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** "The Dalek Invasion of Earth". The Daleks lock the Doctor in a cell with a bar magnet. Dalek doors all use magnetic locks. Subverted because their goal was to [[spoiler:find out if their prisoners were smart enough to escape.]]

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** "The Dalek Invasion of Earth". The Daleks lock the Doctor in a cell with a bar magnet. Dalek doors all use magnetic locks. Subverted because their goal was [[spoiler: Invoked by the Dalek captors to [[spoiler:find out if their prisoners were see who would be smart enough to escape.]]
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Danny used the stuff, but it was Adam who retrieved it from his own kit.


** And in a variation on this theme, an [[IrishMob Irish drug cartel]] once stages a crime scene to kidnap Danny and Adam, and holds them prisoner while their teammates raid the central office (where they hope to recover several tons of confiscated drugs). Mistake #1: Danny has brought, and eventually regains access to, his forensics kit, which contains corrosive compounds. Mistake #2: the cartel leaders fail to lure Mac, Stella, and Hawkes from the CSI labs, where ''they'' have access to a whole plethora of tools and firearms with which to defend themselves and the evidence. (Mac is even able to rig up a [[ChekhovsGun claymore mine]] from ordinary lab materials.)

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** And in a variation on this theme, an [[IrishMob Irish drug cartel]] once stages a crime scene to kidnap Danny and Adam, and holds them prisoner while their teammates raid the central office (where they hope to recover several tons of confiscated drugs). Mistake #1: Danny Adam has brought, and eventually regains access to, his forensics kit, which contains corrosive compounds. Mistake #2: the cartel leaders fail to lure Mac, Stella, and Hawkes from the CSI labs, where ''they'' have access to a whole plethora of tools and firearms with which to defend themselves and the evidence. (Mac is even able to rig up a [[ChekhovsGun claymore mine]] from ordinary lab materials.)

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* Notably done in the book ''Literature/TheThirtyNineSteps'' (1915) by John Buchan, in which the hero blows his way out of a store cupboard using his powers of mining-engineering and a fictional explosive.

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* Notably done in the book ''Literature/TheThirtyNineSteps'' (1915) by John Buchan, Creator/JohnBuchan, in which the hero blows his way out of hero, a mining engineer, is locked in a store cupboard using that happens to contain some explosives that he proceeds to use to blow his powers of mining-engineering and a fictional explosive.way out.

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* MarvelCinematicUniverse:

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* MarvelCinematicUniverse:''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'':


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* ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsII'': When Sora is thrown inside a cell in [[Film/{{Tron}} Space Paranoids]], the MCP didn't bother to lock away his abilities, so it's no surprise that he escapes the cell using the Keyblade. It also works for [[GuestStarPartyMember Tron's]] benefect, as all he needed to break out was to win Sora's trust and explain the situation.
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* As you could expect from a [[MadScientist Spark]], Agatha from ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' manages to pull this off. While she was not locked up, as one of the villains points out, she is many kilometers away from any potential allies, in unfamiliar territory in the middle of hash winter. There are also bad guys constantly looking for her with dogs specially trained to hunt down Sparks. Agatha still manages to build herself a fully functional escape device in form of... [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20130807 a swan-shaped sleigh, an elegant reindeer clank bristling with hidden guns, and four flying robot pigs.]]

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* As you could expect from a [[MadScientist Spark]], Agatha from ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' manages to pull this off. While she was not locked up, as one of the villains points out, she is many kilometers away from any potential allies, in unfamiliar territory in the middle of hash harsh winter. There are also bad guys constantly looking for her with dogs specially trained to hunt down Sparks. Agatha still manages to build herself a fully functional escape device in form of... [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20130807 a swan-shaped sleigh, an elegant reindeer clank bristling with hidden guns, and four flying robot pigs.]]

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%% The examples have been alphabetized. Please put any new example in its proper place in the folder rather than at the end.
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This entry was inspired by the ''Series/MacGyver1985'' episode "The Road Not Taken", where [=MacGyver=] and his GirlOfTheWeek (actually one of his many ex-girlfriends) were locked in a building somewhere in Southeast Asia and the room contained everything they could possibly ask for to make an escape and beat the bad guys.

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This entry was inspired by the ''Series/MacGyver1985'' ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' episode "The Road Not Taken", where [=MacGyver=] and his GirlOfTheWeek (actually one of his many ex-girlfriends) were locked in a building somewhere in Southeast Asia and the room contained everything they could possibly ask for to make an escape and beat the bad guys.



* In ''Manga/MobileSuitGundamSEEDAstray'', protagonist Lowe Guele (who's practically a genius-level mechanical engineer) gets locked in a weapons testing dome by a CorruptCorporateExecutive trying to force him to sell his [[SuperPrototype Astray Red Frame]]. Besides the Red Frame, he has a whole pile of salvaged HumongousMecha parts he was looking to sell when the deal went south. Needless to say, Lowe manages to get out by cobbling together a power converter and using it to channel the facility's power supply into his beam saber so he could cut his way through the reinforced walls.
* Taken to a whole new level in ''Anime/Pokemon2000''. The villain, who has just captured Zapdos, has managed to accidentally catch Ash & Co as well and put them in a cage. Then, breaking all laws of common sense, ''lets them go'' as he monologues, free to wander around his makeshift museum with the captured Zapdos and Moltres, seemingly convinced they they would not do something inconvenient, like go and break out the imprisoned birds...

to:

* In ''Manga/MobileSuitGundamSEEDAstray'', protagonist Lowe Guele (who's practically a genius-level mechanical engineer) gets locked in a weapons testing dome by a CorruptCorporateExecutive trying to force him to sell his [[SuperPrototype Astray Red Frame]]. Besides the Red Frame, he has a whole pile of salvaged HumongousMecha parts he was looking to sell when the deal went south. Needless to say, Lowe manages to get out by cobbling together a power converter and using it to channel the facility's power supply into his beam saber so he could can cut his way through the reinforced walls.
* Taken to a whole new level in ''Anime/Pokemon2000''. The villain, who has just captured Zapdos, has managed to accidentally catch Ash & Co as well and put them in a cage. Then, breaking all laws of common sense, ''lets them go'' as he monologues, free to wander around his makeshift museum with the captured Zapdos and Moltres, seemingly convinced they they would not do something inconvenient, like go and break out the imprisoned birds...birds....



* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour:
** In Creator/MarkWaid's ''Unthinkable, Part 3 '' , ComicBook/DoctorDoom imprisons Reed Richards behind a magical door locked with (according to Doom) a very basic enchantment that even a beginner magician could break. The room also has a massive library of magical tomes, more than enough to learn how to break the enchantment (again, according to Doom). This is a subversion, though: Reed is completely incompetent when it comes to magic, so the library only serves to taunt him and his limitation. When Reed finally admits his incompetence, it turns out to be the magic words that unlock the door. Apparently Doom never expected Reed to do something that Doom, in his arrogance, would ''never'' do. Though [[XanatosGambit Reed Richards admitting his inferiority to Doom can still be seen as a win for Doom]].
** A similar story ended with Reed realizing that he doesn't need to understand ''how'' magic works just to ''use'' it.

to:

* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour:
Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
** Batman is a master of this kind of escape. One [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] example involves him escaping from a mill that is rigged to explode using millstones, sacks of rice and a fire hose.
** ''ComicBook/TheJoker''. Arkham Asylum keeps trying to give Joker a job or two to do. Letting him into the janitor's closet was a really bad idea. Another story as him no longer allowed to have a TV set in his cell because he once built a taser with the remote.
* ''ComicBook/TheCreeper'': It's also not too good an idea to lock a scientist in a room with all his medical equipment and the very scientific inventions you are trying to steal, one of them being a serum that gives super-strength. And if you really must do that, don't lock any suspicious lemon yellow men in there ''with'' him.
* This has happened who knows how many times in ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics. It's usually Mickey or Huey, Dewey, and Louie who figure out the way to escape. Often it's just the old "grind the rope against something" thing, but there are also more imaginative examples such as Mickey's "combining salpetre from cave walls with ground-up oxygen pills to make an explosive".
* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'':
** In Creator/MarkWaid's ''Unthinkable, Part 3 '' 3'' , ComicBook/DoctorDoom imprisons Reed Richards behind a magical door locked with (according to Doom) a very basic enchantment that even a beginner magician could break. The room also has a massive library of magical tomes, more than enough to learn how to break the enchantment (again, according to Doom). This is a subversion, though: Reed is completely incompetent when it comes to magic, so the library only serves to taunt him and his limitation. When Reed finally admits his incompetence, it turns out to be the magic words that unlock the door. Apparently Doom never expected Reed to do something that Doom, in his arrogance, would ''never'' do. Though [[XanatosGambit Reed Richards admitting his inferiority to Doom can still be seen as a win for Doom]].
** A similar story ended ends with Reed realizing that he doesn't need to understand ''how'' magic works just to ''use'' it. it.



* Happens to a ridiculous degree in ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'', where the title character, after being tossed into a cell, creates a forge from scraps around the cell and is well on her way to creating super-technology within days of being tossed into it without her captors noticing.



** In ''Iron Man: Legacy'', a team of supervillains hired by Geoffrey Wilder to assassinate Tony ambushed him while he was visiting a ''junkyard full of abandoned machinery''. One villain even pointed out the idiocy of attacking Tony there since Tony is a well-known GadgeteerGenius who designs high-tech weapons for a living. This story was a flashback set while Tony still had his SecretIdentity, so the villains were merely stupid, not suicidal.

to:

** In ''Iron Man: Legacy'', a team of supervillains hired by Geoffrey Wilder to assassinate Tony ambushed ambush him while he was is visiting a ''junkyard full of abandoned machinery''. One villain even pointed points out the idiocy of attacking Tony there since Tony is a well-known GadgeteerGenius who designs high-tech weapons for a living. This story was is a flashback set while Tony still had his SecretIdentity, so the villains were merely stupid, not suicidal.



** Subverted in the famous [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[WhatIf "Imaginary"]] story ''Superman #149: The Death of Superman'' where ComicBook/LexLuthor claims he has created a cure for cancer in prison and offers to develop it if he has access to a lab. The warden is not buying this and accuses Luthor of wanting to get into a room where he can build yet another tool set to escape. When Superman convinces the warden to let Luthor do his thing, Lex actually does cure cancer. Of course it's all a scheme to make Superman trust him so he can [[spoiler: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin kill him.]]]]

to:

** Subverted in the famous [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[WhatIf "Imaginary"]] "[[WhatIf Imaginary]]" story ''Superman #149: The Death of Superman'' where ComicBook/LexLuthor claims he has created a cure for cancer in prison and offers to develop it if he has access to a lab. The warden is not buying this and accuses Luthor of wanting to get into a room where he can build yet another tool set to escape. When Superman convinces the warden to let Luthor do his thing, Lex actually does cure cancer. Of course it's all a scheme to make Superman trust him so he can [[spoiler: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin [[spoiler:[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin kill him.]]]]



** In ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'', a homage to the Silver Age, while on Death Row he creates a robot that reads classic literature to him... [[spoiler: that can speak at a high enough frequency to dig through solid rock]]. He later gets the chance to mix a cocktail for his last meal... [[spoiler: he mixes a chemical formula that gives him Kryptonian powers for 24 hours]].

to:

** In ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'', a homage to the Silver Age, while on Death Row he Lex creates a robot that reads classic literature to him... [[spoiler: that [[spoiler:that can speak at a high enough frequency to dig through solid rock]]. He later gets the chance to mix a cocktail for his last meal... [[spoiler: he [[spoiler:he mixes a chemical formula that gives him Kryptonian powers for 24 hours]].



* Franchise/{{Batman}} is a master of this kind of escape. One [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] example involves him escaping from a mill that is rigged to explode using millstones, sacks of rice and a fire hose.
* ''ComicBook/TheCreeper'': It's also not too good an idea to lock a scientist in a room with all his medical equipment and the very scientific inventions you are trying to steal, one of them being a serum that gives super-strength. And if you really must do that, don't lock any suspicious lemon yellow men in there WITH him.
* The Man In Room Five from ''ComicBook/VForVendetta'' is given access to gardening chemicals at Larkhill. He seems to be building a RoomFullOfCrazy, it turns out he's made Napalm and Mustard Gas.
* Parodied in the Norwegian daily comic ''Eon''. Series/{{MacGyver|1985}} is seemingly locked inside the bathroom, and comes up with a brilliant escape plan involving a piece of soap, a razor, wire and some other articles, to which the main character responds: "Or we could just open the door." Turns out the door wasn't locked at all.
* ''ComicBook/TheJoker''. Arkham Asylum keeps trying to give Joker a job or two to do. Letting him into the janitor's closet was a really bad idea.



* This has happened who knows how many times in ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics. It's usually Mickey or Huey, Dewey, and Louie who figure out the way to escape. Often it's just the old "grind the rope against something" thing, but there are also more imaginative examples such as Mickey's "combining salpetre from cave walls with ground-up oxygen pills to make an explosive".
* Happened to a ridiculous degree in ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'' where the title character after being tossed into a cell creates a forge from scraps around the cell and is well on her way to creating super-technology within days of being tossed into it without her captors noticing.

to:

* This has happened who knows how many times The Man in ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics. It's usually Mickey or Huey, Dewey, and Louie who figure out the way to escape. Often it's just the old "grind the rope against something" thing, but there are also more imaginative examples such as Mickey's "combining salpetre Room Five from cave walls with ground-up oxygen pills ''ComicBook/VForVendetta'' is given access to make an explosive".
* Happened
gardening chemicals at Larkhill. He seems to be building a ridiculous degree in ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'' where the title character after being tossed into a cell creates a forge from scraps around the cell RoomFullOfCrazy, it turns out he's made Napalm and is well on her way to creating super-technology within days of being tossed into it without her captors noticing.Mustard Gas.



* Parodied in the Norwegian daily comic ''Eon''. Series/{{MacGyver|1985}} is seemingly locked inside the bathroom, and comes up with a brilliant escape plan involving a piece of soap, a razor, wire and some other articles, to which the main character responds: "Or we could just open the door." Turns out the door wasn't locked at all.



