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* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'': The episode "A Page Right Out of History", a crossover with ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'', ends with Fred Flintstone siccing Dino on Johnny just because Johnny flirted with Fred's daughter Pebbles (who was portrayed in the episode as a young woman).
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* In ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers''. Dr. Orpheus is shown to be very overprotected of his only daughter Triana. Where when Pete White tried to flirt with her at the Xmas Party (complete with mistletoe headband) he caused the mistletoe to burst into flames while giving Pete the DeathGlare.

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* In ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers''.''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros''. Dr. Orpheus is shown to be very overprotected of his only daughter Triana. Where when Pete White tried to flirt with her at the Xmas Party (complete with mistletoe headband) he caused the mistletoe to burst into flames while giving Pete the DeathGlare.
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* Penny's father, Patrick Fitzgerald from ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'', especially in "The Kids", where he mistakes Gumball--who had a puberty spurt that made his voice change--for a creepy teenager making prank calls:

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* Penny's father, Patrick Fitzgerald from ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'', especially in "The Kids", where he mistakes Gumball--who Gumball -- who had a puberty spurt that made his voice change--for change -- for a creepy teenager making prank calls:
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* In ''Film/TenThingsIHateAboutYou'', Kat and Bianca's father is an obstetrician who obsesses about his daughters' chastity. Unlike in the play ''[[Creator/WilliamShakespeare Taming of the Shrew]]'' from which the film is [[RecycledINSPACE loosely adapted]], his motivation for requiring his shrewish daughter to enter a romantic relationship first is that he hopes both will remain chaste. [[spoiler:Although he's a little too late in one case...]]
* ''Film/TwentyTwoJumpStreet'' has [[Music/IceCube Captain Dickson]] going ''ballistic'' upon finding out that Schmidt, one of his workers, engaged in sexual activity with his daughter Maya (which Schmidt didn't know at the time), [[UnstoppableRage destroying a buffet]] and [[GroinAttack tasing Schmidt in the nuts]].
-->'''Schmidt:''' ''(to Schmidt)'' I think it's bizarre that I haven't cut your motherfuckin' nuts off.
* In ''Film/FiftyFirstDates'', when Henry tries to get close to Lucy, her father and brother naturally assume he just wants to have consequence-free sex with her, possibly even multiple times, given her LaserGuidedAmnesia. This is justified, given Henry's reputation as TheCasanova, and the fact that it's extremely difficult to have a relationship with a woman, who forgets all about it the following morning. However, this is subverted later, when Lucy's father actually starts to try to get them together.
* Bruce Willis and his shotgun in ''Film/Armageddon1998''.
* In ''Film/BadBoysII'', Marcus' daughter is being picked up at her home by her boyfriend Reggie. Despite specific instructions from his wife to ''not'' go into the overprotective "Her daddy is a policeman, so watch out!" routine, he immediately proceeds to lay down the law [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRiT3ISEN3M punctuated with threats of violence]]. ('''Language warning'''). The scene then CrossesTheLineTwice when his partner Mike pretends to be a family friend who just got out of prison, and chimes in with his own ''outright psychotic'' threats, including pointing a gun at Reggie's face and then threatening that he will '''rape''' him if Reggie exceeds the dating boundaries [[note]]Becomes a BrickJoke in ''Film/BadBoysForLife'' when [[spoiler:Reggie, now a Marine staff sergeant, arrives to ''marry'' said daughter, with a grandchild already on the way. He's still a little intimidated by Marcus and Mike]].[[/note]]:
-->'''Mike Lowery:''' You ever made love to a man?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''horrified'') No.\\
'''Mike Lowery:''' You ''want'' to?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''almost crying'') No sir...
* Mitchell in ''Film/{{Blockers}}'' is completely in denial about how grown up his daughter Kayla is, and immediately distrustful of her prom date Connor, to the point where when he thinks they've had sex he throws Connor through a wall.
* Although he does warm up to his daughter's boyfriend by the end of the movie, Beldar from ''Film/{{Coneheads}}'' can be quite the Overprotective Dad too, in his own peculiar way, backed up by SuperStrength:
-->''[Beldar tears open the roof to Ronnie's car]''\\
'''Ronnie:''' H-hi, Mr. Conehead.\\
'''Beldar:''' I find you unacceptable!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Yes, sir.\\
'''Beldar:''' If I did not fear incarceration from human authority figures, I would terminate your life functions by applying sufficient pressure to your blunt skull so as to force its collapse!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Th-thank you.
* ''Film/{{Chanthaly}}'': Chanthaly's father won't even let her leave the house due to her heart-based disease.
* Inverted in the SlasherMovie ''Film/CherryFalls'': In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5JtpC1F8Rg#t=2m27s this scene]], [[TheSheriff Sheriff]] Brent Marken asks his virginal daughter Jody to [[SexAsRiteOfPassage go all the way]] because the serial killer he's after only [[MustNotDieAVirgin targets virgins]].
* ''Film/{{Clueless}}'' has the dad drop this little hint to a guy taking his daughter out:
-->'''Mel:''' Anything happens to my daughter, I've got a .45 and a shovel. I doubt anybody would miss you.
* ''Film/CollegeRoadTrip''. Giving a nice greeting to a male study partner of the protagonist's daughter seems to cause him physical pain.
* The father from ''Film/{{Critters}}'' is a low-key example, glaring at her daughter's new boyfriend all through dinner and dismissing his flashy sports car as a "fancy toy". Also a severe case of [[MyGirlIsNotASlut fatherly denial]], as he's floored when his wife reassures him she'd told their daughter the facts of life "years ago"... this, while said daughter is busily making out with her date in the barn.
* In Disney's ''Film/MyDateWithThePresidentsDaughter'', when Duncan is about to take the title girl out (he had no idea who she was when he asked her out), [[OurPresidentsAreDifferent her father]] comes in and tells him to have her back by 10 PM. He even threatens to institute the draft if anything happens to his daughter (of course, if Duncan knew anything about how US government works, he'd know the President doesn't have that power). He also sends two Secret Service agents with them. At the end of the film, he seems to have mellowed a little and even shows up at Duncan's school to tell him he's ok with them dating and has accepted that his daughter is just a regular teenager. Then, when Duncan takes Hallie out again, the camera pulls back to reveal their car flanked by four Secret Service vehicles with a helicopter providing aerial support.
* Less JustForFun/{{egregious}} than other examples, Dr. Houseman from ''Film/DirtyDancing'' is still pretty damn strict.
* ''Film/EighthGrade'': Mark to his daughter Kayla. Mark spies on Kayla from afar when she is hanging out at the mall with new friends, embarrassing her.
* ''Film/GirlHappy'': Big Frank is horrified at the prospect of Valerie spending spring break at Fort Lauderdale at the mercy of "30,000 sex-starved boys" (Rusty's words), so he enlists Rusty to watch over her.
* In ''Herbie: Fully Loaded'', Ray Peyton Sr. is dead set against his daughter Maggie being a racer, as much as she wants to follow in his footsteps. This is for two understandable reasons; one, because she had gotten into a bad car accident while street racing years ago, and two:
-->'''Ray Peyton Sr.:''' Because you're [[StrongFamilyResemblance the spitting image of your]] [[MissingMom mother]]. And I can't lose her twice.
* The father in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVtCDFq5T2w this German film adaptation]] of the fairy tale "Literature/JorindeAndJoringel" does not approve of his daughter's relationship with Joringel and uses violence against him a number of times [[note]]This character is a CanonForeigner and does not appear in the original story[[/note]].
