers - Spidey pauses, then tosses it aside, clearly deciding he wasn't worth it.
** When Spider-Man first fights Morlun, an immortal who [[Life Drinker| fed on the life force]] of [[Animal-Themed Superbeing]]s like Spidey, Spidey eventually gains the upper hand against him by injecting himself with a massive dose of radiation, which [[I Love Nuclear Power| only weakens him a little]] due to the radiation already in his blood, anticipating that Morlun couldn't feed on it. Indeed, Morlun absorbs the radiation with every punch Spider-Man throws at him, and when he starts to disintegrate from it, he frantically begs Spidey for mercy, insisting that he was only doing what was necessary for his survival and it was [[Nothing Personal]]. While Spider-Man debates on whether or not to let Morlun walk free, the choice is taken from him when Dex, Morlun's former minion, [[Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work| arrives and shoots Morlun dead]]. {{spoiler|Or [[Only Mostly Dead| so it seemed]].}}
** During the climax of the "Grim Hunt" arc, Spidey has embarked on a [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]] against the Kravinoff family for everything they put him and his "spider family" through, at one point using his [[Wall Crawl]]ing powers to [[Flaying Alive|tear a handprint-shaped mass of flesh]] clean off of Sasha Kravinoff's face. When Sasha frantically pleads for him to wait, Spidey hatefully asks her if she "waited" when she murdered Kaine, Mattie Franklin, and Madame Web, all for a dark ritual intended to raise Kraven from the dead.<ref>Incidentally, using wall-crawling powers to rip the flesh off a victim's face was the trademark of Kaine, an Anti-Hero clone of Spidey. The fact that Spidey is willing to resort to that same level of brutality illustrates just how far the Kravinoffs have driven him.</ref>{{spoiler|Still, unfortunately for Sasha, while the hero did grant mercy, [[Unwanted Revival|Kraven himself did not]] - brutally murdering her for what he neither asked for nor wanted.}}
 
== [[Film]] ==
 
* Subversion in ''[[Transformers: The Movie]]''; Megatron begged Optimus Prime for mercy, but it was just a ploy for him to reach for a weapon.
== Films -- Animated ==
* Subversion in [[Transformers: The Movie]] Megatron begged Optimus Prime for mercy, but it was just a ploy for him to reach for a weapon.
 
 
== Films -- Live-Action ==
* In ''[[Robin Hood: Men in Tights]]'' Prince John tries to beg his way out of trouble with King Richard.
{{quote|'''John:''' It's not my fault. I got a lot of bad advice from Nottingham.
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* Dr. Frank N. Furter tries to desperately to get Riff Raff and Magenta to take pity on him in ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]''. It doesn't work, and Riff Raff kills him.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
 
* In ''[[Harry Potter/Harry Potter and Thethe Prisoner of Azkaban (novel)|Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban]]'', the third ''Harry Potter'' book, Wormtail begs Ron, Hermione and Harry to protect him from Sirius and Remus (after he's already begged for mercy, to no avail, from the latter two).
== Literature ==
* [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]] rather liked this trope.
* In ''[[Harry Potter/Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban|Harry Potter]]'', Wormtail begs Ron, Hermione and Harry to protect him from Sirius and Remus (after he's already begged for mercy, to no avail, from the latter two).
* [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]] rather liked this trope.
** Wormtongue in ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' begs for mercy when his plot with Saruman is discovered and defeated, claiming that he was working for the greater good of Rohan. He's allowed to live, a decision that costs quite a few lives and considerable grief.
** At both of his defeats in ''[[The Silmarillion]]'', Morgoth begged for mercy from his fellow Valar: the first time he was simply imprisoned for three thousand years, the second time he... wasn't so lucky.
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* In the last installment of D. J. MacHale's ''[[Pendragon]]'' series, the [[Big Bad]] Saint Dane—who is a completely ruthless, coldblooded, genius, immortal, superhuman teleporting shapeshifter—is defeated ''[[Anticlimax Boss|in a fistfight]]'' by the hero. He then proceeds to annihilate all his character development of the previous nine books by dropping to his knees and sobbing for the heroes to spare his life.
 
