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!! Films -- Animated
* Creator/{{Disney}} examples:
** ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'': A teenage Hercules has superhuman strength but is very clumsy sometimes; Megara is apparently immortal, but is Hades' slave
** Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it by the time you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
** ''Disney/WreckItRalph'': "WHY DO I FIX EVERYTHING I TOUCH?!" MrFixIt powers are cool and all until you're trying to break out of prison and your efforts are simply making the prison ''sturdier''. Like a reverse ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.
** Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.
* Moses from ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' is God's Chosen One, but he is forced to be the instrument of the 10 Plagues of Egypt.

!! Films -- Live Action
* Zigzagged in ''Film/GroundhogDay'', in which Bill Murray's character repeats the same day over and over again, with no way to stop the cycle. At first he's confused, and then overjoyed, but soon he's depressed as anything because he has no life to look forward to. However, eventually he realizes that the unlimited time can be used to master any skill, prevent any and all mishaps that would otherwise occur during his single day, and, once he learns to truly care for her, win the heart of his love interest. Which, it turns out, breaks the spell and canonizes that last perfect day as the one that actually happened.
* In the Creator/DrewBarrymore film (and the later TV miniseries sequel) ''Film/{{Firestarter}}'', Charlie [=McGee=] inherits psychic powers from her parents who took part in a government experiment (They got lucky, most of the other patients went [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity batshit insane]]). Her father got the ability to read minds and psychically "push" people to do what he wants or see what he sees, but it gives him pinprick brain hemorrhages to do so. Charlie doesn't have this problem, but her pyrokinesis (the ability to make fires by frowning) prohibits her from being close to anyone, due to control issues. To top it all off, the government agency that sponsored the experiment want to use her as a weapon. According to the film, by the time Charlie hits puberty she'll be powerful enough to crack the world in half. If that ain't this trope, nothing is.
* In ''X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes'', the main character grants himself x-ray vision. While he obtains some benefits from it - including the ability to cheat at cards - his vision gradually increases in power until he can see through his own eyelids, through reality itself and into the swirling madness beyond. The rumored deleted ending makes it worse. [[spoiler:After ripping out his own eyes, he screams, "I can still see!"]]
* In ''Film/TheButterflyEffect'' the protagonist gains the power to go back in time and change key events in his childhood. But whatever he tries to fix he just ends up messing up his life and that of his friends even more. The {{Psychic Nosebleed}}s that follow shortly after changing the event aren't that nice either.
* A major element of Creator/MattDamon's character in ''Film/{{Hereafter}}''. He can read people's minds and/or communicate with their dead relatives by touching their hands. Cool, right? No. Imagine accidentally discovering the girl who you've been flirting with [[spoiler:was sexually abused as a child by her father]]. Takes AMindIsATerribleThingToRead to whole new levels.
* In ''Film/{{Ringu}}'', Sadako Yamamura was born with extraordinary psychic abilities, which gave her clairvoyance, psychography, and astral projection that enabled her personality to endure after death [[spoiler: and in the books, her abilities are powerful enough to allow her genetic manipulation of people and viruses]]. Her mother was also shown having similar abilities. Instead of fame and recognition, these powers led to both of them being scorned, driven away and persecuted by society, leading to Sadako's mother throwing herself into a volcano, and Sadako herself being killed and thrown down a well, where her spirit will linger ''forever''.
* ''Film/TheRing'': Samara Morgan had the innate ability to imprint images and visions in the minds of other living things; unfortunately, the power manifested at birth, and she was never able to control it, leading both her mother and adoptive mother into complete madness. The second film says that Samara's powers came about because her mother let dead spirits possess her, and while these gave Samara awesome powers, her body was [[GrandTheftMe pretty much hijacked]] and all she could do was watch as the spirits controlled her body and -- often -- caused problems for people. She spent her whole life asking for people to drown her, because that was the only way to get the spirits out of her body.
* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}''. It's his own radiation that [[spoiler: ends up being the cause of his own death in ''Film/GodzillaVsDestoroyah''.]] Yes, we're talking about the SAME radiation that allows him to spew nuclear plasma and destroy his enemies.
* It's no fun being a [[Film/{{Scanners}} Scanner]], mostly because of all that PowerIncontinence. Also, hearing the thoughts of everyone around you gets noisy and distracting.
* In ''Film/SkyHigh2005'', one of the main plot points involves how all the people with the awesome powers go into the Hero class, the WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway characters are stuck as "sidekicks". Subverted by the handy PlotTailoredToTheParty, which lets the sidekicks do their part and teach everyone a valuable lesson.
* While ''Film/{{Darkman}}'' is impervious to pain, he had to burn nearly to death to get that way, and to undergo a dubious surgical technique which left him subject to uncontrolled rage and mood swings. Plus, with no sense of pain, he can't even tell if he's injuring himself until he actually looks.