* The alpha male raptor from ''Film/JurassicParkIII''. He worries a lot about the alpha female's eggs being stolen by Billy. When Alan uses the resonance chamber to confuse the Raptors, the very confused alpha male tries to attack him but is stopped by the alpha female who asks him to return to their range, when the alpha female hears the helicopters approaching, the alpha male and his mate leave the scene with their recovered eggs and making passes with the humans.
* In the French silent film ''Film/LaRoue'', Sisif doesn't like other men looking at Norma nor does he like her dressing in a way that's likely to get their attention. [[PervertDad He has his reasons.]]
* Inverted with Charlie and his grandmother in ''Film/LettersToJuliet''. Charlie was raised by his grandmother and is protective of her. The main reason he is so vocal about his disapproval of searching for Lorenzo is because he doesn't want his grandmother hurt by a man who may or may not be alive.
* There's a LifetimeMovieOfTheWeek that features Creator/RobertUrich as an overprotective father who takes it to the extreme. He kills his daughters' husbands for the life insurance money. Gwyneth Paltrow plays one of the daughters.
* [[Creator/BruceWillis John McClane]] in ''Film/LiveFreeOrDieHard'' is this, even though his daughter is well in her twenties and doesn't want anything to do with him.
* Subverted in the Colin Firth plot in ''Film/LoveActually''; when Firth travels to Portugal to ask the woman he loves to marry him, he encounters her father... who, thinking that he's wanting to marry her (less attractive) sister, has no problem -- and when she indignantly asks him whether he'd sell his daughter to a perfect stranger, blithely replies "Selling? I'll pay ''him''." Even when the misunderstanding is clarified, he still isn't particularly bothered that a complete stranger (to him) wants to propose to his daughter completely out of the blue.
* Jack Byrnes (played by Robert [=DeNiro=]) of the movie ''Film/MeetTheParents''. He goes so far as to force his daughter's boyfriend to take a polygraph test. ''In the middle of the night''. This is a common theme throughout the entire movie and both sequels. At the end of every movie, he learns that he was wrong... only to get AesopAmnesia in the next film.
* Lancelot in ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'' "rescuing" Galahad from the "clutches" of the girls of [[LadyLand Castle Anthrax]]. Though the fact that Galahad was Lancelot's son was never mentioned in the film, it can be assumed that he was intended to be (as in the [[Myth/ArthurianLegend source material]]) as [[ShownTheirWork the Pythons knew their Arthuriana]].
* In the RomCom ''Film/NewInTown'', Harry Connick Jr. plays one, especially when his little girl is going to her first dance.
-->'''Ted:''' Just remember: anything you do to her, I do to you. ''(insert menacing glare)''
* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass''. As they're facing the collapse of civilisation, Mary asks her boyfriend to "[[MustNotDieAVirgin make her a woman]]". He refuses saying she's only sixteen and her father will shoot him. Mary says that he won't...but her mother probably will. The joke becomes less funny when she and her mother are raped later on and her father does kill those responsible.
* Morgan in ''Film/TheOldDarkHouse1963'' is violently protective of his daughter Morgana. This is rather unfortunate for the protagonist, whom Morgana has the hots for.
* In ''Film/Paddington2014'', Mr. Brown is a variation of this trope -- he's not overprotective in a romantic sense (he appears to have no objection that we see to his daughter dating or the boys she dates), but in a "must protect my kids from every physical threat possible, even if it only exists in my head" sense. And interestingly, his overprotectiveness mainly kicks in around his son rather than his daughter, because he's reckless and she's sensible. He eventually [[CharacterDevelopment grows out of this mindset by the end]] of the film.
* In the Ice Cube film ''Film/ThePlayersClub'', Blue, the local DJ at the stripper club the protagonist, Diana, works at comes to pick her up for a date. While he waiting for her to get ready, he meets her dad who just happens to be practicing his marksmanship with a gun. As you can imagine, the scene is far from comfortable to Blue.
* Nathan Wallace in ''Film/RepoTheGeneticOpera'' takes this to some ''scary'' extremes with his daughter, Shilo. When the story begins, she's been locked in her bedroom for 17 years. It seems like he has good reason for this, as she has a rare blood disease. [[spoiler:Until it turns out that she doesn't, and he was actually poisoning her so he could keep her with him and away from the outside world. Though with it becoming a complete CrapsackWorld, can you really blame him?]]
* ''Film/{{Roustabout}}'': Joe is extremely hostile to the idea of Charlie being with his daughter Cathy and the two men frequently come to blows over it.
%%* John Mahoney plays one in ''Film/SayAnything''.
* Abraham in ''Film/{{Selena}}'' is very much this, disapproving of Selena becoming involved with Chris and initially shunning their marriage.
* Creator/RogerEbert once condemned the Tony Danza movie ''Film/ShesOutOfControl'' for dragging this into {{Squick}} levels.
* In ''Film/SodomAndGomorrah'', Lot is fiercely protective of the virtue of his daughters, Shuah and Maleb. When Prince Astaroth taunts him with the revelation that he has seduced both of them, Lot flies into a murderous rage and fights a DuelToTheDeath with Astaroth, ignoring the pleas for mercy from his daughters and from Astaroth himself as he plunges his sword into his opponent's chest. Incidentally this is AdaptationalHeroism; in the Bible Lot actually offered his daughter's to the mob to rape instead of his guests.
* ''Film/TheSoundOfMusic'': Once he starts paying attention to his children, Captain Von Trapp edges into this on occasion. Most notably, he's very, very upset when he finds out that Max had intended to have the children perform publicly in a music festival (though he's ultimately forced to go along with it). Even before this, eldest daughter Liesl feels she has to sneak around to be with her boyfriend, and can only see him when he happens to be in the area. It's not entirely clear what the basis for the secrecy is, but it's safe to say that she didn't expect her father to react well.
* Adrian Toomes, played by Creator/MichaelKeaton, is one of these in ''Film/SpidermanHomecoming'', although he isn't so overprotective that he denies Liz any freedom. He clearly loves Liz deeply, and the main reason he went into villainy was to be able to continue to provide for her and his wife. Liz isn't surprised at all when Adrian jokingly says he has to give Peter "the Dad Talk" when dropping them off at the Homecoming dance (it's really to confront Peter, whom he figured out is Spider-Man during the drive). He'll kill you if you threaten Liz or try to prevent him from providing for her, but if you save her life he will ''not'' forget it.
* ''Film/{{Steam}}'': Elizabeth's dad Frank is very controlling, with her mom going along on it. He micromanages everything she does, particularly trying to prevent Elizabeth sleeping with men (as they're conservative Catholics), though she [[LipstickLesbian actually only likes women]], but given his beliefs he wouldn't approve of that either. Elizabeth finally pushes back on this, happier to stay in a jail cell than be bailed out by him.
* ''Film/SweetHostage'': Before Doris Mae's kidnapping, her dad grills her about what she did on her date last night and threatens to shoot any man who comes near her.
* In the 2008 Liam Neeson film ''Film/{{Taken}}'', Neeson's character Bryan Mills comes across as this at first, with the rules he tries to impose for his daughter's safety. She's annoyed by them and thinks he's too strict, as does his ex-wife. Shortly after, he is proven right when he has to storm his way through the Paris Underworld to try and save his daughter from sex-traders. Mills, an ex-CIA agent, fights off thugs left and right with mostly hand-to-hand combat and even ties one of the unfortunate traders to a chair, sticks a long nail into each leg, hooks a jumper cable to each leg nail and to the house's wiring, and shocks him so he reveals who he and his group sold his daughter to. After the interrogation, he leaves him in the chair, to have volts and volts of electricity flow through his body until "it is shut off for lack of payment on the bill." Mills did say that he would kill him after finding him, and kill him he did!
