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5%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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10[[quoteright:270:]]
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12->'''Westley:''' Why won't my arms move?\
13'''Fezzik:''' You've been mostly dead all day.
14-->-- ''Film/ThePrincessBride''
15
16Someone experiences temporary paralysis or loss of muscle control but tries to carry on with what they were doing regardless. Frequently, hijinks happen — people losing control of their extremities is natural {{slapstick}} fodder. Can also be PlayedForDrama as a mild form of BodyHorror.
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18The causes vary — sometimes it's an aversion of InstantSedation, where a sedative spreads gradually through the body knocking out muscles as it goes. Otherwise, can be a result of a FingerLickingPoison, or even just someone sleeping at a weird angle until their arm goes to sleep. Inversely, this trope can also come about in the opposite direction as a character is roused from a deep stupor by a slow-acting stimulant, antidote, or other healing remedy, causing them to wake up with extremely limited mobility and gradually regain motor control and general vigor (the page quote being one such example).
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20It's almost never a stroke (which produces such effects in real life), because [[DudeNotFunny that's not exactly comedy fodder]] — and as [[Series/SixFeetUnder the trope namer]] for {{Narm}} demonstrated, this isn't an easy trope to [[PlayedForDrama Play For Drama]]. However, see ICantFeelMyLegs for a related dramatic trope.
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22Expect accusations of being drunk if the character starts schlurring their worthss.
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24See also IntoxicationEnsues and NonSequiturThud, which can also accompany this. May be an early symptom of TheParalyzer.
25
26----
27!!Examples:
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29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:AnimeAndManga]]
32* In ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'', Ed gets into a fight with a prisoner who's been tasked with guarding a secret room. During the fight, Ed's mechanical arm malfunctions and dangles loosely from the socket.
33%% ** This also happens to various other characters whose souls have been attached to false bodies.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Comic Books]]
37* Creator/ElliotSMaggin's classic [[MediaNotes/TheBronzeAgeOfComicBooks Bronze Age]] ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'' story "The Luthor Nobody Knows" is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin primarily]] all about the backstory and psychology of ComicBook/LexLuthor — but the [[NestedStory frame device]] of the story is a standard fight between Lex and Supes in the present day. Lex hits Superman with a gizmo that causes him to lose all muscle control. Then Superman realizes that, since they're in a relatively deserted area, all he really needs to do is lie on his back and ''shake'' to cause a localized earthquake, which knocks Lex out until the gizmo's effects have worn off, and Superman then flies around at super speed, repairing the damage he caused with the earthquake.
38* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: The first sign ComicBook/SteveTrevor is fighting off Hypnota's mind control is that when she orders him and some other mind control victims to shoot he grabs his gun and then his arm just fails to lift. He looks down at it in a daze before he actually starts to regain control.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Film - Animated]]
42* On the film version of ''[[WesternAnimation/HortonHearsAWho2008 Horton Hears a Who!]]'', the Mayor is at the dentist when an earthquake (caused by the speck the Whos all live on moving) occurs, and the Novocaine needle ends up in his arm, which remains limp and useless for some time afterwards.
43* In a moment of massive stupidity, Sid eats a poisonous berry in ''WesternAnimation/IceAgeContinentalDrift'' despite Diego's warnings not to do it while they are in the middle of a big plan. Almost immediately after swallowing it one side of his face starts drooping and it gets worse from there. This ends up causing Sid, Diego, and Manny to fail to get aboard the pirate ship they were stealing before it takes off.
44* In ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory2'', Woody's arm rips, causing it to go limp whenever he's moving.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Film - Live-Action]]
48* Not the first time for Creator/JimCarrey to use that bit of humor — after all, we learned in ''Film/AceVentura: When Nature Calls'' that "Three darts is too much!"
49* In ''Film/{{Botched}}'', Boris gets injected in the face with a paralytic, which gradually causes his face to freeze and makes him harder and harder to understand.
50* PlayedForDrama in ''Film/ElDorado''. Early in the movie, Cole Thornton is shot in revenge for accidentally killing one of the [=McDonald=] boys. For the rest of the film, Cole occasionally experiences sharp spasms of pain in his lower back followed by his right arm (his gun hand as well) going numb due to the bullet lodging in his spinal cord where the local doctor can't get to it. This winds up disabling him during the climax, forcing him to learn how to cock and fire a rifle with only his left hand.