* In the movie ''Film/DeathBecomesHer'', two of the main characters take a potion that grants eternal life and youth. No, the suck doesn't involve WhoWantsToLiveForever, as most of the qualitffies of that trope are either ignored or [[HandWave handwaved]] (anyone who takes the potion is supposed to sever all human contact after so many years anyway, so as to avoid suspicion). The suck comes after both newly immortal characters try to kill each other, and find out that, while they won't die, their bodies will. From then on, they are stuck in their own broken corpses, having to utilize undertaking techniques just to keep themselves looking and moving like living people. By the end of the movie, even this isn't enough, as their bodies fall apart around them, leaving them spending what may very well be eternity as a pile of rotting body parts.
* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. Ella receive the "Gift" of obedience by Lucinda, a fairy. So, is forced to obey every direct order given to her, no matter what. Being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds. [[SarcasmMode Thanks, Lucinda!]]
* Being sensitive to the Force in ''Franchise/StarWars'' isn't really fun at all. Yeah it comes with nifty psychic powers and super reflexes, but Force Users have to maintain strict control over their emotions, sometimes to the point of being TheStoic. Otherwise they run the risk of falling to the Dark Side of the Force, and while this also comes with nifty (and scary) powers, spending too much time on the Dark Side inevitably leads to the loss of friends and loved ones, insanity, and death.
* ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'':
** ''Film/XMen1'':
*** Rogue's superpower doesn't allow her to touch the ones she loves.
*** Cyclops must ''always'' cover his eyes with a ruby quartz lens, otherwise he might accidentally kill someone.
*** The mutations produced by Magneto's machine are fatal.
** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'': Jones can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.
** ''Film/XMenFirstClass'': Havok is very uncomfortable using his mutant ability because of its high potential for destruction, and most likely he has been incarcerated for manslaughter.
** ''Film/TheWolverine'': Yukio's mutant power allows her to foresee a person's death (including that of her own parents), but she can't do anything to prevent it from happening.
** ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'':
*** After slipping into a deep depression, the younger Charles views his telepathy as a curse because he can no longer control it. He is unable to shut out the clamour of thoughts that he doesn't want to hear, and this causes a tremendous amount of agony, to the point where he becomes addicted to a serum which numbs his ability, allowing him to sleep at night.
*** At the age of nine, Xavier believed that he was mentally ill (schizophrenia, most likely) due to the voices in his head, and it took him ''three whole years'' to recognize that he was actually telepathic--as dysfunctional as he is in 1973, his childhood experience must have been downright nightmarish in comparison.
*** This is Beast's attitude towards his physical mutation. He goes through great lengths in order to mask what he perceives to be his body's grotesque deformities.
** ''Film/XMenApocalypse'':
*** Professor X invokes this in his opening narration ("A gift can often be a curse"). When a blindfolded Scott Summers tells him that a mutation "doesn't exactly feel like a gift," Charles agrees and responds with, "It never does at first."
*** Jean Grey's ever-expanding superpowers make her life miserable because her classmates don't want to be near someone who's prone to losing control, and she's anxious that she might inadvertently hurt others.
* Those who take the MarkOfTheBeast in the ''Film/{{Apocalypse}}'' film series are blessed with limited telekinetic and telepathic powers and can also receive miraculous healings, all at the cost of spending eternity in the Lake of Fire.
* The so-called Holy Implant in ''Film/SixTheMarkUnleashed''.
* The protagonists from the ''Film/FinalDestination'' series (Alex Browning, Kimberly Corman, Wendy Christensen, Nick O'Bannon and Sam Lawton). The visions in regards to the impending disasters along with their own demise drives the plot of cheating Death. Either that, or Death is pretty sadistic or he is a sore loser.
* ''Film/MenInBlack3'' introduces Griffin, an alien who can see all possible timelines at once. When he shows J and K the Mets winning the 1969 World Series three months before it'll happen, J says it's incredible; Griffin calls it a pain in the ass. Unusually for this trope, though, he does seem to enjoy the ability to some extent; he refers to said World Series as his favorite moment of all time, because of all the insanely improbable things that came together to make it happen. [[spoiler:Though at the end of the film, it's replaced by the moment where J gets back from the past and meets up with K, who's (slightly) less {{Stoic}} thanks to the events of the movie.]]
* ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'' reveals that, after undergoing the transformation from a scrawny kid to a SuperSoldier thanks to Erskine's SuperSerum, Steve Rogers realizes that his boosted metabolism prevents him from getting drunk and [[DrowningMySorrows drowning his sorrows]]. His body neutralizes alcohol faster than he can drink it. [[BigEater His food bill's pretty hefty too]].
* In ''Film/ManOfSteel'', when young Clark's X-ray vision and super-hearing first manifest, he freaks out from sensory overload and locks himself in a closet.
* All of the Precogs of ''Film/MinorityReport'' are cursed to foresee events that have yet to come, Agatha especially. Throughout the movie, she tells random people and Anderton things she's seen happen. She even sees her mother's death replay in her mind.
* In ''Film/BorisAndNatasha'', Professor Paulovitch invents a time-reversal device which [[spoiler: reverses time by a few seconds when a nearby disaster happens]]. As he explains to the title characters, he quickly realized this could be bad if fallen into the wrong hands and tried to have it destroyed, only for its effects to keep saving it.
----