* ''Film/{{Thelma}}'': Thelma's dad and mom regularly look over her schedule and he calls her every night to make sure that she eats or doesn't give in to hedonistic practices. They may be protective and watch carefully over their daughter but they are shown to be emotionally distant.
* ''Film/Troll2'': "If my father knew you were here, he'd cut off your little nuts and eat them. He can't stand you."
* ''Film/TwiceToldTales'': Taken to psychotic levels by Giacomo Rappaccini in "Rappaccini's Daughter". Many years ago, Rappaccini abruptly quit academia and became a recluse after his wife ran away with a lover. Rappaccini has treated his daughter Beatrice with an exotic plant extract that makes her touch deadly; he does this to keep her safe from unwanted suitors, but it makes her a prisoner in her own home.
* Subverted in ''Film/TheWackness''. It looks as if Squarez is rearing to rip Luke a new one when he finds out that he and his stepdaughter Stephanie are dating; however, it's actually ''Luke'' that he's worried about, warning him that Stephanie is likely to dump him once her friends return from vacation. Considering the fact that he's Luke's friend, therapist, and that Luke hinted at considering suicide, it's not as strange as it seems.

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* In ''Film/TenThingsIHateAboutYou'', Kat and Bianca's father is an obstetrician who obsesses about his daughters' chastity. Unlike ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': When Jake becomes a dad in "Jake the play ''[[Creator/WilliamShakespeare Taming of the Shrew]]'' from which the film is [[RecycledINSPACE loosely adapted]], his motivation for requiring his shrewish daughter to enter a romantic relationship first is that he hopes both will remain chaste. [[spoiler:Although Dad", he's extremely protective of them to the point it's exhausting him to constantly keep watch because he's paranoid ''anything'' could happen to them, and also stifling attempts for the puppies to just have fun, because he doesn't want to them to risk getting hurt, sick, or scared by anything. Eventually, he realizes keeping his kids from experiencing anything isn't better than keeping them safe from everything, and the pups age into mostly-independent adults due to the RapidAging of Rainicorn and dog genes hybridizing.
* Penny's father, Patrick Fitzgerald from ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'', especially in "The Kids", where he mistakes Gumball--who had
a little puberty spurt that made his voice change--for a creepy teenager making prank calls:
-->'''Mr. Fitzgerald''' [''on the phone'']: You think you can call my house and freak us out? You think you've got a scary voice? [''in a deep, ominous voice''] ''This is a scary voice.'' Now listen to me: [[Film/{{Taken}} I have a very specific set of skills]]; skills I've acquired over a very long career... in real estate. If you never call my daughter again, that will be the end of it, but if you do, I will look for you, I will find you, and I will build [[SealedRoomInTheMiddleOfNowhere a house around you... with no doors.]]
* ''Franchise/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
** Lao Bei Fong of ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' was extremely protective of his daughter because she was blind, and even kept her existence a secret. When he finds out she wasn't learning just basic earthbending but was instead ''amazingly'' proficient, he decides ''she's had
too late in much freedom and must be monitored around the clock''. When she runs away he sends two people after her, one case...of which ''had just kidnapped her hours ago''.
** Korra from ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' gets frustrated with her dad when he tries to protect her during her stay in the Southern Water Tribe. If it weren't for him and Tenzin suggesting the [[GildedCage compound]] she had to stay in for most of her life, then things would've been different.
* In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'' episode "The Golden Age of Justice", the entire Justice Society treats Black Canary as if she was made of glass and will tell her to wait back while they do all the hard work -- despite the fact that she's a competent crimefighter in her own right, as well as half their age. Eventually, she learns from Wildcat that [[spoiler:their over-protectiveness stems from a promise made to Dinah's mother, the first Black Canary, as she died in the middle of a rescue mission]]. Not to mention, they treat ''Batman'' kind of the same way, but not quite as severe.
* ''WesternAnimation/CampLazlo'': Commander Hoo-Ha is this to his daughter [[spoiler:Patsy]]
* Paulina's father in ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom''. He threatens Danny within ''seconds'' of meeting him ("If you upset her, we're going to have a ''violent'' talk.") and then tells him ''he knows where Danny lives'' just before they leave for the school dance.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Disenchantment}}:''
** King Zog cannot stand the idea of his daughter Princess Bean dating anyone she fancies ([[ArrangedMarriage he only sets her up with]] [[HopelessSuitor foreign princes she doesn't like]]), and will ''kill'' any man who tries to sleep with her. Much to Bean's dismay, nobody will dare have romance or sex with her out of fear for their lives.
** Same deal with the Elf King, the ruler of [[HiddenElfVillage Elfwood]]. When he catches his daughter Kissy in bed with Elfo, he has the poor guy sentenced to ''death by hanging'' from a tree (though fortunately, [[TheManTheyCouldntHang he survives the execution]]). And this isn't even the first time that Kissy's old man tried to kill one of her boyfriends.
* ''WesternAnimation/DrDimensionpants'' has a villainous example; Glass Skull absolutely doesn't like the idea of his daughter Rebecca getting a boyfriend, and will chase away any boy that shows interest in her.
* ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'': Donald Duck acting as a single father to his three nephews comes across as well meaning but stifling, making the triplets wear life vests on their own house boat when a baby sitter is to take care of them in the {{Pilot}}. [[spoiler: In a CallBack in the GrandFinale, when Scrooge finds out Webby is his daughter via [[OppositeSexClone cloning]], he puts her into a life vest while they're on a plane.
]]
* ''Film/TwentyTwoJumpStreet'' has [[Music/IceCube Captain Dickson]] going ''ballistic'' upon finding out On ''WesternAnimation/FIsForFamily'', this is both subverted and played straight with Dr. Goldman, the father of Kevin's girlfriend, Alice. The first time, they're still in the heavy petting stage and he's pretty chill and understanding. The second time he walks in, he actually catches them in the act, and goes berserk. The language he uses implies that Schmidt, one at least part of his workers, engaged in sexual activity with anger is because he is Orthodox Jewish and holds a taboo against the idea of his daughter Maya (which Schmidt didn't know at the time), [[UnstoppableRage destroying getting pregnant by a buffet]] and [[GroinAttack tasing Schmidt in the nuts]].Gentile (non-Jewish person).
-->'''Schmidt:''' ''(to Schmidt)'' I think it's bizarre that I haven't cut your motherfuckin' nuts off.
* In ''Film/FiftyFirstDates'', when Henry tries to get close to Lucy, her father and brother naturally assume he just wants to have consequence-free sex with her, possibly even multiple times, given her LaserGuidedAmnesia. This is justified, given Henry's reputation as TheCasanova, and the fact that it's extremely difficult to have a relationship with a woman, who forgets all about it the following morning. However, On ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', Big Daddy, Wanda's father, embodies this is subverted later, when Lucy's father actually starts to try to get them together.
* Bruce Willis and his shotgun in ''Film/Armageddon1998''.
