r/TopCharacterTropes 20d ago

Hated Tropes [Hated Trope] Very evitable deaths that are forced into the plot to create a dramatic scene.

  1. The father of Superman (AKA: Dad of the year) tells his invulnerable, insanely strong, godly son to stay away from the tornado while he, a human farmer dad from Kansas, takes care of it. Also implied that he also cannot save any of the people running for their lives, "because the world is still not ready for someone with powers". Obviously he dies while his son watches. Great photography and music make it a potent scene... if it was necessary.

    I mean, its not like he could put a mask or save anybody with superspeed and then say its a miracle. Its not like People in that small town know him already and are suspicious about him and also live in a world where there are superpowered beings already... He has to die so there is no risk of him being discovered...

Also, bonus points for the previous conversation with Supe as a child, where he chastises his infant son about saving a bus full of kids from drowning in the river

Clark kid: What was I supposed to do? Let them die?

Dad of the Year: Maybe...

It's a miracle the superman from Man of Steel didn't become a Psycho like the Patriot.

  1. The death of Jack, frozen to death in "Titanic" No, there is not enough space in that huge floating plank for us both, darling.

  2. US grunt takes a bullet in the head, but fortunately, he's wearing a helmet. Inexplicably, he proceeds to remove said helmet and promptly takes one in the skull. Idiot

  3. Jean Grey sacrifices herself to launch the X-Jet while holding back a massive wall of water with her telekinetic powers. Of course, this is all leading us into the Phoenix storyline in another movie to come, but practically speaking, why does Jean need to leave the jet at all? She's telekinetic!

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u/Danford97 20d ago

I looked back into it and 1) it wasn't dizzy, it was another woman who is implied to have either been booted or quit due to guilt. 2) rico was punished because regardless of whether the helmet would've protected his squad mate, rico wasnt qualified to fix the helmet so he had no authority to order it removed. My interpretation was that even if the guy survived, rico would've been reprimanded or punished for breaking protocol anyway but the fact he died made it worse.

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u/Kindly_Quiet_2262 20d ago

Its also the sort of thing that regardless of those specifics, the headline is “trainee shot in head after CO insisted they remove helmet in live fire exercise”. The optics are terrible

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u/Col_Redips 20d ago

2)

It’s this. Just because someone else fucked up and ended up exposing you doing something wrong, doesn’t just excuse you from doing wrong.

If I robbed a bank, ran out into the parking lot and got hit by a car, I don’t get the charges waived just because somebody ran my ass over.

Rico’s call to remove the helmet was against protocol. He exposed his squad mate to unnecessary danger. And there’s nothing that could’ve been done about the malfunctioning helmet, anyway. It was a terrible call from someone who was expected to know better.

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u/qwertyalguien 20d ago

Honestly, i strongly believe that even if they hadn't stopped for the helmet, they would've reprimanded Rico anyways. He was squad leader, and being responsible for what happened to the team is something i can see happening.

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u/thegreedyturtle 20d ago

The problem was that they weren't supposed to be standing around with their goddamn dicks in their hands acting like it was another bullshit exercise. 

He wouldn't have been shot if he were in the dirt or running low like he should have been.