* Pictured above: in ''Film/IronMan1'', Tony Stark is kidnapped and left with various parts that are supposed to build a missile. However, supervision is relatively lax (just some cameras placed here and there) and the terrorists locking him up are mostly tech-illiterate, so he doesn't build the missile like they think he is. Instead he builds the first version of his Iron Man suit [[MemeticMutation in a cave]], [[OverlyLongGag with a box of scraps]], and uses it to escape.

to:

* Pictured above: ''Film/{{Amusement}}'': Perhaps it wasn't the smartest of moves for The Laugh to lock Tabitha in ''Film/IronMan1'', Tony Stark is kidnapped and left with the back of a truck containing his various parts props. [[spoiler:Including his knives.]]
* Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse: The Kryptonians in ''Film/ManOfSteel'' lock up Lois Lane in a room on their spaceship
that just happens to have a socket that accepts the data key containing Jor-El's downloaded personality that Superman had previously slipped to her.
* In ''Film/DemolitionMan'', the museum armory exhibit in San Angeles has a lock-down protocol in case the weapons
are supposed to build a missile. However, supervision is relatively lax (just some cameras placed here stolen or used. All the weapons within are fully-functional and there) have ammunition, including a ''cannon''. The doors are made of (presumably reinforced) glass. Do the math. Note that this kind of thing is the reason why weapons and ammunition in real life museums are rendered non-functional before they're put on display.
* In ''Film/TheEqualizer'' [=McCall=] inverts
the terrorists locking him up are mostly tech-illiterate, so he doesn't build trope and takes it UpToEleven by [[spoiler: taking down [[TheMafiya Pushkin's entire operation]] this way, including ''locking the missile like they think he is. Instead he builds the first version of his Iron Man suit [[MemeticMutation bad guys in with him'' in a cave]], [[OverlyLongGag with a box of scraps]], huge hardware store, and uses it proceeding to escape.use anything and everything he gets his hands on to tear them apart.]]



* ''Hollow Man'' is parodied in ''Film/ScaryMovie2''. Two main characters find themselves locked in a freezer while running from an angry spirit. After a "[[ADateWithRosiePalms heartwarming]]" monologue, the heroine takes a couple of screws, cups, strings, and other extraneous items and somehow manages to create an entire bulldozer, destroying the wall and allowing them to escape.
* Spoofed in ''Film/ShanghaiKnights'', where Chon Lin is said to have "picked the lock using a deck of rather risqué playing cards. Then scaled the walls with a mop, a fork, and various pilfered undergarments."
* Both ''Film/TheThingFromAnotherWorld'' and ''Film/TheThing1982'' have this occur, except in those cases it's the villain who gets locked in by the heroes (it's locked in a greenhouse in the first version and in [[spoiler: a tool shed in the prequel. Here Blair has not been infected however)]].
* In ''Film/WarGames'', the Air Force brings David (Matthew Broderick) to NORAD because he hacked into the missile control system computer. The first example happens when they leave him alone in [=McKittrick=]'s office where he has access to a computer terminal. Next, they lock him up in the infirmary where he (not surprisingly) finds enough supplies to facilitate a crafty escape using medical supplies and a tape recorder.
* In ''Film/TheWorldIsNotEnough'', M is locked in a cage with a clock left on a stool so she'll know when a bomb will kill her (and the rest of the city). The cage is filled with artifacts being excavated from the site, most of which are useless. There is, however, a broom, which she uses to knock over the clock. When the villain comes back, they leave the clock on the cell door instead of setting it back up. M promptly uses the clock to power a tracking chip in her pocket, which they never bothered to search for.

to:

* ''Hollow Man'' is parodied in ''Film/ScaryMovie2''. Two main characters find themselves locked in a freezer while running from an angry spirit. After a "[[ADateWithRosiePalms heartwarming]]" monologue, the heroine takes a couple of screws, cups, strings, and other extraneous items and somehow manages to create an entire bulldozer, destroying the wall and allowing them to escape.
* Spoofed in ''Film/ShanghaiKnights'', where Chon Lin is said to have "picked the lock using a deck of rather risqué playing cards. Then scaled the walls with a mop, a fork, and various pilfered undergarments."
* Both ''Film/TheThingFromAnotherWorld'' and ''Film/TheThing1982'' have this occur, except in those cases it's the villain who gets locked in by the heroes (it's locked in a greenhouse in the first version and in [[spoiler: a tool shed in the prequel. Here Blair has not been infected however)]].
* In ''Film/WarGames'', the Air Force brings David (Matthew Broderick) to NORAD because he hacked into the missile control system computer. The first example happens when they leave him alone in [=McKittrick=]'s office where he has access to a computer terminal. Next, they lock him up in the infirmary where he (not surprisingly) finds enough supplies to facilitate a crafty escape using medical supplies and a tape recorder.
*
''Film/JamesBond'': In ''Film/TheWorldIsNotEnough'', M is locked in a cage with a clock left on a stool so she'll know when a bomb will kill her (and the rest of the city). The cage is filled with artifacts being excavated from the site, most of which are useless. There is, however, a broom, which she uses to knock over the clock. When the villain comes back, they leave the clock on the cell door instead of setting it back up. M promptly uses the clock to power a tracking chip in her pocket, which they never bothered to search for.



* ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition, which is some thing that the villain had taught Pepito how to do.
-->'''Pepit:''' What idiots!
* MarvelCinematicUniverse:
** In ''Film/IronMan1'', Tony Stark is kidnapped and left with various parts that are supposed to build a missile. However, supervision is relatively lax (just some cameras placed here and there) and the terrorists locking him up are mostly tech-illiterate, so he doesn't build the missile like they think he is. Instead he builds the first version of his Iron Man suit [[MemeticMutation in a cave]], [[OverlyLongGag with a box of scraps]], and uses it to escape.
** In ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron'', after Ultron puts Black Widow in a cell in his underground base, she manages to make a simple transmitter to communicate in Morse code, which allows Hawkeye to find her. Although given that Ultron later tells the Avengers that fighting them is what he most wants -- "all of you, against all of me" --, this may have been deliberate bait.



* In ''Film/DemolitionMan'', the museum armory exhibit in San Angeles has a lock-down protocol in case the weapons are stolen or used. All the weapons within are fully-functional and have ammunition, including a ''cannon''. The doors are made of (presumably reinforced) glass. Do the math. Note that this kind of thing is the reason why weapons and ammunition in real life museums are rendered non-functional before they're put on display.
* The Kryptonians in ''Film/ManOfSteel'' lock up Lois Lane in a room on their spaceship that just happens to have a socket that accepts the data key containing Jor-El's downloaded personality that Superman had previously slipped to her.
* In ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron'' after Ultron puts Black Widow in a cell in his underground base, she manages to make a simple transmitter to communicate in Morse code, which allows Hawkeye to find her. Although given that Ultron later tells the Avengers that fighting them is what he most wants--"all of you, against all of me"--this may have been deliberate bait.
* In ''Film/TheEqualizer'' [=McCall=] inverts the trope and takes it UpToEleven by [[spoiler: taking down [[TheMafiya Pushkin's entire operation]] this way, including ''locking the bad guys in with him'' in a huge hardware store, and proceeding to use anything and everything he gets his hands on to tear them apart.]]

to:

* In ''Film/DemolitionMan'', the museum armory exhibit ''Hollow Man'' is parodied in San Angeles has a lock-down protocol in case the weapons are stolen or used. All the weapons within are fully-functional and have ammunition, including a ''cannon''. The doors are made of (presumably reinforced) glass. Do the math. Note that this kind of thing is the reason why weapons and ammunition in real life museums are rendered non-functional before they're put on display.
* The Kryptonians in ''Film/ManOfSteel'' lock up Lois Lane
''Film/ScaryMovie2''. Two main characters find themselves locked in a room on their spaceship that just happens to have freezer while running from an angry spirit. After a socket that accepts "[[ADateWithRosiePalms heartwarming]]" monologue, the data key containing Jor-El's downloaded personality that Superman had previously slipped to her.
* In ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron'' after Ultron puts Black Widow in
heroine takes a cell in his underground base, she couple of screws, cups, strings, and other extraneous items and somehow manages to make a simple transmitter to communicate in Morse code, which allows Hawkeye to find her. Although given that Ultron later tells the Avengers that fighting them is what he most wants--"all of you, against all of me"--this may have been deliberate bait.
* In ''Film/TheEqualizer'' [=McCall=] inverts the trope and takes it UpToEleven by [[spoiler: taking down [[TheMafiya Pushkin's
create an entire operation]] this way, including ''locking bulldozer, destroying the bad guys wall and allowing them to escape.
* Spoofed
in ''Film/ShanghaiKnights'', where Chon Lin is said to have "picked the lock using a deck of rather risqué playing cards. Then scaled the walls with him'' in a huge hardware store, mop, a fork, and proceeding to use anything and everything he gets his hands on to tear them apart.]]various pilfered undergarments."



* ''Film/{{Amusement}}'': Perhaps it wasn't the smartest of moves for The Laugh to lock Tabitha in the back of a truck containing his various props. [[spoiler:Including his knives.]]
* ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition, which is some thing that the villain had taught Pepito how to do.
-->''Pepito'': "What idiots!"

to:

* ''Film/{{Amusement}}'': Perhaps it wasn't the smartest of moves for The Laugh to lock Tabitha in the back of a truck containing his various props. [[spoiler:Including his knives.]]
* ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline
Both ''Film/TheThingFromAnotherWorld'' and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up ''Film/TheThing1982'' have this occur, except in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition, which is some thing that those cases it's the villain had taught Pepito how who gets locked in by the heroes (it's locked in a greenhouse in the first version and in [[spoiler: a tool shed in the prequel. Here Blair has not been infected however)]].
* In ''Film/WarGames'', the Air Force brings David (Matthew Broderick)
to do.
-->''Pepito'': "What idiots!"
NORAD because he hacked into the missile control system computer. The first example happens when they leave him alone in [=McKittrick=]'s office where he has access to a computer terminal. Next, they lock him up in the infirmary where he (not surprisingly) finds enough supplies to facilitate a crafty escape using medical supplies and a tape recorder.



* The ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' example below was an adaptation of the ''Literature/EightySeventhPrecinct'' novel ''So Long as You Both Shall Live'' where the heroine escapes in the same manner (and with the same end result).
* Subverted for laughs in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfHuckleberryFinn'' where Jim is shackled to a bedpost and could escape simply by lifting the bed off the ground, but Tom Sawyer knows that this is not how it is done in prisoner novels, so instead has Jim saw his way through the bedpost. Of course, Tom also knows (but Jim and Huck do not) that [[spoiler:Jim's owner has set him free in her will; he will soon be able to leave at any time]].
* ''Literature/AfterDoomsday''. The Kandemirians force their captive humans to work on technical projects for them, but keep a strict eye on every component to ensure they don't build tools or weapons to escape. However the humans construct a fake rifle using the non-essential chassis used to house and support the components, and use it to [[BrandishmentBluff bluff them into handing over real weapons]].
* Played with in the ''Literature/AlexRider'' book ''Snakehead'', when Alex is being held prisoner in the BigBad's medical facility so they can [[OrganTheft harvest his organs]]. The "hospital" is completely secure and escape-proof, but the "patients" arrive by seaplane, and when the first recipient of Alex's organs arrives Alex realises that the seaplane is going to stay there overnight, and nobody running the hospital factored that in, since the security was only checked when the plane wasn't there. Alex is thus able to make his escape by raiding the seaplane for equipment under cover of darkness.
* In Kennth Oppel's ''The Boundless'', Maren Amberson is an escape artist with a disappearing act. When she's arrested and handcuffed, all she needs is a blanket so the police can't see her escape. She told them she was cold...
* In ''Literature/CodexAlera'', not [[TailorMadePrison tailor-making]] one's prison to counter the prisoner's Furycrafting capability counts as this. Since pretty much everyone in Alera knows this it's most often averted, but the Canim leader Laharl (who has never been to Alera and regards reports of Furycrafting as myths) plays it quite straight. When he wants to imprison Tavi's group of ambassadors (which includes several windcrafters, one of whom can fly), he strands them on a rooftop with no way down.
-->'''Max:''' They cannot possibly be serious.
* In ''Literature/TheDiamondAge'', the bad guys lock Nell in a closet with a working matter compiler.



** Another ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' subversion is in ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'', where Vimes is imprisoned by Dwarves and slipped some kind of particularly deadly assassin's weapon with which to take out his guards. It is a subversion, as he correctly reasons that the weapon was only provided so that he could be legitimately executed if he used it (plus, it's a single-shot weapon, and there's more than one guard), and thus he only knocks the guards unconscious when escaping.
** Inverted in ''Literature/TheLastContinent''. Rincewind is locked in a cell and told that its previous occupant escaped it many, many times and they checked the cell over and over. It's a solid cell, the bars are thick... [[MyopicArchitecture and you can lift the door right off its hinges]].
** At the beginning of ''Literature/GoingPostal'', Moist van Lipwig has spent several weeks removing the mortar around a large flagstone in his condemned cell with his prison issued spoon. This wears the spoon away to basically nothing, but he finally succeeds in moving the stone -- only to discover a much-better reinforced wall and a fresh spoon on the other side. The guards then immediately come and congratulate him for not giving up, and reveal that at least one other seeming flaw in the cell wouldn't allow a prisoner to escape either. This prison may not exactly be inescapable, but in order to do so you would have to out-think Vetinari.

to:

** Another ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' ''Discworld'' subversion is in ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'', where Vimes is imprisoned by Dwarves and slipped some kind of particularly deadly assassin's weapon with which to take out his guards. It is a subversion, as he correctly reasons that the weapon was only provided so that he could be legitimately executed if he used it (plus, it's a single-shot weapon, and there's more than one guard), and thus he only knocks the guards unconscious when escaping.
** Inverted in ''Literature/TheLastContinent''. Rincewind is locked in a cell and told that its previous occupant escaped it many, many times and they checked the cell over and over. It's a solid cell, the bars are thick... [[MyopicArchitecture and you can lift the door right off its hinges]].
hinges]]. Before putting it back in place, which is what the previous occupant always did.
** At the beginning of ''Literature/GoingPostal'', Moist van Lipwig has spent several weeks removing the mortar around a large flagstone in his condemned cell with his prison issued prison-issued spoon. This wears the spoon away to basically nothing, but he finally succeeds in moving the stone -- only to discover a much-better reinforced wall and a fresh spoon on the other side. The guards then immediately come and congratulate him for not giving up, and reveal that at least one other seeming flaw in the cell wouldn't allow a prisoner to escape either. This prison may not exactly be inescapable, but in order to do so you would have to out-think Vetinari.