* In ''Film/BadBoysII'', Marcus' daughter is being picked up at her home by her boyfriend Reggie. Despite specific instructions from his wife to ''not'' go into the overprotective "Her daddy is a policeman,
trope so watch out!" routine, he immediately proceeds to lay down the law [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRiT3ISEN3M punctuated with threats of violence]]. ('''Language warning'''). The scene then CrossesTheLineTwice when his partner Mike pretends to be a family friend who just got out of prison, and chimes in with his own ''outright psychotic'' threats, including pointing a gun at Reggie's face and then threatening well that he will '''rape''' him if Reggie exceeds the dating boundaries [[note]]Becomes a BrickJoke in ''Film/BadBoysForLife'' when [[spoiler:Reggie, now a Marine staff sergeant, arrives nearly got Wanda to ''marry'' said daughter, with a grandchild already on the way. He's still a little intimidated by Marcus leave Cosmo and Mike]].[[/note]]:
-->'''Mike Lowery:''' You ever made love to a man?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''horrified'') No.\\
'''Mike Lowery:''' You ''want'' to?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''almost crying'') No sir...
* Mitchell in ''Film/{{Blockers}}'' is completely in denial about how grown up his daughter Kayla is, and immediately distrustful of her prom date Connor, to the point where when he thinks they've had sex he throws Connor through a wall.
* Although he does warm up to his daughter's boyfriend by the end of the movie, Beldar from ''Film/{{Coneheads}}'' can be quite the Overprotective Dad too,
Timmy in his own peculiar way, backed first appearance. Unsurprisingly, he ends up by SuperStrength:
-->''[Beldar tears open the roof to Ronnie's car]''\\
'''Ronnie:''' H-hi, Mr. Conehead.\\
'''Beldar:''' I find you unacceptable!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Yes, sir.\\
'''Beldar:''' If I did not fear incarceration from human authority figures, I would terminate your life functions by applying sufficient pressure to your blunt skull so as to force its collapse!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Th-thank you.
* ''Film/{{Chanthaly}}'': Chanthaly's father won't even let her leave the house due to her heart-based disease.
* Inverted in the SlasherMovie ''Film/CherryFalls'': In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5JtpC1F8Rg#t=2m27s this scene]], [[TheSheriff Sheriff]] Brent Marken asks his virginal daughter Jody to [[SexAsRiteOfPassage go all the way]] because the serial killer he's after only [[MustNotDieAVirgin targets virgins]].
* ''Film/{{Clueless}}'' has the dad drop this little hint to a guy taking his daughter out:
-->'''Mel:''' Anything happens to my daughter, I've got a .45 and a shovel. I doubt anybody would miss you.
* ''Film/CollegeRoadTrip''. Giving a nice greeting to a male study partner of the protagonist's daughter seems to cause him physical pain.
* The father from ''Film/{{Critters}}'' is a low-key example, glaring at her daughter's new boyfriend all through dinner and dismissing his flashy sports car as a "fancy toy". Also a severe case of [[MyGirlIsNotASlut fatherly denial]], as he's floored when his wife reassures him she'd told their daughter the facts of life "years ago"... this, while said daughter is busily making out
hooking up with her date in the barn.
[[MyBelovedSmother Mama Cosma]].
* In Disney's ''Film/MyDateWithThePresidentsDaughter'', when Duncan is about to take the title girl out (he had no idea who she was when he asked her out), [[OurPresidentsAreDifferent her father]] comes in and tells him to have her back by 10 PM. He even threatens to institute the draft if anything happens to his daughter (of course, if Duncan knew anything about how US government works, he'd know the President doesn't have that power). He also sends two Secret Service agents with them. At the end of the film, he seems to have mellowed a little and even shows up at Duncan's school to tell him he's ok with them dating and has accepted that his daughter is ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'':
** Carter Pewterschmidt
just a regular teenager. Then, when Duncan takes Hallie out again, the camera pulls back to reveal their car flanked by four Secret Service vehicles with a helicopter providing aerial support.
* Less JustForFun/{{egregious}} than other examples, Dr. Houseman from ''Film/DirtyDancing'' is still pretty damn strict.
* ''Film/EighthGrade'': Mark to his daughter Kayla. Mark spies on Kayla from afar when she is hanging out at the mall with new friends, embarrassing her.
* ''Film/GirlHappy'': Big Frank is horrified at the prospect of Valerie spending spring break at Fort Lauderdale at the mercy of "30,000 sex-starved boys" (Rusty's words), so he enlists Rusty to watch over her.
* In ''Herbie: Fully Loaded'', Ray Peyton Sr. is dead set against his daughter Maggie being a racer, as much as she wants to follow in his footsteps. This is for two understandable reasons; one, because she had gotten into a bad car accident while street racing years ago, and two:
-->'''Ray Peyton Sr.:''' Because you're [[StrongFamilyResemblance the spitting image of your]] [[MissingMom mother]]. And I
can't lose her twice.
* The father in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVtCDFq5T2w this German film adaptation]]
let it go. Despite decades of the fairy tale "Literature/JorindeAndJoringel" does not approve of his daughter's relationship happiness Lois has experienced with Joringel Peter, he has and uses violence against him a number of times [[note]]This character is a CanonForeigner and does not appear in the original story[[/note]].
* The alpha male raptor from ''Film/JurassicParkIII''. He worries a lot about the alpha female's eggs being stolen by Billy. When Alan uses the resonance chamber to confuse the Raptors, the very confused alpha male
still tries to attack him but is stopped by the alpha female who asks him to return to their range, when the alpha female hears the helicopters approaching, the alpha male and smash his mate leave the scene with their recovered eggs and making passes with the humans.
* In the French silent film ''Film/LaRoue'', Sisif doesn't like other men looking at Norma nor does
skull in occasionally. He ''used to'' be this trope. Nowadays he like her dressing in a way that's likely to get their attention. [[PervertDad He has his reasons.]]
* Inverted with Charlie and his grandmother in ''Film/LettersToJuliet''. Charlie was raised by his grandmother and is protective of her. The main reason he is so vocal about his disapproval of searching for Lorenzo is
hates Peter because he doesn't want his grandmother hurt by Peter is a man who may fat, annoying slob.
** Peter's usually neglectful
or may not be alive.
* There's a LifetimeMovieOfTheWeek that features Creator/RobertUrich as an overprotective father who takes it to the extreme. He kills his daughters' husbands for the life insurance money. Gwyneth Paltrow plays one of the daughters.
* [[Creator/BruceWillis John McClane]] in ''Film/LiveFreeOrDieHard'' is this, even though his daughter is well in her twenties and doesn't want anything to do
abusive with him.
* Subverted
[[ButtMonkey Meg]], but in the Colin Firth plot one episode, after she ended up in ''Film/LoveActually''; a hospital, he became overprotective. Also when Firth travels Quagmire tries to Portugal to ask the woman he loves to marry him, he encounters her father... who, thinking that he's wanting to marry her (less attractive) sister, has no problem -- and when seduce Meg [[TheJailbaitWait after she indignantly asks him whether he'd sell his daughter turns eighteen]], he freaks out. Not to a perfect stranger, blithely replies "Selling? I'll pay ''him''." Even when the misunderstanding is clarified, he still isn't particularly bothered that a complete stranger (to him) wants to propose to his daughter completely out of the blue.
* Jack Byrnes (played by Robert [=DeNiro=]) of the movie ''Film/MeetTheParents''. He goes so far as to force his daughter's boyfriend to take a polygraph test. ''In the middle of the night''. This is a common theme throughout the entire movie and both sequels. At the end of every movie, he learns that he was wrong... only to get AesopAmnesia in the next film.