== Films -- [[Live-Action TV]] ==
 
== Live-Action TV ==
* ''[[Doctor Who]]''
** At the conclusion of Season 32/Series 6, [[Big Bad|The Silence]] decide that their agent Madame Kovarian has [[You Have Outlived Your Usefulness|outlived her usefulness]] and trigger a device in her [[Eyepatch of Power]] that begins electrocuting her. She knocks it loose and then has the gall to beg Amy for help, but after all she's done to Amy and her family, Amy refuses to help her {{spoiler|and actually ''puts the eyepatch back on her''}}, leaving her to die.
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** In "Genesis of the Daleks," after tricking the Thals {{spoiler|into nuking his own people and eliminating the handful of Kaled scientists still opposed to his work,}} Dalek-creator Davros loses control of his creations and pleads with the Daleks to "have pity" on him and his acolytes. {{spoiler|"Pity?! I have no understanding of the word. It is not registered in my vocabulary bank. EXTERMINATE!"}}
* In the final season of ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'', Sylar's doozy of psychological issues comes to a head and he seeks out Parkman to have his mind wiped clean again. Parkman, having been tormented by Sylar for most of the season and still reeling from the actions that lead Sylar to him, refuses to fall for it a second time. He instead traps Sylar inside an empty shell of a city inside his own mind to wallow in his issues for the rest of his life and then seals up the physically comatose man inside his basement. Then Peter [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero|shows up and frees Sylar]] because of a vision he received of his archnemesis playing a pivotal role in defeating Samuel.
* In the ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' episode "The Gift", when it becomes obvious to Glory that the ''very'' angry Buffy now has the means and intent to truly kill her, she pleads for mercy. She doesn't get it.
 
== [[New Media]] ==
* In ''The Lord of Darkwood'' Lord Vladislav {{spoiler|and then his son Lucard}} both beg for their lives.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
* Dr. Wily does this after being defeated in nearly every classic-series ''[[Mega Man (video game)|Mega Man]]'' game. Gloriously [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] at the end of ''[[Mega Man 9]]''. When Wily begs for mercy yet again, Mega Man ''puts on a slideshow'' of Wily begging at the end of each of the previous games in the series.
* ''[[The Legend of Zelda CDI Games|The Wand of Gamelon]]'': Duke Onkled.
{{quote|'''Duke Onkled:''' [[Memetic Mutation|Please your omnipotence, have mercy]].}}
* The Ripper in ''[[MediEvil 2|Medi Evil 2]]'' begs for mercy from Sir Fortesque when defeated. He gets a bullet to the face instead.
 
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* In the ''[[Ben 10: Alien Force|Ben 10 Alien Force]]'' episode "Vendetta", Ragnarok begs Kevin to save him from the collapsing spaceship. Considering that Ragnarok [[You Killed My Father|killed Kevin's dad]], you can imagine the outcome.
* An episode of ''[[Captain Planet and the Planeteers]]'' had Dr. Blight beg the title hero to save her from being trampled to death by a genetically altered steer (that she created) stating, "You have to save me! It's in your hero code!" Cap admits she's right and does save her.
* In an early episode of ''[[Batman: The Animated Series|Batman the Animated Series]]'', [[The Joker]] is hanging over a pit of molten metal:
{{quote|'''Joker:''' Batman! You wouldn't let me fry, would you?
'''Batman:''' ''(considersstops to consider it)''
'''Joker:''' BATMAN! ''(Batman pulls him up)'' }}
*:* Though the series wasn't consistent on this. Sometimes the Joker is genuinely afraid of dying and will beg to be saved, while other times he goes to his apparent demise laughing all the way. Then again, it ''is'' [[The Joker]]. Consistency is not exactly a hallmark of insanity.
* {{spoiler|Qilby}}, the season 2 [[Big Bad]] of ''[[Wakfu]]'' does this ''twice''. In his true backstory, {{spoiler|he begs for mercy when Yugo's past incarnation seals him inside limbo.}} In the finale, {{spoiler|he does it again when Yugo banishes him to the same void.}}
* ''[[Transformers|Starscream]]'': Starscream did this all the time. Usually after trying and failing to stab Megatron in the back.
* In ''[[The Smurfs]]'' episode "Smurphony In 'C' ", Gargamel disguises himself as a fairy, and gave Harmony an enchanted horn ( the "Shazalakazoo") claiming it will cure his tone-deafness. Of course, it's a trick, and Harmony realizes his mistake when it sends the other smurfs into a deep slumber that they can't wake up from. When Harmony goes to find the fairy and Gargamel reveals himself, he tries to use the horn against the wizard, but Gargamel merely covers his ears and tries to stomp him - until he unwisely chases him across a log bridge over a chasm and falls. Gargamel is now holding on for his life, unable to cover his ears, and Harmony is right in the position to finish him off. He's about to do it too, but Gargamel pleads and begs for his worthless hide; Harmony changes his mind, realizing it's not good to kick somebody when they're down, so he just simply blows his foe a raspberry and runs off. He would likely regret it later.
* In the ''[[Rick and Morty]]'' episode "Unmortricken", {{spoiler| Rick Prime uses the [[We Can Rule Together]] routine on Evil Morty and then the [[Not So Different]] routine on [[The Protagonist|Rick C-137]]; neither they nor the viewers are fooled by it, as it is all a pathetic attempt to get them to spare his worthless hide. They don't.}}
 
{{reflist}}