51* Used to clownish effect in ''Film/FearAndLoathingInLasVegas'' where Raoul and Dr. Gonzo attempt to enter a casino whilst utterly spangled on ether.
52--> '''Raoul''': Ah, devil ether. It makes you behave like the village drunkard in some early Irish novel. Total loss of all basic motor skills. Blurred vision, no balance, numb tongue. The mind recoils in horror, unable to communicate with the spinal column. Which is interesting because you can actually watch yourself behaving in this terrible way, but you can't control it.
53* In ''Film/FloraAndUlysses'', the protagonist's father, George, is trying to save her pet squirrel from an antagonistic animal control officer armed with a tranquilizer gun. On a couple of occasions the darts hit George and he loses the use of each limb hit, with comical effect - as, for example, when he attempts DrivingStick with a numb arm.
54* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'', when the title character wakes up from being sedated and insists on carrying out his mission infiltrating a posh soiree despite not having fully regained muscle control.
55 * ''Film/JurassicWorldFallenKingdom'': Owen is hit with a tranquiliser dart (with a dosage meant to take down ''dinosaurs'') - he eventually wakes up but his body is almost completely paralysed... and hot lava is creeping closer, causing a moment of BlackComedy as he has to literally worm his way to safety.
56* PlayedForDrama in ''Film/KillBill'', when the Bride's legs ([[FridgeLogic though oddly enough, only her legs]]) have wasted away from disuse.
57* The Chosen One of ''Film/KungPowEnterTheFist'' is subjected to TheParalyzer, and then flails his arms around wildly trying to defeat [[BigBad Betty]].
58* In ''Film/MeMyselfAndIrene'', half of the protagonist's body falls unconscious and the half that his split personality is controlling is attempting to "carry" the unconscious half to the car.
59* In ''Film/PlanetTerror'' one of the main characters is injected in her arms with a local anaesthetic several times, causing her hands to become completely unresponsive. She ends up breaking her wrist attempting to get a car door open... The look of panic on her face presumably isn't pain, but the knowledge that once she gets feeling back, it's going to hurt like hell.
60* During the final showdown in ''Film/{{Primal}}'', Frank shoots Loffler multiple times with curare coated darts. As the fight goes on, Loffler finds that he is losing feeling in various parts of his body and losing control of them.
61* Inverted and PlayedForLaughs in ''Film/ThePrincessBride'', where it takes a while for Miracle Max's cure to fully take effect on Wesley, and Inigo and Fezzik have to carry him around while StormingTheCastle as bits him are "waking up" one at a time.
62* In ''Film/{{Rentadick}}'', the MacGuffin is a gas that causes temporary paralysis. Towards the end of the movie, a pair of characters end up paralysed from the waist down and have to drive a truck, with one of them steering and the other on the floor working the pedals.
63* Most of the laughs in ''Film/{{Senseless}}'' are the result of the main character's senses either going into hyperdrive or completely shutting off, leaving him with things like floppy limbs and inability to speak properly.
64* Part of a RunningGag in ''Film/StarTrek2009'' movie, in which Bones keeps jabbing Kirk with hypos to treat symptoms as they arise — including:
65--> '''Kirk:''' Wath... wath wrong wif mah mouf?\
66'''[=McCoy=]:''' You've got numb tongue?\
67'''Kirk:''' NUM TON?\
68'''[=McCoy=]:''' I can fix that!
69* ''Film/WhatsTheWorstThatCouldHappen'': When Kevin and Berger are trapped in a LaserHallway, they are forced to remain motionless in awkward positions till Windham arrives to rescue them. When they are released, various limbs have fallen asleep. They continue to stagger their way through the robbery.
70* A frequent result of all the Quaaludes consumed in ''Film/TheWolfOfWallStreet'', particularly when a set of really strong, yet old enough for the effect to be delayed, ludes cause Jordan to skip the earlier phases of the Quaalude high and reach the point where he has to crawl from the phone in the country club all the way out to his Ferrari.
71[[/folder]]
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73[[folder:Literature]]
74* {{Deconstructed}} in ''Literature/Feed2002'', where the lower-grade neural implant that allows the heroine to access the titular feed glitches and eventually gives her [[AndIMustScream locked-in syndrome]].
75* The TropeNamer, ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxyTrilogy'', features this when Ford rescues Arthur from the destruction of the [[InsignificantLittleBluePlanet Earth]]. They have just materialised in the Vogon ship, and Arthur, never having teleported before, says:
76-->'''Arthur:''' I feel like a military academy... Bits of me keep passing out.