* The ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' example below was an adaptation of the ''Literature/EightySeventhPrecinct'' novel ''So Long as You Both Shall Live'' where the heroine escapes in the same manner (and with the same end result).
* ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'' had its characters escape from prison with an improbable set of equipment that included the bread they were given to eat. This isn't the only example in the series.

to:

* {{Discussed}} in ''Literature/TheEmperorsSoul''. The ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' example below was Arbiters need [[BoxedCrook Shai]] to make an adaptation incredibly difficult and complicated soulstamp to revive the Emperor from his coma. In order to have any chance of doing this, she will need Forging supplies and the freedom to research, experiment, and take notes. The arbiters are well aware that these are also ''exactly'' the things she'd need to make soulstamps with which to escape her imprisonment. Moreover, neither the Arbiters nor any of the ''Literature/EightySeventhPrecinct'' novel ''So Long as You Both Shall Live'' where the heroine escapes in the same manner (and handful of people they can trust with the same end result).
* ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'' had its characters escape from prison with an improbable set
secret of equipment what Shai's doing know enough about Forging to be able to tell what she's actually working on. It is for this reason that included the bread they were given resort to eat. This isn't calling on the only example in the series.one thing they don't think she can get around, a [[BlackMagic Bloodsealer]].



* Notably done in the book ''Literature/TheThirtyNineSteps'' (1915) by John Buchan, in which the hero blows his way out of a store cupboard using his powers of mining-engineering and a fictional explosive.

to:

* Notably done in In ''[[Creator/GeorgetteHeyer The Foundling]]'', the hero escapes from the cellar he's confined in using the various rubbish stored there to light a fire and burn through the wooden door. The fact that the villains didn't go through his pockets means that he still has the handy-dandy (primitive -- this is 1818) cigar lighter [[ChekhovsGun he was seen using a few chapters previously]].
* Mort in ''Literature/GhostStory'': "You probably shouldn't have left a freakin' ''ectomancer'' a pit full of wraiths to play with."
* In the ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}''
book ''Literature/TheThirtyNineSteps'' (1915) ''The Horror at Camp Jellyjam'', the kids kill [[BlobMonster King Jellyjam]] by John Buchan, refusing to clean him and allowing him to suffocate in his own putrid stench.
* The second ''Literature/TheLaundryFiles'' novel, ''The Jennifer Morgue'', revolves around villains [[spoiler:and the Laundry itself]] using NarrativeCausality as a weapon. Bob Howard the hacker is naturally locked in a room with a working computer system, since the villain had to [[BondVillainStupidity follow the script]] for the plan to work. Bob [[WrongGenreSavvy assumes]] that this is because he's been cast as Franchise/JamesBond. [[spoiler: [[GirlOfTheWeek He hasn't been]].]]
* Literature/MatthewHawkwood does it in ''Rapscallion''. The cellar
in which the hero blows his way he and Lasseur are imprisoned in turns out of a store cupboard using his powers of mining-engineering and a fictional explosive.to contain everything they need to effect an escape.



* In one of the [=ShatnerVerse=] ''Franchise/StarTrek'' novels, Captain Kirk and his allies are separated into pairs and locked into prison cells/holodecks. The doors are not really locked, but the holodeck is programmed to 'keep' the entrance away with every step taken. You can run a mile but never get to it. Thankfully, each prison pair has a super-smarty Vulcan, who figures out that [[FastballSpecial throwing his or her partner at the door]] will fool the computer. The stunned and bruised partner then opens the door and turns off the holodeck.
* Happens in Creator/JohnWCampbell's novella ''Literature/WhoGoesThere'' with a rare villainous example. In this case [[spoiler:the heroes end up locking an alien monster in a shed where it has the equipment to build an escape craft. To their credit the alien was TheVirus and they hadn't realized it had gotten the guy they locked in the toolshed.]]

to:

* In one of the [=ShatnerVerse=] ''Franchise/StarTrek'' novels, Captain Kirk and his allies are separated into pairs and locked into prison cells/holodecks. The doors are not really locked, but the holodeck is programmed to 'keep' the entrance away with every step taken. You can run a mile but never get to it. Thankfully, each prison pair ''Literature/PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians'' has a super-smarty Vulcan, who figures out that [[FastballSpecial throwing his or her partner at part in the door]] will fool the computer. The stunned and bruised partner then opens the door and turns off the holodeck.
* Happens in Creator/JohnWCampbell's novella ''Literature/WhoGoesThere'' with a rare villainous example. In this case [[spoiler:the heroes end up locking an alien monster in a shed
second book where it has the equipment Luke tries to build an imprison Percy ([[MakingASplash son of]] [[Myth/GreekMythology Poseidon]]) on a boat. Needless to say, they escape craft. To their credit the alien was TheVirus and they hadn't realized it had gotten the guy they locked easily enough. [[spoiler:Justified in the toolshed.that Luke actually wanted them to escape.]]



* Literature/MatthewHawkwood does it in ''Rapscallion''. The cellar in which he and Lasseur are imprisoned in turns out to contain everything they need to effect an escape.
* In ''Literature/TheDiamondAge'', the bad guys lock Nell in a closet with a working matter compiler.
* In Creator/LarryNiven's ''Literature/RingworldsChildren'', Tunesmith (a super-intelligent Night Person protector) is smart enough to lock Luis Wu out of the stepping disk system in order to keep Luis from escaping, but somehow didn't think it important to lock Luis out of the autokitchen menu. So naturally Luis orders sushi from the autokitchen, a meal that is dispensed alongside a pair of hardwood chopsticks... which Luis promptly uses to hack his way into the stepping disk system and escape.



* In one of the Literature/TomSwift books, some villain kidnaps Tom and his father and locks them in a building in the middle of nowhere, with the lab equipment necessary to make some product which the villain want to coerce them to make. They instead fabricate a whole lot of lighter-than-air foam, with which they fill the building and then unbolt it from its foundations.
* Subverted for laughs in ''Literature/{{The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn}}'' where Jim is shackled to a bedpost and could escape simply by lifting the bed off the ground, but Tom Sawyer knows that this is not how it is done in prisoner novels, so instead has Jim saw his way through the bedpost. Of course, Tom also knows (but Jim and Huck do not) that [[spoiler: Jim's owner has set him free in her will; he will soon be able to leave at any time]].
* Mort in ''Literature/GhostStory'': "You probably shouldn't have left a freakin' ''ectomancer'' a pit full of wraiths to play with."
* ''Literature/PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians'' has a part in the second book where Luke tries to imprison Percy ([[MakingASplash son of]] [[Myth/GreekMythology Poseidon]]) on a boat. Needless to say, they escape easily enough. [[spoiler:Justified in that Luke actually wanted them to escape.]]
* In Kennth Oppel's ''The Boundless'', Maren Amberson is an escape artist with a disappearing act. When she's arrested and handcuffed, all she needs is a blanket so the police can't see her escape. She told them she was cold...

to:

* In one Creator/LarryNiven's ''Literature/RingworldsChildren'', Tunesmith (a super-intelligent Night Person protector) is smart enough to lock Luis Wu out of the Literature/TomSwift books, some villain kidnaps Tom stepping disk system in order to keep Luis from escaping, but somehow didn't think it important to lock Luis out of the autokitchen menu. So naturally Luis orders sushi from the autokitchen, a meal that is dispensed alongside a pair of hardwood chopsticks... which Luis promptly uses to hack his way into the stepping disk system and his father and locks them in a building in the middle of nowhere, escape.
* ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'' had its characters escape from prison
with the lab an improbable set of equipment necessary to make some product which that included the villain want to coerce them to make. They instead fabricate a whole lot of lighter-than-air foam, with which bread they fill were given to eat. This isn't the building and then unbolt it from its foundations.
* Subverted for laughs in ''Literature/{{The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn}}'' where Jim is shackled to a bedpost and could escape simply by lifting the bed off the ground, but Tom Sawyer knows that this is not how it is done in prisoner novels, so instead has Jim saw his way through the bedpost. Of course, Tom also knows (but Jim and Huck do not) that [[spoiler: Jim's owner has set him free in her will; he will soon be able to leave at any time]].
* Mort in ''Literature/GhostStory'': "You probably shouldn't have left a freakin' ''ectomancer'' a pit full of wraiths to play with."
* ''Literature/PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians'' has a part
only example in the second book where Luke tries to imprison Percy ([[MakingASplash son of]] [[Myth/GreekMythology Poseidon]]) on a boat. Needless to say, they escape easily enough. [[spoiler:Justified in that Luke actually wanted them to escape.]]
* In Kennth Oppel's ''The Boundless'', Maren Amberson is an escape artist with a disappearing act. When she's arrested and handcuffed, all she needs is a blanket so the police can't see her escape. She told them she was cold...
series.



* In the ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' book ''The Horror at Camp Jellyjam'', the kids kill [[BlobMonster King Jellyjam]] by refusing to clean him and allowing him to suffocate in his own putrid stench.
* In ''[[Creator/GeorgetteHeyer The Foundling]]'', the hero escapes from the cellar he's confined in using the various rubbish stored there to light a fire and burn through the wooden door. The fact that the villains didn't go through his pockets means that he still has the handy-dandy (primitive -- this is 1818) cigar lighter [[ChekhovsGun he was seen using a few chapters previously]].
* In ''Literature/CodexAlera'', not [[TailorMadePrison tailor-making]] one's prison to counter the prisoner's Furycrafting capability counts as this. Since pretty much everyone in Alera knows this it's most often averted, but the Canim leader Laharl (who has never been to Alera and regards reports of Furycrafting as myths) plays it quite straight. When he wants to imprison Tavi's group of ambassadors (which includes several windcrafters, one of whom can fly), he strands them on a rooftop with no way down.
-->'''Max:''' They cannot possibly be serious.
* The second Literature/TheLaundryFiles novel, ''The Jennifer Morgue'', revolves around villains [[spoiler:and the Laundry itself]] using NarrativeCausality as a weapon. Bob Howard the hacker is naturally locked in a room with a working computer system, since the villain had to [[BondVillainStupidity follow the script]] for the plan to work. Bob [[WrongGenreSavvy assumes]] that this is because he's been cast as Franchise/JamesBond. [[spoiler: [[GirlOfTheWeek He hasn't been]].]]
* {{Discussed}} in ''Literature/TheEmperorsSoul''. The Arbiters need [[BoxedCrook Shai]] to make an incredibly difficult and complicated soulstamp to revive the Emperor from his coma. In order to have any chance of doing this, she will need Forging supplies and the freedom to research, experiment, and take notes. The arbiters are well aware that these are also ''exactly'' the things she'd need to make soulstamps with which to escape her imprisonment. Moreover, neither the Arbiters nor any of the handful of people they can trust with the secret of what Shai's doing know enough about Forging to be able to tell what she's actually working on. It is for this reason that they resort to calling on the one thing they don't think she can get around, a [[BlackMagic Bloodsealer]].
* ''Literature/AfterDoomsday''. The Kandemirians force their captive humans to work on technical projects for them, but keep a strict eye on every component to ensure they don't build tools or weapons to escape. However the humans construct a fake rifle using the non-essential chassis used to house and support the components, and use it to [[BrandishmentBluff bluff them into handing over real weapons]].
* Played with in the ''Literature/AlexRider'' book ''Snakehead'', when Alex is being held prisoner in the BigBad's medical facility so they can [[OrganTheft harvest his organs]]. The "hospital" is completely secure and escape-proof, but the "patients" arrive by seaplane, and when the first recipient of Alex's organs arrives Alex realises that the seaplane is going to stay there overnight, and nobody running the hospital factored that in, since the security was only checked when the plane wasn't there. Alex is thus able to make his escape by raiding the seaplane for equipment under cover of darkness.

to:

* In one of the ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' [=ShatnerVerse=] ''Franchise/StarTrek'' novels, Captain Kirk and his allies are separated into pairs and locked into prison cells/holodecks. The doors are not really locked, but the holodeck is programmed to "keep" the entrance away with every step taken. You can run a mile but never get to it. Thankfully, each prison pair has a super-smart Vulcan, who figures out that [[FastballSpecial throwing his or her partner at the door]] will fool the computer. The stunned and bruised partner then opens the door and turns off the holodeck.
* Notably done in the
book ''The Horror at Camp Jellyjam'', the kids kill [[BlobMonster King Jellyjam]] ''Literature/TheThirtyNineSteps'' (1915) by refusing to clean him and allowing him to suffocate John Buchan, in his own putrid stench.
* In ''[[Creator/GeorgetteHeyer The Foundling]]'',
which the hero escapes from the cellar he's confined in blows his way out of a store cupboard using the various rubbish stored there to light a fire his powers of mining-engineering and burn through the wooden door. The fact that the villains didn't go through his pockets means that he still has the handy-dandy (primitive -- this is 1818) cigar lighter [[ChekhovsGun he was seen using a few chapters previously]].
fictional explosive.
* In ''Literature/CodexAlera'', not [[TailorMadePrison tailor-making]] one's prison to counter the prisoner's Furycrafting capability counts as this. Since pretty much everyone in Alera knows this it's most often averted, but the Canim leader Laharl (who has never been to Alera and regards reports of Furycrafting as myths) plays it quite straight. When he wants to imprison Tavi's group of ambassadors (which includes several windcrafters, one of whom can fly), he strands the ''Literature/TomSwift'' books, some villain kidnaps Tom and his father and locks them on in a rooftop building in the middle of nowhere, with no way down.
-->'''Max:''' They cannot possibly be serious.
* The second Literature/TheLaundryFiles novel, ''The Jennifer Morgue'', revolves around villains [[spoiler:and
the Laundry itself]] using NarrativeCausality as a weapon. Bob Howard the hacker is naturally locked in a room with a working computer system, since lab equipment necessary to make some product which the villain had want to [[BondVillainStupidity follow the script]] for the plan coerce them to work. Bob [[WrongGenreSavvy assumes]] that this is because he's been cast as Franchise/JamesBond. [[spoiler: [[GirlOfTheWeek He hasn't been]].]]
* {{Discussed}} in ''Literature/TheEmperorsSoul''. The Arbiters need [[BoxedCrook Shai]] to make an incredibly difficult and complicated soulstamp to revive the Emperor from his coma. In order to have any chance
make. They instead fabricate a whole lot of doing this, she will need Forging supplies and the freedom to research, experiment, and take notes. The arbiters are well aware that these are also ''exactly'' the things she'd need to make soulstamps lighter-than-air foam, with which to escape her imprisonment. Moreover, neither the Arbiters nor any of the handful of people they can trust fill the building and then unbolt it from its foundations.
* Happens in Creator/JohnWCampbell's novella ''Literature/WhoGoesThere''
with the secret of what Shai's doing know enough about Forging to be able to tell what she's actually working on. It is for a rare villainous example. In this reason that they resort to calling on case [[spoiler:the heroes end up locking an alien monster in a shed where it has the one thing they don't think she can get around, a [[BlackMagic Bloodsealer]].
* ''Literature/AfterDoomsday''. The Kandemirians force their captive humans to work on technical projects for them, but keep a strict eye on every component to ensure they don't build tools or weapons to escape. However the humans construct a fake rifle using the non-essential chassis used to house and support the components, and use it to [[BrandishmentBluff bluff them into handing over real weapons]].
* Played with in the ''Literature/AlexRider'' book ''Snakehead'', when Alex is being held prisoner in the BigBad's medical facility so they can [[OrganTheft harvest his organs]]. The "hospital" is completely secure and escape-proof, but the "patients" arrive by seaplane, and when the first recipient of Alex's organs arrives Alex realises that the seaplane is going to stay there overnight, and nobody running the hospital factored that in, since the security was only checked when the plane wasn't there. Alex is thus able to make his escape by raiding the seaplane for
equipment under cover of darkness.to build an escape craft. To their credit the alien was TheVirus and they hadn't realized it had gotten the guy they locked in the toolshed.]]



