No second chances. I'm that sort of a man. —The Tenth Doctor,Doctor Who, "The Christmas Invasion",the lying bugger that he is. |
The Hero and TheBig Bad have had their climactic battle. The Hero wins but chooses to spare the Big Bad, be it to prove he is better or because he doesn't want to kill (mostly also because theBig Bad was begging for his life). As the hero turns and walks away, triumphant, the villainlets out a scream of rageand charges after the hero, attempting tostab him in the back. The Hero decides that one chance to change was enough; he won't give the villain a second. He either kills the Big Bad or disarms the villain entirely.
Often sub-trope ofKarmic Death; here it is not Karma but the Hero who did the killing. The hero often uses anOffhand Backhand in this situation. Thematically related toNever Bring a Knife to A Fist Fight: By showing his lack of moral integrity, the villain dooms himself to defeat. It also allows the hero to kill the villain without the hero killing the villain in cold blood, because that would be unheroic. Unless the hero is aCombat Pragmatist who doesn't have a problem with taking the most sensible but morally questionable course of action.
CompareSelf-Disposing Villain. It should not be confused withTaking You with Me, which is where a character after being spared attempts to kill his enemy with full knowledge and/or intentions of his/her own death as a result.
Monev: Aren't you afraid I'll try to shoot you while your back is turned? |
"No second chances. I'm that sort of a man." |
Oswald: You must have mistaken me for a better man. |
Batman: Do you know something funny? Even after everything you've done...I would have saved you. |