* Lancelot in ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'' "rescuing" Galahad from the "clutches" of the girls of [[LadyLand Castle Anthrax]]. Though the fact that Galahad was Lancelot's son was never mentioned in the film, it can be assumed that he was intended to be (as in the [[Myth/ArthurianLegend source material]]) as [[ShownTheirWork the Pythons knew their Arthuriana]].
* In the RomCom ''Film/NewInTown'', Harry Connick Jr. plays one, especially when his little girl is going
mention [[TranquilFury calmly]] [[ShotgunWedding walking up to her first dance.
-->'''Ted:''' Just remember: anything you do to her, I do to you. ''(insert menacing glare)''
* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass''. As they're facing the collapse of civilisation, Mary asks her boyfriend to "[[MustNotDieAVirgin make her
then-boyfriend's house with a woman]]". He refuses saying shotgun]] when [[spoiler:she believes]] she's only sixteen and her pregnant:
--->'''Peter:''' ''(overlapping Meg's protest after loading the barrels)'' [[BlatantLies I just wanna talk to him.]] I just wanna talk to him. I just wanna talk to him, I just wanna talk to him, I just wanna talk to him, I just wanna [[FreudianSlip shoot him]], [[VerbalBackspace I just wanna talk to him]].
* ''Literature/TheFutureIsWild'' animated series: C.G.'s
father will shoot him. Mary says that he won't...but her mother probably will. The joke becomes less funny when she comes off strict and her mother are raped later on and her father does kill those responsible.
* Morgan in ''Film/TheOldDarkHouse1963'' is violently protective
demanding of his daughter Morgana. This is rather unfortunate for the protagonist, whom Morgana has the hots for.
* In ''Film/Paddington2014'', Mr. Brown is a variation of
Daughter, Cassiopeia AKA C.G., but this trope -- he's not overprotective in a romantic sense (he appears is due to have no objection that we see to his daughter dating or the boys she dates), but in a "must protect my kids being overprotective. He is always overly considered for her safety and wellbeing and at first, keeps C.G. from every physical threat possible, even if it only exists learning on her own in my head" sense. And interestingly, his desire to make sure she succeeds in her mission and returns home safely. Not helping with his overprotectiveness mainly kicks in around is the fact that he doesn't at first approve of C.G. bringing her crew of 21st-century teenagers (Ethan, Emily, and Luis), often calling them primitives. Thankfully, over the course of the series, he changes his son rather than attitude for the better once he realized that C.G. needs friends her age and stepped back to give her more flexibility to lead the mission.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'': George Jetson has every reason to be this way, especially when one considers how boy-crazy
his daughter, because he's reckless and she's sensible. He eventually [[CharacterDevelopment grows out of Judy, is. That being said, this mindset by the end]] trope is played for laughs most of the film.
time.
* In the Ice Cube film ''Film/ThePlayersClub'', Blue, the local DJ at the stripper club the protagonist, Diana, works at comes to pick her up for a date. While he waiting for her to get ready, he meets her dad who just happens to be practicing his marksmanship with a gun. As you can imagine, the scene is far from comfortable to Blue.
* Nathan Wallace in ''Film/RepoTheGeneticOpera'' takes this to some ''scary'' extremes with his daughter, Shilo. When the story begins, she's been locked in her bedroom for 17 years. It
''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'': Kim's father James seems like he has good reason for this, as she has a rare blood disease. [[spoiler:Until it turns out that she doesn't, and he was actually poisoning her so he could keep her with him and away from the outside world. Though with it becoming a complete CrapsackWorld, can you really blame him?]]
* ''Film/{{Roustabout}}'': Joe is extremely hostile to
more concerned about the idea of Charlie being with his daughter Cathy and dating boys than risking her life fighting {{supervillain}}s. In the two men frequently come to blows over it.
%%* John Mahoney plays one in ''Film/SayAnything''.
* Abraham in ''Film/{{Selena}}'' is very much this, disapproving of Selena becoming involved with Chris and initially shunning their marriage.
* Creator/RogerEbert once condemned the Tony Danza movie ''Film/ShesOutOfControl'' for dragging this into {{Squick}} levels.
* In ''Film/SodomAndGomorrah'', Lot is fiercely protective of the virtue of his daughters, Shuah and Maleb. When Prince Astaroth taunts him with the revelation that he has seduced both of them, Lot flies into a murderous rage and fights a DuelToTheDeath with Astaroth, ignoring the pleas for mercy from his daughters and from Astaroth himself as he plunges his sword into his opponent's chest. Incidentally this is AdaptationalHeroism; in the Bible Lot actually offered his daughter's to the mob to rape instead of his guests.
* ''Film/TheSoundOfMusic'': Once he starts paying attention to his children, Captain Von Trapp edges into this on occasion. Most notably,
first movie, he's very, very upset when he finds out that Max had intended to have the children perform publicly in a music festival (though he's ultimately forced to go along with it). Even before this, eldest daughter Liesl feels she has to sneak around to be with her boyfriend, and can only see him when he happens to be glad Kim's trapped in the area. It's timestream and not entirely clear what "staying out late with some boy", and his version of "[[TwerpSweating the basis for talk]]" in "Emotion Sickness" is [[IfYouEverDoAnythingToHurtHer a threat to stick Ron on a deep space probe if he tries anything]]. It seems to be lessening in season four -- after all, her boyfriend is... the secrecy is, but it's safe to say that she didn't expect her father to react well.
safest guy on the planet.
* Adrian Toomes, played by Creator/MichaelKeaton, is one An episode of these in ''Film/SpidermanHomecoming'', although he isn't so ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' dealt with an extremely overprotective that he denies Liz any freedom. dad who treated all of his children this way, including his twin boys, who were Bobby's age. He clearly loves Liz deeply, treated them (and the rest of the boy scouts) like babies just because one had ADHD and the main reason other was hyperglycemic. To the point he went kicked Bobby out of the scouts simply because he was playing a fighting game, considering him a bad influence.
* Amusingly subverted in ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda1989'' cartoon. The king catches Link about to swing
into villainy was to be able to continue to provide Zelda's room for her a kiss and his wife. Liz isn't surprised at all when Adrian jokingly says tells him not to... until he has to give Peter "the Dad Talk" when dropping them off at the Homecoming dance (it's really to confront Peter, whom he figured out is Spider-Man during the drive). He'll kill you if you threaten Liz or try to prevent him from providing for her, but if you save her life he will ''not'' forget it.
* ''Film/{{Steam}}'': Elizabeth's dad Frank is very controlling, with her mom going along on it. He micromanages everything she does, particularly trying to prevent Elizabeth sleeping with men (as they're conservative Catholics), though she [[LipstickLesbian actually only likes women]], but given his beliefs he wouldn't approve of that either. Elizabeth finally pushes back on this, happier to stay in a jail cell than be bailed out by him.
* ''Film/SweetHostage'': Before Doris Mae's kidnapping, her dad grills her
flowers, because "girls are crazy about what she did on her date last night and threatens to shoot any man who comes near her.
* In the 2008 Liam Neeson film ''Film/{{Taken}}'', Neeson's character Bryan Mills comes across as this at first, with the rules he tries to impose for his daughter's safety. She's annoyed by them and thinks he's too strict, as does his ex-wife. Shortly after, he is proven right when he has to storm his way through the Paris Underworld to try and save his daughter from sex-traders. Mills, an ex-CIA agent, fights off thugs left and right with mostly hand-to-hand combat and even ties one of the unfortunate traders to a chair, sticks a long nail into each leg, hooks a jumper cable to each leg nail and to the house's wiring, and shocks him so he reveals who he and his group sold his daughter to. After the interrogation, he leaves him in the chair, to have volts and volts of electricity flow through his body until "it is shut off for lack of payment on the bill." Mills did say that he would kill him after finding him, and kill him he did!