* There are several other ''Series/MacGyver1985'' examples. It even gets lampshaded in ''Series/MacGyver2016''. When Mac gets put into protective custody by his boss, Thornton has all the furnishings of the room he's locked into removed first, claiming that if they left him a chair, he'd somehow turn it into a cannon (which Mac objects to on the grounds that [[ComicallyMissingThePoint he'd also need some kind of propellant to make a cannon]]). Mac then proceeded to break out using some wire pulled out of the ceiling and an electrical outlet.
* Parodied in the ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' Film/MacGruber skits, in which he ''can'' get out of the room (which is always the exact same room, just with a different location sign over the door each time), but personal issues, interpersonal issues, stupidity, and totally irrelevant events prevent him from doing anything until it's too late.
* ''Series/ISpy'' had this as a frequent scenario (and predated ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' by two decades).
* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
** "The Dalek Invasion of Earth". The Daleks lock the Doctor in a cell with a bar magnet. Dalek doors all use magnetic locks. Subverted because their goal was to [[spoiler:find out if their prisoners were smart enough to escape.]]
** "Attack of the Cybermen". The Doctor is locked in a storeroom containing explosives. Explosives just powerful enough to blow a large hole in a thick futuristic metal door without harming a person crouching at the other end of the small room.
** "Paradise Towers" has a villainous example in the backstory - when the authorities discovered that Kroagnon was planning to massacre all the building's inhabitants, their reaction was to do something to him that left him a bodiless spirit imprisoned in the basement... with everything he needed to take control of the building's maintenance robots and construct a device that would allow him to possess someone's body.
** "The Doctor's Wife": House possesses the TARDIS and leaves the Doctor behind on his planetoid former body, which happens to be a TARDIS graveyard.
* ''Series/KnightRider'': "Goliath Returns". A group of Foundation employees are locked in a cell with exactly the parts they need to turn their collar tabs into a bomb.



** Lampshaded in one of the novelisations, when Hannibal asks the others if they've ever noticed how often the bad guys lock them up with everything they need to escape.

to:

** Lampshaded in one of the novelisations, novelizations, when Hannibal asks the others if they've ever noticed how often the bad guys lock them up with everything they need to escape.



* Hodgins and Brennen on ''Series/{{Bones}}'' may have outperformed even [=MacGyver=] in the first Gravedigger episode, when they are buried alive inside a car. They can't bust themselves out, but they do manage to prolong their own lives and communicate their location to rescuers using such items as a pocket knife, camera, car horn, depowered cell phone, lithium batteries, dirt, and an ''extremely'' expensive bottle of perfume.
* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', Walter White is tied to a heater within reach of a glass electric coffee jug. He accidentally flings the jug out of reach, but then escapes by ripping the wire out of the base, plugging in the other end and soldering his bonds. {{Justified}}, as his bondage was an improvised solution and his captor had no time to thoroughly sweep the room for possible avenues of escape.
* ''Series/BuckRogersInTheTwentyFifthCentury'': In the episode "Space Rockers", Buck and the musical group Andromeda are locked in a room containing a musical device that with some minor modification is capable of sonically breaking a door lock.



* In the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "Unification Part II", a group of Romulans lock Captain Picard, Lt. Commander Data, and Ambassador Spock, the supreme examples of the SmartGuy, in a room with a computer terminal and holographic projectors.
* ''Series/MythBusters'':
** In the ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' special, Adam and Jamie demonstrated that it was possible to escape a locked room by picking the door lock... ''with lightbulb filaments''.
** Subverted later that same episode, when as part of the [=MacGyver=] challenge, they were presented with a mock campsite which contained everything they needed to create a potato cannon (PVC tubes, gas under pressure, ignition source, potatoes) -- something the show had in fact covered in a previous episode -- [[OffTheRails and built a signal kite instead]]. Which may or may not count as a subversion, because ''the kite worked''.
** Subverted when they tried to stage a jailbreak using electricity, salsa, and dental floss to cut through the bars of a cell window. While Jamie did make some progress, he only did so by using a radio as an additional component, which he insisted the prison warden had given him for good behavior. But the electricity from the radio only sped up the reaction; it did not ''cause'' it. Testing the myth the way it supposedly happened would've taken years. The radio was just there to show proof of concept.
** On their ''Series/TheATeam'' Special, the [=MythBusters=] first attempt to duplicate the results of a particular case in which the A-Team are locked in a lumberyard and manage to create a kind of board-throwing gun. Having shown that the method used in the show doesn't work, Adam and Jamie then set out to place themselves in the same situation: they were locked in a lumberyard full of equipment with a time limit until the "bad guys" would return, and were indeed able to create a functional board-throwing gun in those conditions.



* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'':
** The episode, "Patterns of Force", features Spock and Kirk escaping from a prison after making a laser from a strip of metal, a light bulb, and the crystals from the radios implanted under their skins near the beginning of the episode.
** In the episode, "Arena", powerful aliens place Kirk and the Gorn captain in a rocky area and are told specifically there are the components of weapons they can assemble if they are smart enough. As it is, Kirk is better at this since the best the Gorn could think of is a net and a sharpened piece of rock for a knife, Kirk {{MacGyver|ing}}s a crude cannon from the materials around him.\\\
The episode was inspired by a marginally harder-science story of the same name by Creator/FredricBrown (who got an on-screen writing credit), in which the trick is to get through a force field that allows nothing conscious to pass. The alien builds a passable catapult while the human comes up with some flaming missiles, then knocks himself out to fall through the barrier (which up until this point he thought only allowed non''living'' things to pass) and stabs the alien to death with a stone knife.
* ''Series/BuckRogersInTheTwentyFifthCentury'':
** A very similar incident to the above appears in a second-season episode, wherein the doctor hypnotizes Wilma Deering to escape a force field with the same properties.
** In the episode "Space Rockers", Buck and the musical group Andromeda are locked in a room containing a musical device that with some minor modification is capable of sonically breaking a door lock.

to:

* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'':
''Series/DoctorWho'':
** "The Dalek Invasion of Earth". The episode, "Patterns of Force", features Spock and Kirk escaping from a prison after making a laser from a strip of metal, a light bulb, and Daleks lock the crystals from the radios implanted under Doctor in a cell with a bar magnet. Dalek doors all use magnetic locks. Subverted because their skins near the beginning goal was to [[spoiler:find out if their prisoners were smart enough to escape.]]
** "Attack
of the episode.
** In the episode, "Arena",
Cybermen". The Doctor is locked in a storeroom containing explosives. Explosives just powerful aliens place Kirk and the Gorn captain enough to blow a large hole in a rocky area and are told specifically there are thick futuristic metal door without harming a person crouching at the components of weapons they can assemble if they are smart enough. As it is, Kirk is better at this since the best the Gorn could think of is a net and a sharpened piece of rock for a knife, Kirk {{MacGyver|ing}}s a crude cannon from the materials around him.\\\
The episode was inspired by a marginally harder-science story
other end of the same name by Creator/FredricBrown (who got an on-screen writing credit), small room.
** "Paradise Towers" has a villainous example
in the backstory -- when the authorities discovered that Kroagnon was planning to massacre all the building's inhabitants, their reaction was to do something to him that left him a bodiless spirit imprisoned in the basement... with everything he needed to take control of the building's maintenance robots and construct a device that would allow him to possess someone's body.
** "The Doctor's Wife": House possesses the TARDIS and leaves the Doctor behind on his planetoid former body,
which the trick is happens to get through be a force field that allows nothing conscious to pass. The alien builds a passable catapult while the human comes up with some flaming missiles, then knocks himself out to fall through the barrier (which up until this point he thought only allowed non''living'' things to pass) TARDIS graveyard.
* Averted
and stabs the alien to death with a stone knife.
* ''Series/BuckRogersInTheTwentyFifthCentury'':
** A very similar incident to the above appears
lampshaded in a second-season episode, wherein the doctor hypnotizes Wilma Deering to escape a force field with the same properties.
** In the episode "Space Rockers", Buck
''Series/EleventhHour'': "Eternal", when Hood and the musical group Andromeda Rachel are locked in a room containing freezer by one of the villains. Hood pulls out a musical rack of shelves and boxes "for protection", Rachel asks if he's planning to fashion a bomb from things in the freezer. Hood's response? "I'm a scientist, I'm not [=MacGyver=]. [[ShootOutTheLock Shoot the lock]]."
%%* ''Series/ISpy'' had this as a frequent scenario (and predated ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' by two decades).
* ''Series/KnightRider'': "Goliath Returns". A group of Foundation employees are locked in a cell with exactly the parts they need to turn their collar tabs into a bomb.
* ''Series/LondonsBurning'' of all series had a fairly plausible example. He had a little outside help, but an inmate at a Young Offenders Institute managed to improvise a delayed-action incendiary
device with a block of lard swiped from the kitchen, a length of string and a heater in the carpentry workshop, then cold-cocked a firefighter and stole his uniform in order to slip away. It nearly worked.
* There are several other ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' examples. It even gets lampshaded in the 2016 ''Series/{{MacGyver|2016}}''. When Mac gets put into protective custody by his boss, Thornton has all the furnishings of the room he's locked into removed first, claiming
that if they left him a chair, he'd somehow turn it into a cannon (which Mac objects to on the grounds that [[ComicallyMissingThePoint he'd also need some kind of propellant to make a cannon]]). Mac then proceeded to break out using some wire pulled out of the ceiling and an electrical outlet.
* ''Series/MurdochMysteries'': A rather extreme example in "Staring Blindly into the Future". What happens when you lock up William Murdoch, Ernest Rutherford, UsefulNotes/NikolaTesla, UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein and UsefulNotes/MarieCurie into a fully equipped laboratory? [[spoiler:They build a DeathRay. Sally Pendrick kidnapped them all to force them to work on an atomic weapon, and although the ray wasn't used on the door like they planned, Murdoch fires it at Sally's head when she's threatening to murder Julia.]]
* ''Series/MythBusters'':
** In the ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' special, Adam and Jamie demonstrate that it is possible to escape a locked room by picking the door lock... ''with lightbulb filaments''.
** Subverted later that same episode, when as part of the [=MacGyver=] challenge, they were presented
with a mock campsite which contained everything they needed to create a potato cannon (PVC tubes, gas under pressure, ignition source, potatoes) -- something the show had in fact covered in a previous episode -- [[OffTheRails and built a signal kite instead]]. Which may or may not count as a subversion, because ''the kite worked''.
** Subverted when they tried to stage a jailbreak using electricity, salsa, and dental floss to cut through the bars of a cell window. While Jamie did make
some minor modification progress, he only did so by using a radio as an additional component, which he insisted the prison warden had given him for good behavior. But the electricity from the radio only sped up the reaction; it did not ''cause'' it. Testing the myth the way it supposedly happened would've taken years. The radio was just there to show proof of concept.
** On their ''Series/TheATeam'' Special, the [=MythBusters=] first attempt to duplicate the results of a particular case in which the A-Team are locked in a lumberyard and manage to create a kind of board-throwing gun. Having shown that the method used in the show doesn't work, Adam and Jamie then set out to place themselves in the same situation: they were locked in a lumberyard full of equipment with a time limit until the "bad guys" would return, and were indeed able to create a functional board-throwing gun in those conditions.
* In ''Series/{{NCIS}}'', Ducky and Jimmy, the medical examiners, are kidnapped by a group of spies who need them to perform an autopsy on their deceased cohort who died before revealing where he hid the classified information he stole. The kidnappers cannot stand the smell of the autopsy so they leave the two doctors in the cabin while they stand guard outside. Ducky and Jimmy use the gastric acid from the dead man's stomach to cut through their leg chains and then make a bomb out of a cigarette, a surgical glove, a part of the dead man's lower intestine and some drain cleaner.
* In Season 2 of ''Series/{{Nikita}}'', Michael gets trapped in the panic room by bad guys. ''On purpose.''
* The entire first season of ''Series/PrisonBreak''
is capable about how Michael Scofield breaks his brother out of sonically breaking prison using things from within the prison (well, and things he's prepared beforehand, with notes handily tattooed all over him in a door lock.form only he can decipher). Example: One of the first things he does is [[spoiler:turn a screw from the prison bleachers into an allen wrench that can unscrew the cell sink.]] It's priceless MacGyvering.