to:

!! Films -- Animated
* Creator/{{Disney}} examples:
** ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'': A teenage Hercules has superhuman strength but is very clumsy sometimes; Megara is apparently immortal, but is Hades' slave
** Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it by the time you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
** ''Disney/WreckItRalph'': "WHY DO I FIX EVERYTHING I TOUCH?!" MrFixIt powers are cool and all until you're trying to break out of prison and your efforts are simply making the prison ''sturdier''. Like a reverse ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.
** Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.
* Moses from ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' is God's Chosen One, but he is forced to be the instrument of the 10 Plagues of Egypt.

!! Films -- Live Action
* Zigzagged in ''Film/GroundhogDay'', in which Bill Murray's character repeats the same day over and over again, with no way to stop the cycle. At first he's confused, and then overjoyed, but soon he's depressed as anything because he has no life to look forward to. However, eventually he realizes that the unlimited time can be used to master any skill, prevent any and all mishaps that would otherwise occur during his single day, and, once he learns to truly care for her, win the heart of his love interest. Which, it turns out, breaks the spell and canonizes that last perfect day as the one that actually happened.
* In the Creator/DrewBarrymore film (and the later TV miniseries sequel) ''Film/{{Firestarter}}'', Charlie [=McGee=] inherits psychic powers from her parents who took part in a government experiment (They got lucky, most of the other patients went [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity batshit insane]]). Her father got the ability to read minds and psychically "push" people to do what he wants or see what he sees, but it gives him pinprick brain hemorrhages to do so. Charlie doesn't have this problem, but her pyrokinesis (the ability to make fires by frowning) prohibits her from being close to anyone, due to control issues. To top it all off, the government agency that sponsored the experiment want to use her as a weapon. According to the film, by the time Charlie hits puberty she'll be powerful enough to crack the world in half. If that ain't this trope, nothing is.
* In ''X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes'', the main character grants himself x-ray vision. While he obtains some benefits from it - including the ability to cheat at cards - his vision gradually increases in power until he can see through his own eyelids, through reality itself and into the swirling madness beyond. The rumored deleted ending makes it worse. [[spoiler:After ripping out his own eyes, he screams, "I can still see!"]]
* In ''Film/TheButterflyEffect'' the protagonist gains the power to go back in time and change key events in his childhood. But whatever he tries to fix he just ends up messing up his life and that of his friends even more. The {{Psychic Nosebleed}}s that follow shortly after changing the event aren't that nice either.
* A major element of Creator/MattDamon's character in ''Film/{{Hereafter}}''. He can read people's minds and/or communicate with their dead relatives by touching their hands. Cool, right? No. Imagine accidentally discovering the girl who you've been flirting with [[spoiler:was sexually abused as a child by her father]]. Takes AMindIsATerribleThingToRead to whole new levels.
* In ''Film/{{Ringu}}'', Sadako Yamamura was born with extraordinary psychic abilities, which gave her clairvoyance, psychography, and astral projection that enabled her personality to endure after death [[spoiler: and in the books, her abilities are powerful enough to allow her genetic manipulation of people and viruses]]. Her mother was also shown having similar abilities. Instead of fame and recognition, these powers led to both of them being scorned, driven away and persecuted by society, leading to Sadako's mother throwing herself into a volcano, and Sadako herself being killed and thrown down a well, where her spirit will linger ''forever''.