* ''Film/{{Thelma}}'': Thelma's dad and mom regularly look over her schedule and he calls her every night to make sure that she eats or doesn't give in to hedonistic practices. They may be protective and watch carefully over their daughter but they are shown to be emotionally distant.
* ''Film/Troll2'': "If my father knew you were here, he'd cut off your little nuts and eat them. He can't stand you.
flowers."
* ''Film/TwiceToldTales'': Taken to psychotic levels by Giacomo Rappaccini Tennie's father in "Rappaccini's Daughter". Many years ago, Rappaccini abruptly quit academia ''WesternAnimation/{{Motorcity}}'' doesn't like her hanging around Dutch, since he knows he's part of Mike Chilton's [[LaResistance Burners]].
* The father of one-off love interest Angela D'Angelo in ''WesternAnimation/MyDadTheRockStar'' is both completely neurotic
and became a recluse after his wife ran away with a lover. Rappaccini ''extremely'' overprotective. He's so overprotective that no-one has treated ever dated his daughter Beatrice because every boy who ever tried got scared away during the "pre-date"... interrogation. Willy, the main character, fares no better in trying to woo Angela. Even when Angela decided to defy her father's decision, his response was to ''move the entire family out of town'' just to make sure he kept his daughter "protected". Appropriately enough, his wife is also an equally extreme example of a [[MyBelovedSmother Beloved Smother]].
* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'':
** When a biker hits on Vanessa in "Vanessasary Roughness", Dr. Doofenshmirtz snaps "She's sixteen!" and [[PayEvilUntoEvil sends him to another dimension.]]
** In the DVDCommentary for "The Chronicles of Meap", Dr. Doofenshmirtz states that he doesn't trust Ferb and disapproves of his crush on Vanessa when it comes up during the episode.
** [[WesternAnimation/PHineasAndFerbTheMovieAcrossThe2ndDimension The 2nd Dimension Doofenshmirtz]] is also this trope, maybe more than the main one. A deleted scene has his Vanessa complain about how he keeps banishing every guy who shows interest in her.
* Oscar Proud of ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'':
-->'''Oscar:''' (''to Penny'') No dating, until ''[[Catch22Dilemma after you're married]]''.
* ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'': "Let me tell you something; you lay ONE PAW ON MY DAUGHTER AND YOU'LL BECOME MY PERSONAL TOOTHPICK, YOU HEAR ME!"
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'': Chas Finster, Chuckie's father, shows shades of this regarding his son. A major example occurs in "Mr. Clean," where he's so concerned about his son getting sick that he gives Chuckie excessive baths and tells him about germs. He meant well, but
with an exotic plant extract his son's worried nature, he ended up making the poor kid TerrifiedOfGerms. [[spoiler: His overprotective tendencies may well be justified considering his wife Melinda has died and Chuckie is all he has left of her.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Mr. Stanky from "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS3E23BartsFriendFallsInLove Bart's Friends Falls in Love]]" is Samantha Stanky's strict and overprotective father. After Bart calls him on the phone with new concerning Samantha, Mr. Stanky shows up to the Simpson residence and immediately goes up Bart's treehouse. Shock to see Milhouse and Samantha together, he let's out a prolonged "Noooooooooooooo!"
that makes her touch deadly; he does this is powerful enough to keep her safe make birds flee from unwanted suitors, but it makes the tree. Mr. Stanky then snatches her a prisoner in out of the tree and nervously asks her own home.
what happened. Before Samantha can even fully explain, he yells at her. As Mr. Stanky carries her off on his back, he tells her that she will be put in an all-girl school and that she will never see Milhouse again. After Milhouse and Samantha cry out for each other, Mr. Stanky puts her in the car, slams the door, and bitterly drives off, leaving Milhouse heart-broken.
-->'''Mr. Stanky:''' (''to Samantha Stanky'') I'm putting you in an all-girl school! You're never gonna see that boy again!
* Subverted in ''Film/TheWackness''. It looks as if Squarez is rearing to rip Luke a new one on ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'', when he finds out that he and his stepdaughter Stephanie are dating; however, it's actually ''Luke'' that [=SpongeBob=] agrees to chaperon Mr. Krabs' daughter to the prom. When he's dropping her off, Krabs runs out the door screaming "GET AWAY FROM ME PRECIOUS FLOWER!!!"... which turns out to be an actual flower that [=SpongeBob=] was in danger of stepping on. Also, another episode has Krabs worried about, warning him sick that Stephanie is likely boys will show up to dump him once her friends return from vacation. Considering his daughter's sleepover, though his overriding concern isn't anything the fact boys would do to Pearl, but the thought that he's Luke's friend, therapist, boys would destroy any of his property and beloved possessions. It should also be noted that Luke hinted at considering suicide, it's in the prom episode, Mr. Krabs totally subverts the trope by telling ''Pearl'' not as strange as it seems.to mess ''[=SpongeBob=]'' up too much. (because he needs him for work)
* The second ''WesternAnimation/{{Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|2003}}'' series includes a gender-reversed example in Casey Jones' mother, who, upon first meeting April, subjects her to an increasingly aggravating series of chores, all while being rude and bossy to her. When an exasperated April finally completes the tasks, Mrs. Jones becomes much nicer, even inviting April to call her "Mom", implying that the whole thing was a SecretTestOfCharacter to see if April's devotion to Casey was strong enough that she'd be willing to go through anything for him.
** An earlier episode of the series parodies the trope: when Casey picks up April for a date, Splinter and the Turtles take on the respective roles of a BoyfriendBlockingDad and [[MySisterIsOffLimits big brothers]], jokingly asking Casey stock questions associated with this trope.
* ''WesternAnimation/ElTigreTheAdventuresOfMannyRivera'': Emiliano Suarez, the father of Frida, is not only the chief of Miracle City's police, but also the only policeman in the city to avert PoliceAreUseless. This is unfortunate for Manny, who is constantly on the receiving end of Chief Suarez's ire because of how close he is to Frida. Given the supervillains who plague Miracle City, Chief Suarez is not unjustified in being protective of Frida, but he usually blames Manny for the messes Frida gets them into.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers''. Dr. Orpheus is shown to be very overprotected of his only daughter Triana. Where when Pete White tried to flirt with her at the Xmas Party (complete with mistletoe headband) he caused the mistletoe to burst into flames while giving Pete the DeathGlare.
-->'''Triana Orpheus:''' Dad, I can take care of myself, you know.\\
'''Byron Orpheus:''' I'm sorry, pumpkin. I trust you to defend your honor. It's just that... MY PUMPKIN'S MAIDENHEAD IS NOT A PRIZE TO BE...\\
'''Triana Orpheus:''' DAD!
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BoyfriendBlockingDad in WesternAnimation.
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* In ''Film/TenThingsIHateAboutYou'', Kat and Bianca's father is an obstetrician who obsesses about his daughters' chastity. Unlike in the play ''[[Creator/WilliamShakespeare Taming of the Shrew]]'' from which the film is [[RecycledINSPACE loosely adapted]], his motivation for requiring his shrewish daughter to enter a romantic relationship first is that he hopes both will remain chaste. [[spoiler:Although he's a little too late in one case...]]