* The entire first season of ''Series/PrisonBreak'' is about how Michael Scofield breaks his brother out of prison using things from within the prison (well, and things he's prepared beforehand, with notes handily tattooed all over him in a form only he can decipher). Example: One of the first things he does is [[spoiler:turn a screw from the prison bleachers into an allen wrench that can unscrew the cell sink.]] It's priceless MacGyvering.
* ''Series/TheTomorrowPeople1973'': One of the protagonists has begun to demonstrate a limited but effective form of telekinesis - he can open any lock. A gang of criminals kidnaps him and some of his family for leverage on the superhuman lockpick. At one point, the boss asks one of his mooks if the telekinetic and his family are safe. The mook's response - "Sure. Got 'em under lock and key."
* Averted and lampshaded in ''Series/EleventhHour'': "Eternal". When Hood and Rachel are locked in a freezer by one of the villains. Hood pulls out a rack of shelves and boxes "for protection", Rachel asks if he's planning to fashion a bomb from things in the freezer. Hood's response? "I'm a scientist, I'm not [=MacGyver=]. [[ShootOutTheLock Shoot the lock]]."

to:

* The entire first season of ''Series/PrisonBreak'' is about how Michael Scofield breaks his brother out of prison using things from within the prison (well, ''Series/TheSaint'': In "The Master Plan", Simon Templar and things he's prepared beforehand, with notes handily tattooed all over him in a form only he can decipher). Example: One of the first things he does is [[spoiler:turn a screw from the prison bleachers into an allen wrench that can unscrew the cell sink.]] It's priceless MacGyvering.
* ''Series/TheTomorrowPeople1973'': One of the protagonists has begun to demonstrate a limited but effective form of telekinesis - he can open any lock. A gang of criminals kidnaps him and some of his family for leverage on the superhuman lockpick. At one point, the boss asks one of his mooks if the telekinetic and his family are safe. The mook's response - "Sure. Got 'em under lock and key."
* Averted and lampshaded in ''Series/EleventhHour'': "Eternal". When Hood and Rachel are
GirlOfTheWeek Jean find themselves locked in a freezer hidden cell which can only be opened by one sliding a sculpture, visible through a small viewing hole, on the wall opposite the entrance. He happens to notice Jean fiddling with the beads of her necklace -- by pulling the string taut, he uses it to reach the switch and release the door.
* Parodied in the ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' Film/MacGruber skits, in which he ''can'' get out
of the villains. Hood pulls out room (which is always the exact same room, just with a rack of shelves different location sign over the door each time), but personal issues, interpersonal issues, stupidity, and boxes "for protection", Rachel asks if he's planning to fashion a bomb totally irrelevant events prevent him from things in the freezer. Hood's response? "I'm a scientist, I'm not [=MacGyver=]. [[ShootOutTheLock Shoot the lock]]."doing anything until it's too late.



* Hodgins and Brennen on ''Series/{{Bones}}'' may have outperformed even [=MacGyver=] in the first Gravedigger episode, when they are buried alive inside a car. They can't bust themselves out, but they do manage to prolong their own lives and communicate their location to rescuers using such items as a pocket knife, camera, car horn, depowered cell phone, lithium batteries, dirt, and an ''extremely'' expensive bottle of perfume.
* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', Walter White is tied to a heater within reach of a glass electric coffee jug. He accidentally flings the jug out of reach, but then escapes by ripping the wire out of the base, plugging in the other end and soldering his bonds. {{Justified}}, as his bondage was an improvised solution and his captor had no time to thoroughly sweep the room for possible avenues of escape.
* In ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' Ducky and Jimmy, the medical examiners, are kidnapped by a group of spies who need them to perform an autopsy on their deceased cohort who died before revealing where he hid the classified information he stole. The kidnappers cannot stand the smell of the autopsy so they leave the two doctors in the cabin while they stand guard outside. Ducky and Jimmy use the gastric acid from the dead man's stomach to cut through their leg chains and then make a bomb out of a cigarette, a surgical glove, a part of the dead man's lower intestine and some drain cleaner.
* In Season 2 of ''Series/{{Nikita}}'', Michael gets trapped in the panic room by bad guys. ''On purpose.''
* ''Series/TheSaint'': In "The Master Plan", Simon Templar and GirlOfTheWeek Jean find themselves locked in a hidden cell which can only be opened by sliding a sculpture, visible through a small viewing hole, on the wall opposite the entrance. He happens to notice Jean fiddling with the beads of her necklace - by pulling the string taut, he uses it to reach the switch and release the door.
* ''Series/LondonsBurning'' of all series had a fairly plausible example. He had a little outside help, but an inmate at a Young Offenders Institute managed to improvise a delayed-action incendiary device with a block of lard swiped from the kitchen, a length of string and a heater in the carpentry workshop, then cold-cocked a firefighter and stole his uniform in order to slip away. It nearly worked.

to:

* Hodgins ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'':
*** The episode "Patterns of Force" features Spock
and Brennen on ''Series/{{Bones}}'' may have outperformed even [=MacGyver=] in Kirk escaping from a prison after making a laser from a strip of metal, a light bulb, and the first Gravedigger episode, when crystals from the radios implanted under their skins near the beginning of the episode.
*** In the episode "Arena", powerful aliens place Kirk and the Gorn captain in a rocky area and are told specifically there are the components of weapons they can assemble if
they are buried alive inside smart enough. As it is, Kirk is better at this since the best the Gorn could think of is a car. They can't bust themselves out, but they do manage to prolong their own lives net and communicate their location to rescuers using such items as a pocket sharpened piece of rock for a knife, camera, car horn, depowered cell phone, lithium batteries, dirt, and an ''extremely'' expensive bottle of perfume.
* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', Walter White is tied to
Kirk {{MacGyver|ing}}s a heater within reach of a glass electric coffee jug. He accidentally flings crude cannon from the jug out of reach, but then escapes materials around him.\\\
The episode was inspired
by ripping the wire out a marginally harder-science story of the base, plugging same name by Creator/FredricBrown (who got an on-screen writing credit), in which the other end trick is to get through a force field that allows nothing conscious to pass. The alien builds a passable catapult while the human comes up with some flaming missiles, then knocks himself out to fall through the barrier (which up until this point he thought only allowed non''living'' things to pass) and soldering his bonds. {{Justified}}, as his bondage was an improvised solution and his captor had no time to thoroughly sweep stabs the room for possible avenues of escape.
*
alien to death with a stone knife.
**
In ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' Ducky and Jimmy, the medical examiners, are kidnapped by ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "Unification Part II", a group of spies who need them to perform an autopsy on their deceased cohort who died before revealing where he hid Romulans lock Captain Picard, Lt. Commander Data, and Ambassador Spock, the classified information he stole. The kidnappers cannot stand the smell supreme examples of the autopsy so SmartGuy, in a room with a computer terminal and holographic projectors.
** ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery'': When the series has its LostColony episode, the colony is "young" enough for its inhabitants to know
they leave the two doctors in the cabin while they stand guard outside. Ducky and Jimmy use the gastric acid are originally from Earth, but several factors mean that the dead man's stomach crew members from ''Discovery'' who visit have to cut through pretend to be from another settlement on the planet. The one person suspecting their leg chains true nature at some point knocks them out, steals their equipment and then make a bomb out locks them in his basement, which is full of a cigarette, a surgical glove, a part relics of the dead man's lower intestine technology brought in by the original settlers. And given the fact that the ''lock'' is low-tech, all they need to escape is wire and a magnet.
* ''Series/{{The Tomorrow People|1973}}'': One of the protagonists has begun to demonstrate a limited but effective form of telekinesis -- he can open any lock. A gang of criminals kidnaps him
and some drain cleaner.
* In Season 2
of ''Series/{{Nikita}}'', Michael gets trapped in the panic room by bad guys. ''On purpose.''
* ''Series/TheSaint'': In "The Master Plan", Simon Templar and GirlOfTheWeek Jean find themselves locked in a hidden cell which can only be opened by sliding a sculpture, visible through a small viewing hole,
his family for leverage on the wall opposite superhuman lockpick. At one point, the entrance. He happens to notice Jean fiddling with boss asks one of his mooks if the beads of her necklace - by pulling the string taut, he uses it to reach the switch telekinetic and release the door.
* ''Series/LondonsBurning'' of all series had a fairly plausible example. He had a little outside help, but an inmate at a Young Offenders Institute managed to improvise a delayed-action incendiary device with a block of lard swiped from the kitchen, a length of string
his family are safe. The mook's response -- "Sure. Got 'em under lock and a heater in the carpentry workshop, then cold-cocked a firefighter and stole his uniform in order to slip away. It nearly worked.key."



* ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery'': When the series has its LostColony episode, the colony is "young" enough for its inhabitants to know they are originally from Earth, but several factors mean that the crew members from ''Discovery'' who visit have to pretend to be from another settlement on the planet. The one person suspecting their true nature at some point knocks them out, steals their equipment and locks them in his basement, which is full of relics of the technology brought in by the original settlers. And given the fact that the ''lock'' is low-tech, all they need to escape is wire and a magnet.
* ''Series/MurdochMysteries'': A rather extreme example in "Staring Blindly into the Future". What happens when you lock up William Murdoch, Ernest Rutherford, UsefulNotes/NikolaTesla, UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein and UsefulNotes/MarieCurie into a fully equipped laboratory? [[spoiler:They build a DeathRay. Sally Pendrick kidnapped them all to force them to work on an atomic weapon, and although the ray wasn't used on the door like they planned, Murdoch fires it at Sally's head when she's threatening to murder Julia.]]



* The whole point of the ''VisualNovel/ZeroEscape'' gameplay. You're in a room that has exactly the items and mechanisms you need to escape your sore doom. Subverted in that the rooms are built ''in order'' for the protagonists to escape.



* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' likes to use this one.
** In the first game, for example, you're locked up in a jail cell with nothing but the clothes on your back and a useless bottle of ketchup. Naturally, you lie down on the floor and pour the ketchup all over yourself. When the guard comes in to check on the suddenly bloodied prisoner, you snap his neck and haul tail out of there. Alternatively, you can hide yourself in a location in the room where he can't see you when he's busy wrestling with his diarrhea and when he can't suddenly find you when he returns, he opens the cell door to check. If both of the above methods fail, your mysterious benefactor will get tired of waiting for you to figure it out, knock out the guard and open the door for you.
** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3'' you can operate on yourself using a fork to get to your fake death pill, handily hidden inside your body, you can open the cell door with the correct radio frequency, or trick the guard into giving you a cig spray, or throw food to the guard so that he gets diarrhea.

to:

* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' likes to use this one.
**
In ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', after the first game, for example, you're locked up in a jail cell with nothing but the clothes on your back Enclave captures you and a useless bottle of ketchup. Naturally, you lie down on the floor and pour the ketchup all over yourself. When the guard comes in to check on the suddenly bloodied prisoner, you snap his neck and haul tail out of there. Alternatively, you can hide yourself in a location in the room where he can't see you when he's busy wrestling with his diarrhea and when he can't suddenly find you when he returns, he opens the cell door to check. If both of the above methods fail, your mysterious benefactor will get tired of waiting for takes you to figure it out, knock out the guard and open the door for you.
** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3'' you can operate on yourself using a fork to get to
Raven Rock, they stupidly put all your fake death pill, handily hidden inside possessions in a locker ''in'' your body, you can open the cell door with the correct radio frequency, or trick the guard into giving you a cig spray, or throw food to the guard so cell. [[spoiler:Subverted in that he gets diarrhea.President Eden wants you to carry out his plan which [[TheDragon Colonel Autumn]] is really against and more than suspects that Autumn might try to have you killed]]



* This happens in EVERY ADVENTURE GAME EVER, or at least all of those in which you're locked in a cell. Exception: occasionally you must manipulate the guard, rather than the items in the cell, to your advantage.
** Averted in ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryII'', though. The hero is captured and thrown in jail after being stripped of all his equipment, but all three classes have a way out. The fighter can just break the door down (he's strong enough for that), the wizard can use the ubiquitous Open spell (they can't strip his magic), and the thief can pick the lock with the magical pin of Katta friendship, that those who are not Katta or friends of Katta cannot see. [[spoiler: Ultimately turns into a subversion, when the villain actually ''wanted'' you to escape.]]
** The aversion in ''VideoGame/KingsQuestV'' may explain why this trope is so common in the genre. If Graham enters the inn, the proprietors seize him, tie him up and throw him into the storeroom. Did he save a randomly appearing rat from being chased by a cat and trade for a cobbler's hammer before coming to the inn? If the answer to either one is no, he can't escape with the items on hand and the game is over. [[TrialAndErrorGameplay That'll teach him to enter places of business to talk to their owners.]]
* There tends to be a lot of this in the ''VideoGame/MonkeyIsland'' video games. The prison on Phatt Island in [[VideoGame/MonkeyIsland2LeChucksRevenge the second game]] is a classic example.
** VideoGame/MonkeyIsland also likes to subvert it, by surrounding you with items, any one of which could get you out of your predicament, but they're all out of reach so you have to escape in a much more convoluted way.
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'': When captured upon entering the [[StealthBasedMission Gerudo Fortress]], Link gets tossed into a cell. Subverted in that the cell is completely empty. Played straight in that the Gerudo don't think to take away any of the equipment Link already has, ''not even his sword''.
** Heck, in every single dungeon ever in the series, there's at least one room that locks behind you. If killing the enemies in the room doesn't trigger the mechanism to open the doors, there's always just the perfect number of crates/supplies of items in pots/ magically appearing chest with a new item to help you escape.
* ''VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh:'' F-Con probably would have succeeded if they hadn't been fool enough to lock ''Alan Bradley'' (as in, the guy who programmed Tron) in a closet full of computer parts.