* ''Film/TheRing'': Samara Morgan had the innate ability to imprint images and visions in the minds of other living things; unfortunately, the power manifested at birth, and she was never able to control it, leading both her mother and adoptive mother into complete madness. The second film says that Samara's powers came about because her mother let dead spirits possess her, and while these gave Samara awesome powers, her body was [[GrandTheftMe pretty much hijacked]] and all she could do was watch as the spirits controlled her body and -- often -- caused problems for people. She spent her whole life asking for people to drown her, because that was the only way to get the spirits out of her body.
* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}''. It's his own radiation that [[spoiler: ends up being the cause of his own death in ''Film/GodzillaVsDestoroyah''.]] Yes, we're talking about the SAME radiation that allows him to spew nuclear plasma and destroy his enemies.
* It's no fun being a [[Film/{{Scanners}} Scanner]], mostly because of all that PowerIncontinence. Also, hearing the thoughts of everyone around you gets noisy and distracting.
* In ''Film/SkyHigh2005'', one of the main plot points involves how all the people with the awesome powers go into the Hero class, the WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway characters are stuck as "sidekicks". Subverted by the handy PlotTailoredToTheParty, which lets the sidekicks do their part and teach everyone a valuable lesson.
* While ''Film/{{Darkman}}'' is impervious to pain, he had to burn nearly to death to get that way, and to undergo a dubious surgical technique which left him subject to uncontrolled rage and mood swings. Plus, with no sense of pain, he can't even tell if he's injuring himself until he actually looks.
* In the movie ''Film/DeathBecomesHer'', two of the main characters take a potion that grants eternal life and youth. No, the suck doesn't involve WhoWantsToLiveForever, as most of the qualitffies of that trope are either ignored or [[HandWave handwaved]] (anyone who takes the potion is supposed to sever all human contact after so many years anyway, so as to avoid suspicion). The suck comes after both newly immortal characters try to kill each other, and find out that, while they won't die, their bodies will. From then on, they are stuck in their own broken corpses, having to utilize undertaking techniques just to keep themselves looking and moving like living people. By the end of the movie, even this isn't enough, as their bodies fall apart around them, leaving them spending what may very well be eternity as a pile of rotting body parts.
* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. Ella receive the "Gift" of obedience by Lucinda, a fairy. So, is forced to obey every direct order given to her, no matter what. Being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds. [[SarcasmMode Thanks, Lucinda!]]
* Being sensitive to the Force in ''Franchise/StarWars'' isn't really fun at all. Yeah it comes with nifty psychic powers and super reflexes, but Force Users have to maintain strict control over their emotions, sometimes to the point of being TheStoic. Otherwise they run the risk of falling to the Dark Side of the Force, and while this also comes with nifty (and scary) powers, spending too much time on the Dark Side inevitably leads to the loss of friends and loved ones, insanity, and death.
* ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'':
** ''Film/XMen1'':
*** Rogue's superpower doesn't allow her to touch the ones she loves.
*** Cyclops must ''always'' cover his eyes with a ruby quartz lens, otherwise he might accidentally kill someone.
*** The mutations produced by Magneto's machine are fatal.
** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'': Jones can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.
** ''Film/XMenFirstClass'': Havok is very uncomfortable using his mutant ability because of its high potential for destruction, and most likely he has been incarcerated for manslaughter.
** ''Film/TheWolverine'': Yukio's mutant power allows her to foresee a person's death (including that of her own parents), but she can't do anything to prevent it from happening.
** ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'':
*** After slipping into a deep depression, the younger Charles views his telepathy as a curse because he can no longer control it. He is unable to shut out the clamour of thoughts that he doesn't want to hear, and this causes a tremendous amount of agony, to the point where he becomes addicted to a serum which numbs his ability, allowing him to sleep at night.
*** At the age of nine, Xavier believed that he was mentally ill (schizophrenia, most likely) due to the voices in his head, and it took him ''three whole years'' to recognize that he was actually telepathic--as dysfunctional as he is in 1973, his childhood experience must have been downright nightmarish in comparison.
*** This is Beast's attitude towards his physical mutation. He goes through great lengths in order to mask what he perceives to be his body's grotesque deformities.
** ''Film/XMenApocalypse'':
*** Professor X invokes this in his opening narration ("A gift can often be a curse"). When a blindfolded Scott Summers tells him that a mutation "doesn't exactly feel like a gift," Charles agrees and responds with, "It never does at first."
*** Jean Grey's ever-expanding superpowers make her life miserable because her classmates don't want to be near someone who's prone to losing control, and she's anxious that she might inadvertently hurt others.
* Those who take the MarkOfTheBeast in the ''Film/{{Apocalypse}}'' film series are blessed with limited telekinetic and telepathic powers and can also receive miraculous healings, all at the cost of spending eternity in the Lake of Fire.
* The so-called Holy Implant in ''Film/SixTheMarkUnleashed''.
* The protagonists from the ''Film/FinalDestination'' series (Alex Browning, Kimberly Corman, Wendy Christensen, Nick O'Bannon and Sam Lawton). The visions in regards to the impending disasters along with their own demise drives the plot of cheating Death. Either that, or Death is pretty sadistic or he is a sore loser.
* ''Film/MenInBlack3'' introduces Griffin, an alien who can see all possible timelines at once. When he shows J and K the Mets winning the 1969 World Series three months before it'll happen, J says it's incredible; Griffin calls it a pain in the ass. Unusually for this trope, though, he does seem to enjoy the ability to some extent; he refers to said World Series as his favorite moment of all time, because of all the insanely improbable things that came together to make it happen. [[spoiler:Though at the end of the film, it's replaced by the moment where J gets back from the past and meets up with K, who's (slightly) less {{Stoic}} thanks to the events of the movie.]]
* ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'' reveals that, after undergoing the transformation from a scrawny kid to a SuperSoldier thanks to Erskine's SuperSerum, Steve Rogers realizes that his boosted metabolism prevents him from getting drunk and [[DrowningMySorrows drowning his sorrows]]. His body neutralizes alcohol faster than he can drink it. [[BigEater His food bill's pretty hefty too]].
* In ''Film/ManOfSteel'', when young Clark's X-ray vision and super-hearing first manifest, he freaks out from sensory overload and locks himself in a closet.
* All of the Precogs of ''Film/MinorityReport'' are cursed to foresee events that have yet to come, Agatha especially. Throughout the movie, she tells random people and Anderton things she's seen happen. She even sees her mother's death replay in her mind.
* In ''Film/BorisAndNatasha'', Professor Paulovitch invents a time-reversal device which [[spoiler: reverses time by a few seconds when a nearby disaster happens]]. As he explains to the title characters, he quickly realized this could be bad if fallen into the wrong hands and tried to have it destroyed, only for its effects to keep saving it.
----
[[redirect:BlessedWithSuck/LiveActionFilms]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In ''Film/SkyHigh'', one of the main plot points involves how all the people with the awesome powers go into the Hero class, the WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway characters are stuck as "sidekicks". Subverted by the handy PlotTailoredToTheParty, which lets the sidekicks do their part and teach everyone a valuable lesson.