77* In the ''Series/TheManFromUNCLE'' TieInNovel ''The Doomsday Affair'', Illya Kuryakin is injected with a serum that causes him to remain fully conscious but lose muscle control and the ability to speak or write. The villains are able to kidnap him in plain view by explaining his struggles to concerned passers-by as the result of a congenital brain defect.
78* In ''Literature/TheThrawnTrilogy'', Luke Skywalker pulls one of the two power sources out of his artificial hand in order to use it to hotwire a locked door. For the rest of the first book, his hand keeps going numb at random times, often making him drop whatever he's holding at the time, and he apologizes and carries on. It's dropped when he gets out of the jungle, presumably with him getting a replacement power source offscreen, or the original power supply (by then in the possession of Lando) being returned.
79* Bizarre and terrifying version with Quasiman from the ''Literature/WildCards'' universe. Bits and pieces of his body are constantly phasing/teleporting out into other dimensions, which can result in incidents such as his walking along only for one of his legs to teleport away, causing him to fall over, to the fact that various bits and pieces of his brain are almost constantly disconnected from the rest of him, sometimes temporarily leaving him akin to a drooling vegetable.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Live Action TV]]
83* An interesting case is found in the last episodes of ''Series/BabylonFive'', where [[spoiler:Londo]] is implanted with an alien symbiont that forces him to comply with all orders from his real masters. Having been a heavy drinker for most of his life, he can still think relatively clearly while the symbiont has passed out completely drunk.
84* "The Dentist Sketch" on ''Series/TheCarolBurnettShow'' in which a hapless dentist (Tim Conway) keeps accidentally injecting various parts of his body with Novocaine. By the end of the sketch, Tim's character has numbed his leg, arm, and forehead and his patient (Harvey Korman) is madly {{corpsing}} in the chair.
85* A somewhat different version of this occurs in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' anniversary special ''The Five Doctors'' when the Doctor experiences sharp pains and is eventually incapacitated because his previous regenerations are being taken out of time.
86** After he is poisoned in "Let's Kill Hitler", the Doctor tries to pass off his painful spasms as this.
87* On ''Series/TheInbetweeners'', Jay is watching a porn film and sitting on his hand to try out "the stranger" when he's [[CaughtWithYourPantsDown Caught With His Pants Down]], and desperately tries to close the laptop and dress himself with his dead arm.
88* On one ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'' episode, Hal has to decide whether or not to pull the plug on a man in a vegetative state. Unable to bear the pressure of the decision, Hal's mind [[YourMindMakesItReal forces him to become paralyzed]] from the waist ''up'', so that he can't say or write what to do. He manages to get along surprisingly well using just his legs for everything.
89* On ''Series/MrBean'', Bean's dentist keeps accidentally injecting himself with Novocaine until he passes out completely, forcing Bean to do his own dental work.
90* In an episode of sitcom ''Series/PeteVsWorld'' the main character was planning on NotStayingForBreakfast, but had a dead arm from the girl sleeping on top of it and was having trouble getting dressed with quite the level of stealth [[SoMuchForStealth he had in mind]].
91* One prank on ''Series/PrankPatrol'' involved a fake dentist who accidentally injected himself with Novocaine while working on the target.
92* ''Series/RedDwarf'': In "Back in the Red: Part II", Rimmer injects his groin with anesthetic is an attempt to bring his 'sexual magnetism virus' enhanced libido under control. However, the effect spreads to his legs causing them to start buckling as he is running along the corridor.
93* In a case where it really ''is'' a stroke, this was how a line from ''Series/SixFeetUnder'' became the TropeNamer for {{Narm}}, as Nate tried to say he had a "numb arm".
94* A game of ''Weird Superheroes'' in ''Series/WhoseLineIsItAnyway'' has Ryan getting the name "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Body-Parts-Constantly-Falling-Asleep Man]]".
95[[/folder]]
96
97[[folder:Radio]]
98* A {{pun}} from ''Radio/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy1978'' is the TropeNamer, but [[ThisIndexIsNotAnExample if the trope occurs at all]] it's only as an InformedAttribute; the nature of the medium makes it difficult to convey the exact details, and it's also not clear whether Arthur means bits of his ''body'' or of his ''brain'', although he sounds decidedly out of it at the time so the latter is a strong possibility.