* The aversion in ''VideoGame/KingsQuestV'' may explain why this trope is so common in the genre. If Graham enters the inn, the proprietors seize him, tie him up and throw him into the storeroom. Did he save a randomly appearing rat from being chased by a cat and trade for a cobbler's hammer before coming to the inn? If the answer to either one is no, he can't escape with the items on hand and the game is over. [[TrialAndErrorGameplay That'll teach him to enter places of business to talk to their owners.]]
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'':
** When captured upon entering the [[StealthBasedMission Gerudo Fortress]], Link gets tossed into a cell. Subverted in that the cell is completely empty. Played straight in that the Gerudo don't think to take away any of the equipment Link already has, ''not even his sword''.
** Heck, in every single dungeon ever in the series, there's at least one room that locks behind you. If killing the enemies in the room doesn't trigger the mechanism to open the doors, there's always just the perfect number of crates/supplies of items in pots/ magically appearing chest with a new item to help you escape.
* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' likes to use this one.
** In the first game, for example, you're locked up in a jail cell with nothing but the clothes on your back and a useless bottle of ketchup. Naturally, you lie down on the floor and pour the ketchup all over yourself. When the guard comes in to check on the suddenly bloodied prisoner, you snap his neck and haul tail out of there. Alternatively, you can hide yourself in a location in the room where he can't see you when he's busy wrestling with his diarrhea and when he can't suddenly find you when he returns, he opens the cell door to check. If both of the above methods fail, your mysterious benefactor will get tired of waiting for you to figure it out, knock out the guard and open the door for you.
** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3'' you can operate on yourself using a fork to get to your fake death pill, handily hidden inside your body, you can open the cell door with the correct radio frequency, or trick the guard into giving you a cig spray, or throw food to the guard so that he gets diarrhea.
* There tends to be a lot of this in the ''VideoGame/MonkeyIsland'' video games. The prison on Phatt Island in [[VideoGame/MonkeyIsland2LeChucksRevenge the second game]] is a classic example. ''Monkey Island'' also likes to subvert it, by surrounding you with items, any one of which could get you out of your predicament, but they're all out of reach so you have to escape in a much more convoluted way.
* ''VideoGame/NancyDrew'': In ''Ghost Dogs of Moon Lake'', Nancy Drew gets knocked out, tied up, and dumped in a shed that's then set on fire. The shed just happens to contain an assortment of junk that she can use to get free, merely by ''kicking'' the right objects.



* In ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', after the Enclave captures you and takes you to Raven Rock, they stupidly put all your possessions in a locker ''in'' your cell. [[spoiler:Subverted in that President Eden wants you to carry out his plan which [[TheDragon Colonel Autumn]] is really against and more than suspects that Autumn might try to have you killed]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/NancyDrew Ghost Dogs of Moon Lake]]'', Nancy Drew gets knocked out, tied up, and dumped in a shed that's then set on fire. The shed just happens to contain an assortment of junk that she can use to get free, merely by ''kicking'' the right objects.

to:

* In ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', Averted in ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryII''. The hero is captured and thrown in jail after the Enclave captures you and takes you to Raven Rock, they stupidly put being stripped of all your possessions in a locker ''in'' your cell. [[spoiler:Subverted in that President Eden wants you to carry out his plan which [[TheDragon Colonel Autumn]] is really against and more than suspects that Autumn might try to equipment, but all three classes have you killed]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/NancyDrew Ghost Dogs of Moon Lake]]'', Nancy Drew gets knocked out, tied up, and dumped in
a shed that's then set on fire. way out. The shed fighter can just happens to contain an assortment of junk that she break the door down (he's strong enough for that), the wizard can use to get free, merely by ''kicking'' the right objects.ubiquitous Open spell (they can't strip his magic), and the thief can pick the lock with the magical pin of Katta friendship, that those who are not Katta or friends of Katta cannot see. [[spoiler: Ultimately turns into a subversion, when the villain actually ''wanted'' you to escape.]]
* ''VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh:'' F-Con probably would have succeeded if they hadn't been fool enough to lock ''Alan Bradley'' (as in, the guy who programmed Tron) in a closet full of computer parts.



[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* The whole point of the ''VisualNovel/ZeroEscape'' gameplay. You're in a room that has exactly the items and mechanisms you need to escape your sore doom. Subverted in that the rooms are built ''in order'' for the protagonists to escape.
[[/folder]]



* In ''Webcomic/RipAndTeri'', a spy has been captured by a rival and locked inside a broom closet. Unfortunately for the spy, the rival has removed everything that could possibly be of use to him to make his escape... but has neglected to put tape on the sharp edges of the doorframe, thus allowing the spy to cut through his bonds and escape. Naturally, the spy considers his rival a 'Rookie' for overlooking this minor detail.



* As you could expect from a [[MadScientist Spark]], Agatha from ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' manages to pull this off. While she was not locked up, as one of the villains points out, she is many kilometers away from any potential allies, in unfamiliar territory in the middle of hash winter. There are also bad guys constantly looking for her with dogs specially trained to hunt down Sparks. Agatha still manages to build herself a fully functional escape device in form of... [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20130807 a swan-shaped sleigh, an elegant reindeer clank bristling with hidden guns, and four flying robot pigs.]]
* In the ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' story arc "Show Business", King finds himself trapped in a tool shed when being chased by Duchess. [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2012/03/19/the-optimal-solution/ This strip]] even mentions [=MacGyver=] by name. The ultimate solution to his dilemma is, however, somewhat more directly violent than most of [=MacGyver's=] solutions.



* In ''Webcomic/RipAndTeri'', a spy has been captured by a rival and locked inside a broom closet. Unfortunately for the spy, the rival has removed everything that could possibly be of use to him to make his escape... but has neglected to put tape on the sharp edges of the doorframe, thus allowing the spy to cut through his bonds and escape. Naturally, the spy considers his rival a "rookie" for overlooking this minor detail.



* In the ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' story arc "Show Business", King finds himself trapped in a tool shed when being chased by Duchess. [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2012/03/19/the-optimal-solution/ This strip]] even mentions [=MacGyver=] by name. The ultimate solution to his dilemma is, however, somewhat more directly violent than most of [=MacGyver's=] solutions.
* As you could expect from a [[MadScientist Spark]], Agatha from ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' manages to pull this off. While she was not locked up, as one of the villains points out, she is many kilometers away from any potential allies, in unfamiliar territory in the middle of hash winter. There are also bad guys constantly looking for her with dogs specially trained to hunt down Sparks. Agatha still manages to build herself a fully functional escape device in form of… [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20130807 a swan-shaped sleigh, an elegant reindeer clank bristling with hidden guns, and four flying robot pigs.]]



* ''Literature/AGreyWorld'' Although she doesn't manage to escape Alexis frees herself from her bounds as well as fashioning a crude but deadly knife and spear from some light-fittings, her bounds and the chair she was tied to.
* ''TabletopGame/TechInfantry'' has Xinjao O'Reilly and his engineering crew captured and locked in a storage room for tools and spare parts when their space station is seized by rebels. They waste no time in grabbing tools, using them to open access panels, and escape into the maintenance spaces inside the bulkheads. Lampshaded when Xinjao incredulously remarks on how stupid it is to lock up a bunch of starship engineers in the tool closet on their own space station.
* [[http://imago.hitherby.com/?p=227 This]] ''Literature/HitherbyDragons'' story has minions discussing where to lock [=MacGyver=], before having to, reluctantly, lock him in a bare room. [[spoiler:It doesn't work.]]



* ''Literature/AGreyWorld'': Although she doesn't manage to escape, Alexis frees herself from her bounds as well as fashioning a crude but deadly knife and spear from some light-fittings, her bounds and the chair she was tied to.
* [[http://imago.hitherby.com/?p=227 This]] ''Literature/HitherbyDragons'' story has minions discussing where to lock [=MacGyver=], before having to, reluctantly, lock him in a bare room. [[spoiler:It doesn't work.]]
* ''TabletopGame/TechInfantry'' has Xinjao O'Reilly and his engineering crew captured and locked in a storage room for tools and spare parts when their space station is seized by rebels. They waste no time in grabbing tools, using them to open access panels, and escape into the maintenance spaces inside the bulkheads. Lampshaded when Xinjao incredulously remarks on how stupid it is to lock up a bunch of starship engineers in the tool closet on their own space station.



* In ''WesternAnimation/AladdinTheSeries'', Abis Mal locks Aladdin in a dungeon with two skeletons. He uses a finger bone to pick the lock and escape.
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', a TV anchorman tires of the Warners' antics and locks them inside the control room. When Dot asks why he would do that, Yakko responds "I don't know. Maybe he wants us to direct." Sure enough, they start messing around with the video controls and screwing up the broadcast until the anchorman is driven mad.



** One of the most notable example is a case of bad (good?) luck: back in the day, the Fire Nation locked a bunch of waterbenders in cells where they dried the air and chained them up when feeding them. They didn't cut them off completely from source of their strength, the moon, but without everything else, that extra power was pointless. In theory. No one expected one of the benders to manage escaping by [[spoiler:inventing Bloodbending, letting her control the water in the ''[[PeoplePuppets guards]]'']].
** In one episode, they imprisoned Earthbenders on a rig out in the middle of the ocean, made of pure metal (thought to be unbendable at the time). Unfortunately for them, they overlooked the fact that the rig is powered by coal, which the Earthbenders ''can'' bend; all it took was the proper motivation to escape and they were good to go.

to:

** One of the most notable example is a case of bad (good?) luck: back in the day, the Fire Nation locked a bunch of waterbenders in cells where they dried the air and chained them up when feeding them. They didn't cut them off completely from source of their strength, the moon, but without everything else, that extra power was pointless. In theory. No one No-one expected one of the benders to manage escaping by [[spoiler:inventing Bloodbending, letting her control the water in the ''[[PeoplePuppets guards]]'']].
** In one episode, they imprisoned Earthbenders on a rig out in the middle of the ocean, made of pure metal (thought to be unbendable at the time). Unfortunately for them, they overlooked the fact that the rig is powered by coal, which the Earthbenders ''can'' bend; all it took was takes is the proper motivation to escape and they were are good to go.



* In one episode of the old ''WesternAnimation/{{Birdman}}'' cartoon, a GadgeteerGenius supervillain was allowed to spend his prison sentence working in the prison's metalshop. He built a suit of powered armor complete with a jetpack and escaped. The episode ends with the warden sensibly deciding that putting him in a metalshop isn't a good idea and switches him to laundry duty. In a later episode starring the same villain, he adds flight capability to a dryer and escapes in it. The warden finally figures out that putting the guy near any machinery is a bad idea and sends him to work in the prison's library.
* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with [[MythologyGag a bag of marbles to play with]]. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. Cue Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles until it breaks off.
* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'':
** Batman is captured by a group of criminals and is restrained, without his utility belt, in a full-body restraint made of inch-thick metal cables. He doesn't go anywhere at first, preferring instead to [[TalkingYourWayOut screw with the dysfunctional bad guy team]] from the inside. When that stops being fun, he promptly escapes to beat the Joker up. Then again, Batman is wearing his own store cupboard.
** In the episode "A Better World", when Batman is captured and put in a prison, his alternative universe counterpart, Lord-Batman, points out not to bother trying a certain technique since he build to prison specifically to counter anything Batman could think of (since being another version of Batman, he can think of everything Batman would). [[spoiler:Flash then escapes by speeding up his heart rate so it appears like he has flatlined, causing Lord-Batman to open the prison to check on him. It works because Batman, and therefore Lord Batman as well, didn't know he could do that]].
* The surreal reverse example in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' where three criminals get out of prison thanks to three conveniently placed man-sized Powerpuff Girl disguises within the jail cell. "This is going to be harder than I thought."



* In ''WesternAnimation/AladdinTheSeries'', Abis Mal locks Aladdin in a dungeon with two skeletons. He uses a finger bone to pick the lock and escape.
* The surreal reverse example in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' where three criminals get out of prison thanks to three conveniently placed man-sized Powerpuff Girl disguises within the jail cell. "This is going to be harder than I thought."



* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'':
** Batman is captured by a group of criminals and is restrained, without his utility belt, in a full-body restraint made of inch-thick metal cables. He doesn't go anywhere at first, preferring instead to [[TalkingYourWayOut screw with the dysfunctional bad guy team]] from the inside. When that stops being fun, he promptly escapes to beat the Joker up. Then again, Batman is wearing his own store cupboard.
** In the episode "A Better World", when Batman is captured and put in a prison, his alternative universe counterpart, Lord-Batman, points out not to bother trying a certain technique since he build to prison specifically to counter anything Batman could think of (since being another version of Batman, he can think of everything Batman would). [[spoiler:Flash then escapes by speeding up his heart rate so it appears like he has flatlined, causing Lord-Batman to open the prison to check on him- it works because Batman, and therefore Lord Batman as well, didn't know he could do that]].
* In one episode of the old ''WesternAnimation/{{Birdman}}'' cartoon, a GadgeteerGenius supervillain was allowed to spend his prison sentence working in the prison's metalshop. He built a suit of powered armor complete with a jetpack and escaped. The episode ends with the warden sensibly deciding that putting him in a metalshop isn't a good idea and switches him to laundry duty. In a later episode starring the same villain, he adds flight capability to a dryer and escapes in it. The warden finally figures out that putting the guy near any machinery is a bad idea and sends him to work in the prison's library.
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', a TV anchorman tires of the Warners' antics and locks them inside the control room. When Dot asks why he would do that, Yakko responds "I don't know. Maybe he wants us to direct." Sure enough, they start messing around with the video controls and screwing up the broadcast until the anchorman is driven mad.
* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with [[MythologyGag a bag of marbles to play with]]. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. Cue Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles until it breaks off.
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This entry was inspired by the ''Series/MacGyver1985'' episode "The Road Not Taken", where [=MacGyver=] and his GirlOfTheWeek (actually one of his many ex-girlfriends) were locked in a building somewhere in SE Asia and the room contained everything they could possibly ask for to make an escape and beat the bad guys.

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This entry was inspired by the ''Series/MacGyver1985'' episode "The Road Not Taken", where [=MacGyver=] and his GirlOfTheWeek (actually one of his many ex-girlfriends) were locked in a building somewhere in SE Southeast Asia and the room contained everything they could possibly ask for to make an escape and beat the bad guys.
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* Pictured above: in ''Film/IronMan1'', Tony Stark is kidnapped and left mostly unsupervised with various parts that are supposed to build a missile. Instead he builds the first version of his Iron Man suit [[MemeticMutation in a cave]], [[OverlyLongGag with a box of scraps]], and uses it to escape.