* ''Film/TwentyTwoJumpStreet'' has [[Music/IceCube Captain Dickson]] going ''ballistic'' upon finding out that Schmidt, one of his workers, engaged in sexual activity with his daughter Maya (which Schmidt didn't know at the time), [[UnstoppableRage destroying a buffet]] and [[GroinAttack tasing Schmidt in the nuts]].
-->'''Schmidt:''' ''(to Schmidt)'' I think it's bizarre that I haven't cut your motherfuckin' nuts off.
* In ''Film/FiftyFirstDates'', when Henry tries to get close to Lucy, her father and brother naturally assume he just wants to have consequence-free sex with her, possibly even multiple times, given her LaserGuidedAmnesia. This is justified, given Henry's reputation as TheCasanova, and the fact that it's extremely difficult to have a relationship with a woman, who forgets all about it the following morning. However, this is subverted later, when Lucy's father actually starts to try to get them together.
* Bruce Willis and his shotgun in ''Film/Armageddon1998''.
* In ''Film/BadBoysII'', Marcus' daughter is being picked up at her home by her boyfriend Reggie. Despite specific instructions from his wife to ''not'' go into the overprotective "Her daddy is a policeman, so watch out!" routine, he immediately proceeds to lay down the law [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRiT3ISEN3M punctuated with threats of violence]]. ('''Language warning'''). The scene then CrossesTheLineTwice when his partner Mike pretends to be a family friend who just got out of prison, and chimes in with his own ''outright psychotic'' threats, including pointing a gun at Reggie's face and then threatening that he will '''rape''' him if Reggie exceeds the dating boundaries [[note]]Becomes a BrickJoke in ''Film/BadBoysForLife'' when [[spoiler:Reggie, now a Marine staff sergeant, arrives to ''marry'' said daughter, with a grandchild already on the way. He's still a little intimidated by Marcus and Mike]].[[/note]]:
-->'''Mike Lowery:''' You ever made love to a man?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''horrified'') No.\\
'''Mike Lowery:''' You ''want'' to?\\
'''Reggie:''' (''almost crying'') No sir...
* Mitchell in ''Film/{{Blockers}}'' is completely in denial about how grown up his daughter Kayla is, and immediately distrustful of her prom date Connor, to the point where when he thinks they've had sex he throws Connor through a wall.
* Although he does warm up to his daughter's boyfriend by the end of the movie, Beldar from ''Film/{{Coneheads}}'' can be quite the Overprotective Dad too, in his own peculiar way, backed up by SuperStrength:
-->''[Beldar tears open the roof to Ronnie's car]''\\
'''Ronnie:''' H-hi, Mr. Conehead.\\
'''Beldar:''' I find you unacceptable!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Yes, sir.\\
'''Beldar:''' If I did not fear incarceration from human authority figures, I would terminate your life functions by applying sufficient pressure to your blunt skull so as to force its collapse!\\
'''Ronnie:''' Th-thank you.
* ''Film/{{Chanthaly}}'': Chanthaly's father won't even let her leave the house due to her heart-based disease.
* Inverted in the SlasherMovie ''Film/CherryFalls'': In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5JtpC1F8Rg#t=2m27s this scene]], [[TheSheriff Sheriff]] Brent Marken asks his virginal daughter Jody to [[SexAsRiteOfPassage go all the way]] because the serial killer he's after only [[MustNotDieAVirgin targets virgins]].
* ''Film/{{Clueless}}'' has the dad drop this little hint to a guy taking his daughter out:
-->'''Mel:''' Anything happens to my daughter, I've got a .45 and a shovel. I doubt anybody would miss you.
* ''Film/CollegeRoadTrip''. Giving a nice greeting to a male study partner of the protagonist's daughter seems to cause him physical pain.
* The father from ''Film/{{Critters}}'' is a low-key example, glaring at her daughter's new boyfriend all through dinner and dismissing his flashy sports car as a "fancy toy". Also a severe case of [[MyGirlIsNotASlut fatherly denial]], as he's floored when his wife reassures him she'd told their daughter the facts of life "years ago"... this, while said daughter is busily making out with her date in the barn.
* In Disney's ''Film/MyDateWithThePresidentsDaughter'', when Duncan is about to take the title girl out (he had no idea who she was when he asked her out), [[OurPresidentsAreDifferent her father]] comes in and tells him to have her back by 10 PM. He even threatens to institute the draft if anything happens to his daughter (of course, if Duncan knew anything about how US government works, he'd know the President doesn't have that power). He also sends two Secret Service agents with them. At the end of the film, he seems to have mellowed a little and even shows up at Duncan's school to tell him he's ok with them dating and has accepted that his daughter is just a regular teenager. Then, when Duncan takes Hallie out again, the camera pulls back to reveal their car flanked by four Secret Service vehicles with a helicopter providing aerial support.
* Less JustForFun/{{egregious}} than other examples, Dr. Houseman from ''Film/DirtyDancing'' is still pretty damn strict.
* ''Film/EighthGrade'': Mark to his daughter Kayla. Mark spies on Kayla from afar when she is hanging out at the mall with new friends, embarrassing her.
* ''Film/GirlHappy'': Big Frank is horrified at the prospect of Valerie spending spring break at Fort Lauderdale at the mercy of "30,000 sex-starved boys" (Rusty's words), so he enlists Rusty to watch over her.
* In ''Herbie: Fully Loaded'', Ray Peyton Sr. is dead set against his daughter Maggie being a racer, as much as she wants to follow in his footsteps. This is for two understandable reasons; one, because she had gotten into a bad car accident while street racing years ago, and two:
-->'''Ray Peyton Sr.:''' Because you're [[StrongFamilyResemblance the spitting image of your]] [[MissingMom mother]]. And I can't lose her twice.
* The father in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVtCDFq5T2w this German film adaptation]] of the fairy tale "Literature/JorindeAndJoringel" does not approve of his daughter's relationship with Joringel and uses violence against him a number of times [[note]]This character is a CanonForeigner and does not appear in the original story[[/note]].
* The alpha male raptor from ''Film/JurassicParkIII''. He worries a lot about the alpha female's eggs being stolen by Billy. When Alan uses the resonance chamber to confuse the Raptors, the very confused alpha male tries to attack him but is stopped by the alpha female who asks him to return to their range, when the alpha female hears the helicopters approaching, the alpha male and his mate leave the scene with their recovered eggs and making passes with the humans.
* In the French silent film ''Film/LaRoue'', Sisif doesn't like other men looking at Norma nor does he like her dressing in a way that's likely to get their attention. [[PervertDad He has his reasons.]]
* Inverted with Charlie and his grandmother in ''Film/LettersToJuliet''. Charlie was raised by his grandmother and is protective of her. The main reason he is so vocal about his disapproval of searching for Lorenzo is because he doesn't want his grandmother hurt by a man who may or may not be alive.
* There's a LifetimeMovieOfTheWeek that features Creator/RobertUrich as an overprotective father who takes it to the extreme. He kills his daughters' husbands for the life insurance money. Gwyneth Paltrow plays one of the daughters.
* [[Creator/BruceWillis John McClane]] in ''Film/LiveFreeOrDieHard'' is this, even though his daughter is well in her twenties and doesn't want anything to do with him.