to:

* In ''Film/SkyHigh'', ''Film/SkyHigh2005'', one of the main plot points involves how all the people with the awesome powers go into the Hero class, the WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway characters are stuck as "sidekicks". Subverted by the handy PlotTailoredToTheParty, which lets the sidekicks do their part and teach everyone a valuable lesson.



* Being sensitive to the Force in ''StarWars'' isn't really fun at all. Yeah it comes with nifty psychic powers and super reflexes, but Force Users have to maintain strict control over their emotions, sometimes to the point of being TheStoic. Otherwise they run the risk of falling to the Dark Side of the Force, and while this also comes with nifty (and scary) powers, spending too much time on the Dark Side inevitably leads to the loss of friends and loved ones, insanity, and death.

to:

* Being sensitive to the Force in ''StarWars'' ''Franchise/StarWars'' isn't really fun at all. Yeah it comes with nifty psychic powers and super reflexes, but Force Users have to maintain strict control over their emotions, sometimes to the point of being TheStoic. Otherwise they run the risk of falling to the Dark Side of the Force, and while this also comes with nifty (and scary) powers, spending too much time on the Dark Side inevitably leads to the loss of friends and loved ones, insanity, and death.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Film / X Men has been changed to Film / X Men Film Series, as discussed here.


* ''Film/XMen'':

to:

* ''Film/XMen'':''Film/XMenFilmSeries'':
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* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. She receive the "Gift" of obedience by Lucinda, a fairy. So, is forced to obey every direct order given to her, no matter what. Being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds. [[SarcasmMode Thanks, Lucinda!]]

to:

* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. She Ella receive the "Gift" of obedience by Lucinda, a fairy. So, is forced to obey every direct order given to her, no matter what. Being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds. [[SarcasmMode Thanks, Lucinda!]]

Changed: 171

Removed: 88

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. "Gift" of obedience indeed - [[SarcasmMode thanks, Lucinda!]]
** Inverted, since the being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds.

to:

* The plot of ''Film/EllaEnchanted''. She receive the "Gift" of obedience indeed - [[SarcasmMode thanks, Lucinda!]]
** Inverted, since the being
by Lucinda, a fairy. So, is forced to obey every direct order given to her, no matter what. Being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds.sounds. [[SarcasmMode Thanks, Lucinda!]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** Professor X invokes this in his opening narration ("A gift can often be a curse"). When a blindfolded Scott tells him that a mutation "doesn't exactly feel like a gift," Charles agrees and responds with, "It never does at first."

to:

*** Professor X invokes this in his opening narration ("A gift can often be a curse"). When a blindfolded Scott Summers tells him that a mutation "doesn't exactly feel like a gift," Charles agrees and responds with, "It never does at first."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Inverted, since the being obedient 24/7 is just as bad – if not worse – as It sounds.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** ''Film/XMenApocalypse'':
*** Professor X invokes this in his opening narration ("A gift can often be a curse"). When a blindfolded Scott tells him that a mutation "doesn't exactly feel like a gift," Charles agrees and responds with, "It never does at first."
*** Jean Grey's ever-expanding superpowers make her life miserable because her classmates don't want to be near someone who's prone to losing control, and she's anxious that she might inadvertently hurt others.

Added: 393

Removed: 393

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'': A teenage Hercules has superhuman strength but is very clumsy sometimes; Megara is apparently immortal, but is Hades' slave



** ''Disney/WreckItRalph'': "WHY DO I FIX EVERYTHING I TOUCH?!" MrFixIt powers are cool and all until you're trying to break out of prison and your efforts are simply making the prison ''sturdier''. Like a reverse ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.



** ''Disney/WreckItRalph'': "WHY DO I FIX EVERYTHING I TOUCH?!" MrFixIt powers are cool and all until you're trying to break out of prison and your efforts are simply making the prison ''sturdier''. Like a reverse ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.
** ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'': A teenage Hercules has superhuman strength but is very clumsy sometimes; Megara is apparently immortal, but is Hades' slave

Added: 1502

Removed: 897

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


!! Films -- Animated
* Creator/{{Disney}} examples:
** Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it by the time you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
** Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.
** ''Disney/WreckItRalph'': "WHY DO I FIX EVERYTHING I TOUCH?!" MrFixIt powers are cool and all until you're trying to break out of prison and your efforts are simply making the prison ''sturdier''. Like a reverse ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.
** ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'': A teenage Hercules has superhuman strength but is very clumsy sometimes; Megara is apparently immortal, but is Hades' slave
* Moses from ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' is God's Chosen One, but he is forced to be the instrument of the 10 Plagues of Egypt.

!! Films -- Live Action



* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it by the time you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
* Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.
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* ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'' reveals that, after undergoing the transformation from a scrawny kid to a SuperSoldier thanks to Erskine's SuperSerum, Steve Rogers realizes that his boosted metabolism prevents him from getting drunk and [[DrowningMySorrows drowning his sorrows]]. His body neutralizes alcohol faster than he can drink it.