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* Pictured above: in ''Film/IronMan1'', Tony Stark is kidnapped and left mostly unsupervised with various parts that are supposed to build a missile.missile. However, supervision is relatively lax (just some cameras placed here and there) and the terrorists locking him up are mostly tech-illiterate, so he doesn't build the missile like they think he is. Instead he builds the first version of his Iron Man suit [[MemeticMutation in a cave]], [[OverlyLongGag with a box of scraps]], and uses it to escape.
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* ''VideoGame/Dishonored'': Daud captures Corvo and keeps him inside a hole, trapped by a barrier of wood. Inside the hole however are rats that you can possess to escape, as well as about a dozen bricks that can be thrown at the wood to break out.

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* ''VideoGame/Dishonored'': ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'': Daud captures Corvo and keeps him inside a hole, trapped by a barrier of wood. Inside the hole however are rats that you can possess to escape, as well as about a dozen bricks that can be thrown at the wood to break out.
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* ''VideoGame/Dishonored'': Daud captures Corvo and keeps him inside a hole, trapped by a barrier of wood. Inside the hole however are rats that you can possess to escape, as well as about a dozen bricks that can be thrown at the wood to break out.
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** In the episode "A Better World", when Batman is captured and put in a prison, his alternative universe counterpart, Lord-Batman, points out not to bother trying a certain technique since he build to prison specifically to counter anything Batman could think of (since being another version of Batman, he can think of everything Batman would). [[spoiler:Flash then escapes by speeding up his heart rate so it appears like he has flatlined, causing Lord-Batman to open the prison to check on him]].

to:

** In the episode "A Better World", when Batman is captured and put in a prison, his alternative universe counterpart, Lord-Batman, points out not to bother trying a certain technique since he build to prison specifically to counter anything Batman could think of (since being another version of Batman, he can think of everything Batman would). [[spoiler:Flash then escapes by speeding up his heart rate so it appears like he has flatlined, causing Lord-Batman to open the prison to check on him]].him- it works because Batman, and therefore Lord Batman as well, didn't know he could do that]].
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* Played with in the ''Literature/AlexRider'' book ''Snakehead'', when Alex is being held prisoner in the BigBad's medical facility so they can [[OrganTheft harvest his organs]]. The "hospital" is completely secure and escape-proof, but the "patients" arrive by seaplane, and when the first recipient of Alex's organs arrives Alex realises that the seaplane is going to stay there overnight, and nobody running the hospital factored that in, since the security was only checked when the plane wasn't there. Alex is thus able to make his escape by raiding the seaplane for equipment under cover of darkness.
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* Escape Rooms

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* Escape RoomsRooms are basically designed to be this on purpose. The clues to getting out of the room are built into the room itself. Sometimes they involve kludging together some items to improvise a solution, and other times it just involves finding an alternative item to open a lock that otherwise has no key present.
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[[quoteright:320:[[Film/IronMan1 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iron_man_mark_1_armor_3105.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:320:[[MemeticMutation IN A CAVE! WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS!]] A SuperheroOrigin as good as any.]]

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[[quoteright:320:[[Film/IronMan1 [[quoteright:319:[[Film/IronMan1 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iron_man_mark_1_armor_3105.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:320:[[MemeticMutation
org/pmwiki/pub/images/iron_man_armor_3.png]]]]
[[caption-width-right:319:[[MemeticMutation
IN A CAVE! WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS!]] A SuperheroOrigin as good as any.]]
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* Escape Rooms
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If the scene is tailored for a character's specific skills, it is ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.

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If the scene is tailored for a character's specific skills, it is ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman.
ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman. See also NiceJobFixingItVillain.
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* ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition.

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* ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition.ignition, which is some thing that the villain had taught Pepito how to do.
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* ''Film/Madeline'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition.

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* ''Film/Madeline'': ''Film/{{Madeline}}'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition.
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Added DiffLines:

* ''Film/Madeline'': When Madeline and Pepito are kidnapped, they are left tied up in a the back of a truck filled with circus equipment. They are able to easily free themselves when they realize that there are juggling knives hanging from the wall right next to them. They then escape by stealing a motorcycle also left in the truck, using Madeline's hairpin to pick the ignition.
-->''Pepito'': "What idiots!"

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[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* In one ''ComicStrip/PrinceValiant'' story arc, a manipulative villain plunders monasteries, bribing his followers with looted gold from their melted-down treasures. He succeeds in capturing the heroes and leaves them locked under guard in a dungeon filled with the looted monasteries' "useless" books of science and history. One recognizes books of alchemy, brews up a vial of ''aqua regia'', and demonstrates to the guard that the gold with which he was bribed dissolves in "mere water". Convinced that he has been tricked with [[AllThatGlitters fool's gold]], the enraged guard releases the imprisoned heroes.
[[/folder]]



* In the WesternAnimation/WallaceAndGromit short ''WesternAnimation/AMatterOfLoafAndDeath'', the villain locks Gromit in the supply closet where the hot-air balloon was kept. Guess how he escaped.

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* In the WesternAnimation/WallaceAndGromit short ''WesternAnimation/AMatterOfLoafAndDeath'', the villain locks Gromit in the supply closet where the hot-air balloon was kept. Guess how he escaped.escapes.






* ''Series/WonderWoman1975'': In "The Last of the Two Dollar Bills", Steve Trevor becomes [[RunningGag the fifth person to be locked into the cell in the basement of the coffee house]]. He looks around, finds a fork on a nearby shelf and uses it to pick the lock. It might have helped make the lock easier to pick when Wonder Woman [[SuperStrength bent the lock open and then bent it back into shape]] earlier when she needed to break out of the same cell.

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* ''Series/WonderWoman1975'': ''Series/{{Wonder Woman|1975}}'': In "The Last of the Two Dollar Bills", Steve Trevor becomes [[RunningGag the fifth person to be locked into the cell in the basement of the coffee house]]. He looks around, finds a fork on a nearby shelf and uses it to pick the lock. It might have helped make the lock easier to pick when Wonder Woman [[SuperStrength bent the lock open and then bent it back into shape]] earlier when she needed to break out of the same cell.



* ''Series/MurdochMysteries'': A rather extreme example in "Staring Blindly into the Future". What happens when you lock up William Murdoch, Ernest Rutherford, UsefulNotes/NikolaTesla, UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein and UsefulNotes/MarieCurie into a fully equipped laboratory? [[spoiler:They build a DeathRay. Sally Pendrick kidnapped them all to force them to work on an atomic weapon, and although the ray wasn't used on the door like they planned, Murdoch fires it at Sally's head when she's threatening to murder Julia.]]



[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* In one ComicStrip/PrinceValiant story arc, a manipulative villain plunders monasteries, bribing his followers with looted gold from their melted-down treasures. He succeeds in capturing the heroes and leaves them locked under guard in a dungeon filled with the looted monasteries' "useless" books of science and history. One recognizes books of alchemy, brews up a vial of ''aqua regia'', and demonstrates to the guard that the gold with which he was bribed dissolves in "mere water". Convinced that he has been tricked with [[AllThatGlitters fool's gold]], the enraged guard releases the imprisoned heroes.
[[/folder]]



* In ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob,'' Fructose Riboflavin escapes from his prison ship by deliberately tripping and falling at the feet of his robot guard, so the guard's heavy feet snap his chains. He then disables the robot and removes its ArmCannon to blast open the other prisoners' cells and enslave them, and to take out the other robot guards. He uses the ship's parts to cobble together a cloaking device to install on a small escape pod and uses the pod to hitch a ride in another ship's [[AppliedPhlebotinum "grav wake"]] to get to Earth undetected. Continuing in this fashion for ''a couple of days,'' he winds up in command of a stolen space warship armed with the most powerful weapon known to science and makes ready to conquer a planet.
* In the Haven Hive arc of ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' with Lt. Ventura -- Major Murtaugh tried to not have the "[[PuppyDogEyes helpless-with-the-big-eyes]]" looking girl guarded by a human that might be swayed by it. She didn't even ask the prisoner's name and couldn't have known that allowing the genius roboticist with [[TheDreaded widely known and feared reputation]] among robots time alone with a robot and the AI controlling the spacecraft means the next phrase a human being will hear from her will be [[spoiler:"get off my ship"]]. The incredulous tone Ventura used at the suggestion of guarding her with a robot might have been a tip-off; her captor apparently misinterpreted it as the tone of voice one might use to say "You're posting '''five''' guards to my cell?" as opposed to the disbelief of a child over being locked in a cell made of caramel.

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* In ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob,'' ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob'', Fructose Riboflavin escapes from his prison ship by deliberately tripping and falling at the feet of his robot guard, so the guard's heavy feet snap his chains. He then disables the robot and removes its ArmCannon to blast open the other prisoners' cells and enslave them, and to take out the other robot guards. He uses the ship's parts to cobble together a cloaking device to install on a small escape pod and uses the pod to hitch a ride in another ship's [[AppliedPhlebotinum "grav wake"]] to get to Earth undetected. Continuing in this fashion for ''a couple of days,'' he winds up in command of a stolen space warship armed with the most powerful weapon known to science and makes ready to conquer a planet.
* In the Haven Hive arc of ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' with Lt. Ventura -- Ventura, Major Murtaugh tried to not have the "[[PuppyDogEyes helpless-with-the-big-eyes]]" looking helpless-with-the-big-eyes]]"-looking girl guarded by a human that might be swayed by it. She didn't even ask the prisoner's name and couldn't have known that allowing the genius roboticist with [[TheDreaded widely known and feared reputation]] among robots time alone with a robot and the AI controlling the spacecraft means the next phrase a human being will hear from her will be [[spoiler:"get off my ship"]]. The incredulous tone Ventura used at the suggestion of guarding her with a robot might have been a tip-off; her captor apparently misinterpreted it as the tone of voice one might use to say "You're posting '''five''' guards to my cell?" as opposed to the disbelief of a child over being locked in a cell made of caramel.



* The surreal reverse example in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' where three criminals get out of prison thanks to three conveniently placed man-sized Powerpuff Girl disguises within the jail cell. "This is going to be harder than I thought".

to:

* The surreal reverse example in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' where three criminals get out of prison thanks to three conveniently placed man-sized Powerpuff Girl disguises within the jail cell. "This is going to be harder than I thought".thought."



* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Ducktales2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with [[MythologyGag a bag of marbles to play with]]. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. Cue Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles until it breaks off.

to:

* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Ducktales2017}}'', ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with [[MythologyGag a bag of marbles to play with]]. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. Cue Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles until it breaks off.
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** The Fire Nation locks Waterbenders in cells where they dry the air and chain them up when feeding them. Their only mistake is to not cut them off from the source of their strength: the moon. Thanks to the full moon's power, one of the benders manages to escape by [[spoiler:inventing Bloodbending, letting her control the water in the ''[[PeoplePuppets guards]]'']].
** They also imprison Earthbenders on a rig out in the middle of the ocean, made of pure metal (thought to be unbendable at the time). Unfortunately for them, they overlooked the fact that the rig is powered by coal, which the Earthbenders ''can'' bend.
** Toph is also locked in a steel cage by two men her father hired to kidnap her. This just makes her realizes she ''can'' still bend steel by using her SuperSenses to focus on the earthen impurities.

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** The One of the most notable example is a case of bad (good?) luck: back in the day, the Fire Nation locks Waterbenders locked a bunch of waterbenders in cells where they dry dried the air and chain chained them up when feeding them. Their only mistake is to not They didn't cut them off completely from the source of their strength: strength, the moon. Thanks to the full moon's power, moon, but without everything else, that extra power was pointless. In theory. No one expected one of the benders manages to escape manage escaping by [[spoiler:inventing Bloodbending, letting her control the water in the ''[[PeoplePuppets guards]]'']].
** They also imprison In one episode, they imprisoned Earthbenders on a rig out in the middle of the ocean, made of pure metal (thought to be unbendable at the time). Unfortunately for them, they overlooked the fact that the rig is powered by coal, which the Earthbenders ''can'' bend.
bend; all it took was the proper motivation to escape and they were good to go.
** Toph is also gets locked in a steel cage by two men her father hired to kidnap her. her at one point. This just makes her realizes she ''can'' still bend steel realize that by using her SuperSenses to focus on the earthen impurities.impurities in the metal, she ''can'' bend steel, thus creating Metalbending.



* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Ducktales2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with a bag of marbles to play with. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. The next scene shows Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles to break it off.

to:

* During the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Ducktales2017}}'', Scrooge locks Huey, Dewey, and Louie in an empty room with [[MythologyGag a bag of marbles to play with.with]]. The triplets, naturally, plan to break out of the room, with Dewey commenting that he knows "just how to do it" while holding the bag of marbles. The next scene shows Cue Dewey bashing the doorknob with the marbles to break until it breaks off.
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* In ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob,'' Fructose Riboflavin escapes from his prison ship by deliberately tripping and falling at the feet of his robot guard, so the guard's heavy feet snap his chains. He then disables the robot and removes its ArmCannon to blast open the other prisoners' cells and enslave them, and to take out the other robot guards. He uses the ship's parts to cobble together a cloaking device to install on a small escape pod and uses the pod to hitch a ride in another ship's [[AppliedPhlebotinum "grav wake"]] to get to Earth undetected. Continuing in this fashion for ''a couple of days,'' he winds up in command of a stolen space warship armed with the most powerful weapon known to science and is makes ready to conquer a planet.

to:

* In ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob,'' Fructose Riboflavin escapes from his prison ship by deliberately tripping and falling at the feet of his robot guard, so the guard's heavy feet snap his chains. He then disables the robot and removes its ArmCannon to blast open the other prisoners' cells and enslave them, and to take out the other robot guards. He uses the ship's parts to cobble together a cloaking device to install on a small escape pod and uses the pod to hitch a ride in another ship's [[AppliedPhlebotinum "grav wake"]] to get to Earth undetected. Continuing in this fashion for ''a couple of days,'' he winds up in command of a stolen space warship armed with the most powerful weapon known to science and is makes ready to conquer a planet.
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** In the first game, for example, you're locked up in a jail cell with nothing but the clothes on your back and a useless bottle of ketchup. Naturally, you lie down on the floor and pour the ketchup all over yourself. When the guard comes in to check on the suddenly bloodied prisoner, you snap his neck and haul tail out of there.
** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3'' you can operate on your self using a fork to get to your fake death pill, handily hidden inside your body, you can open the cell door with the correct radio frequency, or trick the guard into giving you a cig spray, or throw food to the guard so that he gets diarrhea.