* Subverted in the Colin Firth plot in ''Film/LoveActually''; when Firth travels to Portugal to ask the woman he loves to marry him, he encounters her father... who, thinking that he's wanting to marry her (less attractive) sister, has no problem -- and when she indignantly asks him whether he'd sell his daughter to a perfect stranger, blithely replies "Selling? I'll pay ''him''." Even when the misunderstanding is clarified, he still isn't particularly bothered that a complete stranger (to him) wants to propose to his daughter completely out of the blue.
* Jack Byrnes (played by Robert [=DeNiro=]) of the movie ''Film/MeetTheParents''. He goes so far as to force his daughter's boyfriend to take a polygraph test. ''In the middle of the night''. This is a common theme throughout the entire movie and both sequels. At the end of every movie, he learns that he was wrong... only to get AesopAmnesia in the next film.
* Lancelot in ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'' "rescuing" Galahad from the "clutches" of the girls of [[LadyLand Castle Anthrax]]. Though the fact that Galahad was Lancelot's son was never mentioned in the film, it can be assumed that he was intended to be (as in the [[Myth/ArthurianLegend source material]]) as [[ShownTheirWork the Pythons knew their Arthuriana]].
* In the RomCom ''Film/NewInTown'', Harry Connick Jr. plays one, especially when his little girl is going to her first dance.
-->'''Ted:''' Just remember: anything you do to her, I do to you. ''(insert menacing glare)''
* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass''. As they're facing the collapse of civilisation, Mary asks her boyfriend to "[[MustNotDieAVirgin make her a woman]]". He refuses saying she's only sixteen and her father will shoot him. Mary says that he won't...but her mother probably will. The joke becomes less funny when she and her mother are raped later on and her father does kill those responsible.
* Morgan in ''Film/TheOldDarkHouse1963'' is violently protective of his daughter Morgana. This is rather unfortunate for the protagonist, whom Morgana has the hots for.
* In ''Film/Paddington2014'', Mr. Brown is a variation of this trope -- he's not overprotective in a romantic sense (he appears to have no objection that we see to his daughter dating or the boys she dates), but in a "must protect my kids from every physical threat possible, even if it only exists in my head" sense. And interestingly, his overprotectiveness mainly kicks in around his son rather than his daughter, because he's reckless and she's sensible. He eventually [[CharacterDevelopment grows out of this mindset by the end]] of the film.
* In the Ice Cube film ''Film/ThePlayersClub'', Blue, the local DJ at the stripper club the protagonist, Diana, works at comes to pick her up for a date. While he waiting for her to get ready, he meets her dad who just happens to be practicing his marksmanship with a gun. As you can imagine, the scene is far from comfortable to Blue.
* Nathan Wallace in ''Film/RepoTheGeneticOpera'' takes this to some ''scary'' extremes with his daughter, Shilo. When the story begins, she's been locked in her bedroom for 17 years. It seems like he has good reason for this, as she has a rare blood disease. [[spoiler:Until it turns out that she doesn't, and he was actually poisoning her so he could keep her with him and away from the outside world. Though with it becoming a complete CrapsackWorld, can you really blame him?]]
* ''Film/{{Roustabout}}'': Joe is extremely hostile to the idea of Charlie being with his daughter Cathy and the two men frequently come to blows over it.
%%* John Mahoney plays one in ''Film/SayAnything''.
* Abraham in ''Film/{{Selena}}'' is very much this, disapproving of Selena becoming involved with Chris and initially shunning their marriage.
* Creator/RogerEbert once condemned the Tony Danza movie ''Film/ShesOutOfControl'' for dragging this into {{Squick}} levels.
* In ''Film/SodomAndGomorrah'', Lot is fiercely protective of the virtue of his daughters, Shuah and Maleb. When Prince Astaroth taunts him with the revelation that he has seduced both of them, Lot flies into a murderous rage and fights a DuelToTheDeath with Astaroth, ignoring the pleas for mercy from his daughters and from Astaroth himself as he plunges his sword into his opponent's chest. Incidentally this is AdaptationalHeroism; in the Bible Lot actually offered his daughter's to the mob to rape instead of his guests.
* ''Film/TheSoundOfMusic'': Once he starts paying attention to his children, Captain Von Trapp edges into this on occasion. Most notably, he's very, very upset when he finds out that Max had intended to have the children perform publicly in a music festival (though he's ultimately forced to go along with it). Even before this, eldest daughter Liesl feels she has to sneak around to be with her boyfriend, and can only see him when he happens to be in the area. It's not entirely clear what the basis for the secrecy is, but it's safe to say that she didn't expect her father to react well.
* Adrian Toomes, played by Creator/MichaelKeaton, is one of these in ''Film/SpidermanHomecoming'', although he isn't so overprotective that he denies Liz any freedom. He clearly loves Liz deeply, and the main reason he went into villainy was to be able to continue to provide for her and his wife. Liz isn't surprised at all when Adrian jokingly says he has to give Peter "the Dad Talk" when dropping them off at the Homecoming dance (it's really to confront Peter, whom he figured out is Spider-Man during the drive). He'll kill you if you threaten Liz or try to prevent him from providing for her, but if you save her life he will ''not'' forget it.
* ''Film/{{Steam}}'': Elizabeth's dad Frank is very controlling, with her mom going along on it. He micromanages everything she does, particularly trying to prevent Elizabeth sleeping with men (as they're conservative Catholics), though she [[LipstickLesbian actually only likes women]], but given his beliefs he wouldn't approve of that either. Elizabeth finally pushes back on this, happier to stay in a jail cell than be bailed out by him.
* ''Film/SweetHostage'': Before Doris Mae's kidnapping, her dad grills her about what she did on her date last night and threatens to shoot any man who comes near her.
* In the 2008 Liam Neeson film ''Film/{{Taken}}'', Neeson's character Bryan Mills comes across as this at first, with the rules he tries to impose for his daughter's safety. She's annoyed by them and thinks he's too strict, as does his ex-wife. Shortly after, he is proven right when he has to storm his way through the Paris Underworld to try and save his daughter from sex-traders. Mills, an ex-CIA agent, fights off thugs left and right with mostly hand-to-hand combat and even ties one of the unfortunate traders to a chair, sticks a long nail into each leg, hooks a jumper cable to each leg nail and to the house's wiring, and shocks him so he reveals who he and his group sold his daughter to. After the interrogation, he leaves him in the chair, to have volts and volts of electricity flow through his body until "it is shut off for lack of payment on the bill." Mills did say that he would kill him after finding him, and kill him he did!
* ''Film/{{Thelma}}'': Thelma's dad and mom regularly look over her schedule and he calls her every night to make sure that she eats or doesn't give in to hedonistic practices. They may be protective and watch carefully over their daughter but they are shown to be emotionally distant.
* ''Film/Troll2'': "If my father knew you were here, he'd cut off your little nuts and eat them. He can't stand you."
* ''Film/TwiceToldTales'': Taken to psychotic levels by Giacomo Rappaccini in "Rappaccini's Daughter". Many years ago, Rappaccini abruptly quit academia and became a recluse after his wife ran away with a lover. Rappaccini has treated his daughter Beatrice with an exotic plant extract that makes her touch deadly; he does this to keep her safe from unwanted suitors, but it makes her a prisoner in her own home.
* Subverted in ''Film/TheWackness''. It looks as if Squarez is rearing to rip Luke a new one when he finds out that he and his stepdaughter Stephanie are dating; however, it's actually ''Luke'' that he's worried about, warning him that Stephanie is likely to dump him once her friends return from vacation. Considering the fact that he's Luke's friend, therapist, and that Luke hinted at considering suicide, it's not as strange as it seems.
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