99-->'''Ford Prefect:''' If you've never been through a matter transference beam before, you've probably lost some salt and protein...How are you feeling?\
100'''Arthur Dent:''' Like a military academy.[[note]]Graduation from which is known as "passing out"[[/note]] [[TropeNamer Bits of me keep passing out.]]
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Theatre]]
104* In the third act of ''Theatre/MaryMary'', Bob accidentally takes a bunch of sleeping pills and struggles to remain awake. At one point, he falls asleep and collapses on the floor just as he starts to make an impassioned speech.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:VisualNovels]]
108* A dramatic example occurs during the Unlimited Blade Works route of ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'', where Shirou's first experiments with projection result in the entire left side of his body falling asleep and some troubles moving around and doing things that evening.
109* A HarsherInHindsight variation occurs in ''VisualNovel/HatofulBoyfriend'' with Kazuaki Nanaki's narcolepsy. He has a tendency to fall asleep with his eyes open, and a lot of the odd stuff he just accepts as normal is suggested to be a result of him falling asleep and his body continuing on autopilot as if he were aware of the conversation.
110** The true route shows that this trope also applies to [[BigBad Shuu Iwamine]]. Nervous system damage from the Aves High City attack renders his right arm/wing almost entirely useless, and he often needs help carrying things or getting around. [[spoiler:It ends up often being used against him by both the main character and Kazuaki Nanaki when trying to defeat him. The main character narrowly avoids a cleaver in Holiday Star by disabling Shuu's functioning left side, and Kazuaki shoots him twice in the left side in the true route.]] It's also {{Lampshaded}} by Shuu in the manga.
111--> Ah... I overestimated my right side again. Now this specimen is ruined.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Webcomics]]
115* Inverted early on in ''Webcomic/ErfWorld'', where a door guard snarks at the villainess telling him to stand at attention.
116--> [[RagingStiffie Parts of me were.]] Now all of me is.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:WesternAnimation]]
120* In the ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' episode "From Bad to Worse", Jake [[SizeShifter continuously expands his arm]] in an attempt to keep the [[ZombieApocalypse zombie infection]] from spreading to the rest of his body and claiming him.
121* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
122** Sokka, during the fight with Jun, was paralysed by her beast and just when he started to gain some control over his hand a pile of blocks falls onto him.
123** Also happened to Sokka in his fight with Ty Lee when she was paralysing his limbs one by one yet he still tried to fight.
124* In ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'', Zim has [[FantasticVoyagePlot gone inside Dib's brain]] to destroy the knowledge of where he put his backups of evidence against Zim. Zim takes over control of his arms, deactivating them to start, prompting [[https://youtu.be/3bsfWTQKCF0 the quote]]...
125--> '''Dib''': "[[LargeHam Arms!]] Like! '''''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis Noodles]]'''''!"
126* Happens to all the contestants during the Africa episode of ''WesternAnimation/TotalDrama World Tour'' as a result of the tranquilizer balls they are using in an attempt to subdue Zeke. And then they have to sing about it.
127[[/folder]]
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129[[folder:RealLife]]
130* Some muscle spasms and cases of dystonia can manifest as this, as well as in cases of a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focal_seizure focal onset aware seizure]], in which the person experiencing it remains completely conscious, but they lose control of one or more limbs temporarily. Contrary to most depictions of this trope in fiction, most people who experience such spasms agree that not only are such incidents not funny, but they can be truly terrifying for someone not aware of what's happening.
131* Plato's description of the death of Socrates mentions the last moments of the philosopher, dying of hemlock poisoning;
132--> "... and he walked about until, as he said, his legs began to fail, and then he lay on his back, according to the directions, and the man who gave him the poison now and then looked at his feet and legs; and after a while he pressed his foot hard, and asked him if he could feel; and he said, "No;" and then his leg, and so upwards and upwards, and showed us that he was cold and stiff. And he felt them himself, and said: "When the poison reaches the heart, that will be the end..."
133* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell%27s_palsy Bell's Palsy]] causes paralysis in one (or rarely both) sides of the face. Most medical websites suggest that anyone who suffers an onset of Bell's Palsy immediately present themselves to a hospital--it might be something far more serious instead, like a stroke.
134* Some autistic people describe this happening within their brains when they go into SensoryOverload. Much like an overworked computer, different portions of the brain essentially go into "sleep mode" until the person has a chance to calm down. It can be a rather frightening experience, especially if one of the affected parts of the brain is the part responsible for alerting the person that it's happening.
135[[/folder]]
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