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** In the first game, for example, you're locked up in a jail cell with nothing but the clothes on your back and a useless bottle of ketchup. Naturally, you lie down on the floor and pour the ketchup all over yourself. When the guard comes in to check on the suddenly bloodied prisoner, you snap his neck and haul tail out of there.
there. Alternatively, you can hide yourself in a location in the room where he can't see you when he's busy wrestling with his diarrhea and when he can't suddenly find you when he returns, he opens the cell door to check. If both of the above methods fail, your mysterious benefactor will get tired of waiting for you to figure it out, knock out the guard and open the door for you.
** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3'' you can operate on your self yourself using a fork to get to your fake death pill, handily hidden inside your body, you can open the cell door with the correct radio frequency, or trick the guard into giving you a cig spray, or throw food to the guard so that he gets diarrhea.
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[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* In one ComicStrip/PrinceValiant story arc, a manipulative villain plunders monasteries, bribing his followers with looted gold from their melted-down treasures. He succeeds in capturing the heroes and leaves them locked under guard in a dungeon filled with the looted monasteries' "useless" books of science and history. One recognizes books of alchemy, brews up a vial of ''aqua regia'', and demonstrates to the guard that the gold with which he was bribed dissolves in "mere water". Convinced that he has been tricked with [[AllThatGlitters fool's gold]], the enraged guard releases the imprisoned heroes.
[[/folder]]
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** A notable example in ''Discworld/MonstrousRegiment'' when the eponymous regiment is locked in a ''kitchen'' -- not only does their makeshift cell lack any of the useful weapon-type things one would expect to find in a kitchen (knives, rolling pins, etc.), but it also appears to contain ''no food at all.''

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** A notable example in ''Discworld/MonstrousRegiment'' ''Literature/MonstrousRegiment'' when the eponymous regiment is locked in a ''kitchen'' -- not only does their makeshift cell lack any of the useful weapon-type things one would expect to find in a kitchen (knives, rolling pins, etc.), but it also appears to contain ''no food at all.''



** The trope is taken to its logical conclusion in ''Discworld/GuardsGuards'', where the Patrician is locked up inside a supposedly escape-proof cell of his own design. Not only did the guys who locked him up overlook that the door with its unpickable lock had bolts on the inside (enabling Vetinari to lock the door from the inside and keep them out), they also failed to realize that there was a hidden compartment inside the cell containing enough food and water to keep him healthy for several days should they decline to feed him, along with a copy of the key to the unpickable lock.
** Another ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' subversion is in ''Discworld/TheFifthElephant'', where Vimes is imprisoned by Dwarves and slipped some kind of particularly deadly assassin's weapon with which to take out his guards. It is a subversion, as he correctly reasons that the weapon was only provided so that he could be legitimately executed if he used it (plus, it's a single-shot weapon, and there's more than one guard), and thus he only knocks the guards unconscious when escaping.
** Inverted in ''Discworld/TheLastContinent''. Rincewind is locked in a cell and told that its previous occupant escaped it many, many times and they checked the cell over and over. It's a solid cell, the bars are thick... [[MyopicArchitecture and you can lift the door right off its hinges]].
** At the beginning of ''Discworld/GoingPostal'', Moist van Lipwig has spent several weeks removing the mortar around a large flagstone in his condemned cell with his prison issued spoon. This wears the spoon away to basically nothing, but he finally succeeds in moving the stone -- only to discover a much-better reinforced wall and a fresh spoon on the other side. The guards then immediately come and congratulate him for not giving up, and reveal that at least one other seeming flaw in the cell wouldn't allow a prisoner to escape either. This prison may not exactly be inescapable, but in order to do so you would have to out-think Vetinari.
** Another example, from ''Discworld/FeetOfClay'', has a specific ShoutOut to ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' and/or ''Series/TheATeam'' -- "some villains are obliging enough to lock you in a warehouse with enough equipment to build a fully functional armoured car".

to:

** The trope is taken to its logical conclusion in ''Discworld/GuardsGuards'', ''Literature/GuardsGuards'', where the Patrician is locked up inside a supposedly escape-proof cell of his own design. Not only did the guys who locked him up overlook that the door with its unpickable lock had bolts on the inside (enabling Vetinari to lock the door from the inside and keep them out), they also failed to realize that there was a hidden compartment inside the cell containing enough food and water to keep him healthy for several days should they decline to feed him, along with a copy of the key to the unpickable lock.
** Another ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' subversion is in ''Discworld/TheFifthElephant'', ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'', where Vimes is imprisoned by Dwarves and slipped some kind of particularly deadly assassin's weapon with which to take out his guards. It is a subversion, as he correctly reasons that the weapon was only provided so that he could be legitimately executed if he used it (plus, it's a single-shot weapon, and there's more than one guard), and thus he only knocks the guards unconscious when escaping.
** Inverted in ''Discworld/TheLastContinent''.''Literature/TheLastContinent''. Rincewind is locked in a cell and told that its previous occupant escaped it many, many times and they checked the cell over and over. It's a solid cell, the bars are thick... [[MyopicArchitecture and you can lift the door right off its hinges]].
** At the beginning of ''Discworld/GoingPostal'', ''Literature/GoingPostal'', Moist van Lipwig has spent several weeks removing the mortar around a large flagstone in his condemned cell with his prison issued spoon. This wears the spoon away to basically nothing, but he finally succeeds in moving the stone -- only to discover a much-better reinforced wall and a fresh spoon on the other side. The guards then immediately come and congratulate him for not giving up, and reveal that at least one other seeming flaw in the cell wouldn't allow a prisoner to escape either. This prison may not exactly be inescapable, but in order to do so you would have to out-think Vetinari.
** Another example, from ''Discworld/FeetOfClay'', ''Literature/FeetOfClay'', has a specific ShoutOut to ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' and/or ''Series/TheATeam'' -- "some villains are obliging enough to lock you in a warehouse with enough equipment to build a fully functional armoured car".
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* Parodied in the ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' skits called [=MacGruber=], in which he ''can'' get out of the room (which is always the exact same room, just with a different location sign over the door each time), but personal issues, interpersonal issues, stupidity, and totally irrelevant events prevent him from doing anything until it's too late.

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* Parodied in the ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' skits called [=MacGruber=], Film/MacGruber skits, in which he ''can'' get out of the room (which is always the exact same room, just with a different location sign over the door each time), but personal issues, interpersonal issues, stupidity, and totally irrelevant events prevent him from doing anything until it's too late.

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* In Creator/MarkWaid's ''ComicBook/FantasticFour: Unthinkable, Part 3 '' , Doctor Doom imprisons Reed Richards behind a magical door locked with (according to Doom) a very basic enchantment that even a beginner magician could break. The room also has a massive library of magical tomes, more than enough to learn how to break the enchantment (again, according to Doom). This is a subversion, though: Reed is completely incompetent when it comes to magic, so the library only serves to taunt him and his limitation. When Reed finally admits his incompetence, it turns out to be the magic words that unlock the door. Apparently Doom never expected Reed to do something that Doom, in his arrogance, would ''never'' do. Though [[XanatosGambit Reed Richards admitting his inferiority to Doom can still be seen as a win for Doom]].

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* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour:
**
In Creator/MarkWaid's ''ComicBook/FantasticFour: Unthinkable, ''Unthinkable, Part 3 '' , Doctor Doom ComicBook/DoctorDoom imprisons Reed Richards behind a magical door locked with (according to Doom) a very basic enchantment that even a beginner magician could break. The room also has a massive library of magical tomes, more than enough to learn how to break the enchantment (again, according to Doom). This is a subversion, though: Reed is completely incompetent when it comes to magic, so the library only serves to taunt him and his limitation. When Reed finally admits his incompetence, it turns out to be the magic words that unlock the door. Apparently Doom never expected Reed to do something that Doom, in his arrogance, would ''never'' do. Though [[XanatosGambit Reed Richards admitting his inferiority to Doom can still be seen as a win for Doom]].



* Subverted in an issue of ''ComicBook/UltimateFantasticFour''. The confined Frightful Four announce that they've made a teleporter from a ballpoint pen, hair, and paper. [[spoiler:Zombie Susan just turned them invisible. She lampshades how stupid the guards would be to fall for it. [[TooDumbToLive They do]]]].

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* ** Subverted in an issue of ''ComicBook/UltimateFantasticFour''. The confined Frightful Four announce that they've made a teleporter from a ballpoint pen, hair, and paper. [[spoiler:Zombie Susan just turned them invisible. She lampshades how stupid the guards would be to fall for it. [[TooDumbToLive They do]]]].



* Subverted in the famous [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[WhatIf "Imaginary"]] ''Comicbook/{{Superman}}'' story, "The Death of Superman" where Lex Luthor claims he has created a cure for cancer in prison and offers to develop it if he has access to a lab. The warden is not buying this and accuses Luthor of wanting to get into a room where he can build yet another tool set to escape. When Superman convinces the warden to let Luthor do his thing, Lex actually does cure cancer. Of course it's all a scheme to make Superman trust him so he can [[spoiler: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin kill him.]]]]
** In UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|of Comic Books}}, giving ComicBook/LexLuthor pretty much ''anything'' in prison was a bad idea, the most famous example being his creation of a time-displacing ray gun from a spring, a flashlight and some cans of fruit juice. In ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'', a homage to the Silver Age, while on Death Row he creates a robot that reads classic literature to him... [[spoiler: that can speak at a high enough frequency to dig through solid rock]]. He later gets the chance to mix a cocktail for his last meal... [[spoiler: he mixes a chemical formula that gives him Kryptonian powers for 24 hours]]. At one point it got so ridiculous that the only thing that they would allow him in prison was pen and paper. He noted to himself that he ''could'' break out of prison with just a notepad and a pen, but if he did that, the next time he got locked up the guards wouldn't let him have pen and paper anymore.

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* ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'':
**
Subverted in the famous [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[WhatIf "Imaginary"]] ''Comicbook/{{Superman}}'' story, "The story ''Superman #149: The Death of Superman" Superman'' where Lex Luthor ComicBook/LexLuthor claims he has created a cure for cancer in prison and offers to develop it if he has access to a lab. The warden is not buying this and accuses Luthor of wanting to get into a room where he can build yet another tool set to escape. When Superman convinces the warden to let Luthor do his thing, Lex actually does cure cancer. Of course it's all a scheme to make Superman trust him so he can [[spoiler: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin kill him.]]]]
** In UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|of Comic Books}}, giving ComicBook/LexLuthor pretty much ''anything'' in prison was a bad idea, the most famous example being his creation of a time-displacing ray gun from a spring, a flashlight and some cans of fruit juice. juice.
**
In ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'', a homage to the Silver Age, while on Death Row he creates a robot that reads classic literature to him... [[spoiler: that can speak at a high enough frequency to dig through solid rock]]. He later gets the chance to mix a cocktail for his last meal... [[spoiler: he mixes a chemical formula that gives him Kryptonian powers for 24 hours]]. hours]].
**
At one point it got so ridiculous that the only thing that they would allow him in prison was pen and paper. He noted to himself that he ''could'' break out of prison with just a notepad and a pen, but if he did that, the next time he got locked up the guards wouldn't let him have pen and paper anymore.
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* Parodied in the Norwegian daily comic ''Eon''. Series/MacGyver is seemingly locked inside the bathroom, and comes up with a brilliant escape plan involving a piece of soap, a razor, wire and some other articles, to which the main character responds: "Or we could just open the door." Turns out the door wasn't locked at all.

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* Parodied in the Norwegian daily comic ''Eon''. Series/MacGyver Series/{{MacGyver|1985}} is seemingly locked inside the bathroom, and comes up with a brilliant escape plan involving a piece of soap, a razor, wire and some other articles, to which the main character responds: "Or we could just open the door." Turns out the door wasn't locked at all.



** Another example, from ''Discworld/FeetOfClay'', has a specific ShoutOut to ''Series/MacGyver'' and/or ''Series/TheATeam'' -- "some villains are obliging enough to lock you in a warehouse with enough equipment to build a fully functional armoured car".

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** Another example, from ''Discworld/FeetOfClay'', has a specific ShoutOut to ''Series/MacGyver'' ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' and/or ''Series/TheATeam'' -- "some villains are obliging enough to lock you in a warehouse with enough equipment to build a fully functional armoured car".



* ''Series/ISpy'' had this as a frequent scenario (and predated ''Series/MacGyver'' by two decades).

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* ''Series/ISpy'' had this as a frequent scenario (and predated ''Series/MacGyver'' ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' by two decades).



** In the ''Series/MacGyver'' special, Adam and Jamie demonstrated that it was possible to escape a locked room by picking the door lock... ''with lightbulb filaments''.

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** In the ''Series/MacGyver'' ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' special, Adam and Jamie demonstrated that it was possible to escape a locked room by picking the door lock... ''with lightbulb filaments''.



--->'''Amanda Tapping:''' You spend seven years on ''Series/MacGyver'' and you can't figure this one out? We...we've got belt buckles, and shoelaces and a piece of gum; build a nuclear reactor, for crying out loud. You used to be [=MacGyver=], [=MacGadget=], [=MacGimmick=]. Now you're Mister [=MacUseless=]. ''[crew & RDA start to laugh]'' Dear God! Stuck on a glacier with ''[=MacGyver=]''!

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--->'''Amanda Tapping:''' You spend seven years on ''Series/MacGyver'' ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' and you can't figure this one out? We...we've got belt buckles, and shoelaces and a piece of gum; build a nuclear reactor, for crying out loud. You used to be [=MacGyver=], [=MacGadget=], [=MacGimmick=]. Now you're Mister [=MacUseless=]. ''[crew & RDA start to laugh]'' Dear God! Stuck on a glacier with ''[=MacGyver=]''!
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** "Paradise Towers" has a villainous example in the backstory - when the authorities discovered that Kroagnon was planning to massacre all the building's inhabitants, their reaction was to do something to him that left him a bodiless spirit imprisoned in the basement... with everything he needed to take control of the building's maintenance robots and construct a device that would allow him to possess someone's body.
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[[caption-width-right:320:[[MemeticMutation A CAVE! AND A BOX OF SCRAPS!]] A SuperheroOrigin as good as any.]]

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[[caption-width-right:320:[[MemeticMutation IN A CAVE! AND WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS!]] A SuperheroOrigin as good as any.]]

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