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* ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'' reveals that, after undergoing the transformation from a scrawny kid to a SuperSoldier thanks to Erskine's SuperSerum, Steve Rogers realizes that his boosted metabolism prevents him from getting drunk and [[DrowningMySorrows drowning his sorrows]]. His body neutralizes alcohol faster than he can drink it. [[BigEater His food bill's pretty hefty too]].
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* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it when you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.

to:

* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And with 70 feet of it when by the time you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.



* In ''Film/BorisAndNatasha'', Professor Paulovitch invents a time-reversal device which [[spoiler: reverses time by a few seconds when a nearby disaster happens]]. As he explains to the title characters, he quickly realized this could be bad if fallen into the wrong hands and tried to have it destroyed, only for its affects to keep saving it.

to:

* In ''Film/BorisAndNatasha'', Professor Paulovitch invents a time-reversal device which [[spoiler: reverses time by a few seconds when a nearby disaster happens]]. As he explains to the title characters, he quickly realized this could be bad if fallen into the wrong hands and tried to have it destroyed, only for its affects effects to keep saving it.
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sadly, no one\'s been able to verify its existence.


* In ''X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes'', the main character grants himself x-ray vision. While he obtains some benefits from it - including the ability to cheat at cards - his vision gradually increases in power until he can see through his own eyelids, through reality itself and into the swirling madness beyond. The deleted ending makes it worse. [[spoiler:After ripping out his own eyes, he screams, "I can still see!"]]

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* In ''X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes'', the main character grants himself x-ray vision. While he obtains some benefits from it - including the ability to cheat at cards - his vision gradually increases in power until he can see through his own eyelids, through reality itself and into the swirling madness beyond. The rumored deleted ending makes it worse. [[spoiler:After ripping out his own eyes, he screams, "I can still see!"]]



* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And at 70 feet when you're 18, it can also be a real drag to lug around literally. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.

to:

* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}.''Disney/{{Tangled}}''. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And at with 70 feet of it when you're 18, it can also be a real drag (literally) to lug around literally.around. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
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None

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* In ''Film/BorisAndNatasha'', Professor Paulovitch invents a time-reversal device which [[spoiler: reverses time by a few seconds when a nearby disaster happens]]. As he explains to the title characters, he quickly realized this could be bad if fallen into the wrong hands and tried to have it destroyed, only for its affects to keep saving it.

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Changed: 679

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* In the movie ''Film/DeathBecomesHer'', two of the main characters take a potion that grants eternal life and youth. No, the suck doesn't involve WhoWantsToLiveForever, as most of the qualities of that trope are either ignored or [[HandWave handwaved]] (anyone who takes the potion is supposed to sever all human contact after so many years anyway, so as to avoid suspicion). The suck comes after both newly immortal characters try to kill each other, and find out that, while they won't die, their bodies will. From then on, they are stuck in their own broken corpses, having to utilize undertaking techniques just to keep themselves looking and moving like living people. By the end of the movie, even this isn't enough, as their bodies fall apart around them, leaving them spending what may very well be eternity as a pile of rotting body parts.

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* In the movie ''Film/DeathBecomesHer'', two of the main characters take a potion that grants eternal life and youth. No, the suck doesn't involve WhoWantsToLiveForever, as most of the qualities qualitffies of that trope are either ignored or [[HandWave handwaved]] (anyone who takes the potion is supposed to sever all human contact after so many years anyway, so as to avoid suspicion). The suck comes after both newly immortal characters try to kill each other, and find out that, while they won't die, their bodies will. From then on, they are stuck in their own broken corpses, having to utilize undertaking techniques just to keep themselves looking and moving like living people. By the end of the movie, even this isn't enough, as their bodies fall apart around them, leaving them spending what may very well be eternity as a pile of rotting body parts.



* Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson strong powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.

to:

* Rapunzel of ''Disney/{{Tangled}}. Oh sure, it's awesome to have hair that glows and heals any wound and reverses aging, but when you get kidnapped from your birth parents, and said hair grows 3 times as fast as regular hair, there are problems that can arise. For instance, it apparently takes 3 hours to brush her hair, and 6 hours to wash it. And at 70 feet when you're 18, it can also be a real drag to lug around literally. And yes, you could braid it to make walking easier, but then if it catches on anything, you're stuck.
* Elsa in ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' considers her powers this [[spoiler: until she learns to control them]]. Having [[AnIcePerson strong powers over ice and snow]] is cool. Nearly killing your little sister when you are both just children and years later [[spoiler: accidentally putting your whole kingdom in eternal winter]] due to PowerIncontinence is not.
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None


* ''Film/MenInBlackIII'' introduces Griffin, an alien who can see all possible timelines at once. When he shows J and K the Mets winning the 1969 World Series three months before it'll happen, J says it's incredible; Griffin calls it a pain in the ass. Unusually for this trope, though, he does seem to enjoy the ability to some extent; he refers to said World Series as his favorite moment of all time, because of all the insanely improbable things that came together to make it happen. [[spoiler:Though at the end of the film, it's replaced by the moment where J gets back from the past and meets up with K, who's (slightly) less {{Stoic}} thanks to the events of the movie.]]

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* ''Film/MenInBlackIII'' ''Film/MenInBlack3'' introduces Griffin, an alien who can see all possible timelines at once. When he shows J and K the Mets winning the 1969 World Series three months before it'll happen, J says it's incredible; Griffin calls it a pain in the ass. Unusually for this trope, though, he does seem to enjoy the ability to some extent; he refers to said World Series as his favorite moment of all time, because of all the insanely improbable things that came together to make it happen. [[spoiler:Though at the end of the film, it's replaced by the moment where J gets back from the past and meets up with K, who's (slightly) less {{Stoic}} thanks to the events of the movie.]]

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*** Cyclops must ''always'' cover his eyes with a ruby quartz lens, otherwise he might accidentally kill someone.



** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'': Jones from can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.

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** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'': Jones from can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.sleeps.
** ''Film/XMenFirstClass'': Havok is very uncomfortable using his mutant ability because of its high potential for destruction, and most likely he has been incarcerated for manslaughter.

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** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'':
*** Jones from can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.

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** ''Film/X2XMenUnited'':
***
''Film/X2XMenUnited'': Jones from can change television channels by blinking, but he never sleeps.


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*** This is Beast's attitude towards his physical mutation. He goes through great lengths in order to mask what he perceives to be his body's grotesque deformities.
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Added namespaces.


* A major element of Creator/MattDamon's character in ''{{Hereafter}}''. He can read people's minds and/or communicate with their dead relatives by touching their hands. Cool, right? No. Imagine accidentally discovering the girl who you've been flirting with [[spoiler:was sexually abused as a child by her father]]. Takes AMindIsATerribleThingToRead to whole new levels.
* In ''{{Ringu}}'', Sadako Yamamura was born with extraordinary psychic abilities, which gave her clairvoyance, psychography, and astral projection that enabled her personality to endure after death [[spoiler: and in the books, her abilities are powerful enough to allow her genetic manipulation of people and viruses]]. Her mother was also shown having similar abilities. Instead of fame and recognition, these powers led to both of them being scorned, driven away and persecuted by society, leading to Sadako's mother throwing herself into a volcano, and Sadako herself being killed and thrown down a well, where her spirit will linger ''forever''.

to:

* A major element of Creator/MattDamon's character in ''{{Hereafter}}''.''Film/{{Hereafter}}''. He can read people's minds and/or communicate with their dead relatives by touching their hands. Cool, right? No. Imagine accidentally discovering the girl who you've been flirting with [[spoiler:was sexually abused as a child by her father]]. Takes AMindIsATerribleThingToRead to whole new levels.
* In ''{{Ringu}}'', ''Film/{{Ringu}}'', Sadako Yamamura was born with extraordinary psychic abilities, which gave her clairvoyance, psychography, and astral projection that enabled her personality to endure after death [[spoiler: and in the books, her abilities are powerful enough to allow her genetic manipulation of people and viruses]]. Her mother was also shown having similar abilities. Instead of fame and recognition, these powers led to both of them being scorned, driven away and persecuted by society, leading to Sadako's mother throwing herself into a volcano, and Sadako herself being killed and thrown down a well, where her spirit will linger ''forever''.

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