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1[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/MonsterHouse https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nebbercracker_8067.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:All the kids in the neighborhood know: if it ends up on his lawn, it ''doesn't exist''.]]
3
4->''"Ernesto, can you not see that I am busy getting upset about some kids across the street having FUN?!"''
5-->-- '''Lord Boxman,''' ''WesternAnimation/OKKOLetsBeHeroes''
6
7Kids will be kids. They like to have fun and don't tend to give a lot of consideration to how adults feel about it. The entire world is their playground, pretty much, and they generally don't mean any harm, even when their playing gets out of hand. Most adults are understanding, or at least willing to be tolerant of kids getting a little rambunctious.
8
9And then there's ''this'' adult. The one every kid in the neighborhood dreads.
10
11Maybe they're a ChildHater, or they can't remember what it was like to have been young, or they have some other FreudianExcuse for their behavior. Whatever the cause, they feel that children should be seen and not heard, and that their fun is noisy, disruptive, dangerous, offensive, annoying, and otherwise undesirable. In their opinion, most other adults are far too lenient with those rotten little brats and let them get away with too much. While this CrankyNeighbor type can't control the whole world or even their whole neighborhood, they ''can'' and will exert complete tyranny over one area --[[PropertyLine their own lawn]].
12
13Any child whose toy or other plaything ends up on this adult's property -- lawn, roof, backyard, pool -- is in for a bad time; the Fun Hating Confiscating Adult will triumphantly declare something along the lines of "It belongs to me now!" and make off with the plaything in question, which may end up forgotten in a box in the garage, or put in a trophy room of sorts -- or worst of all, ''thrown in the garbage''. Such an adult may have a vicious AngryGuardDog to chase away any children brave enough to try retrieving their belongings. (Curiously, nobody ever seems to think to just report the geezer to the police for Theft of Property.)
14
15There's a SadistTeacher variation too, who will snatch whatever they catch a student using that they disapprove of. Sometimes they will give it back at the end of the semester -- or the school year. Sometimes they consider it theirs from that point forward. Such a teacher may have a sniveling suck-up student helping to point out targets.
16
17The most common resolution to a plot involving this villain involves some KidHero or another hatching a plan to get in and get all the stuff back, returning it to its happy and grateful owners. Occasionally, the kids will run to a parent, and the parent will confront the confiscator.
18
19The most common subversion to the trope tends to be when the kids finally work out a plan to get their stuff back, only to discover that the adult in question isn't actually fun-hating and hasn't actually confiscated it. In cases like this, it's most likely some kind of misunderstanding. They're usually just a MisunderstoodLonerWithAHeartOfGold, and they've just been holding onto it, waiting for the kids to come for it.
20
21For practical meta-reasons, this trope is common to family and children's fare. The {{Media Watchdog}}s tend to frown on shows involving children facing the types of more serious and deadly dangerous villains that turn up in media targeting an older or adult audience. This trope allows both kid viewers and adult viewers to dislike the villain, as (a) they are showing disrespect to the child and the child's property, and (b) the parent is usually the one who paid for or gifted the child with the toy being confiscated.
22
23When the Confiscator is old (and they usually are) expect to see such tropes as ScrewPolitenessImASenior, WhenEldersAttack, and GrumpyOldMan as well. Compare FantasyForbiddingFather and TheKilljoy. May overlap with FunHatingVillain if the Confiscator is a main antagonist. See also ThrewMyBikeOnTheRoof for a more general application of the same principle. If they are not exactly of the mean type, though, they may instead be an IndubitablyUninterestingIndividual, forcing their way of life on others.
24----
25!!Examples
26
27[[foldercontrol]]
28
29[[folder: {{Anime}} and {{Manga}}]]
30* ''Manga/YuGiOh'' manga: A teacher not only confiscates a toy from Yugi, but threatens him, Jonouchi and Honda with expulsion if they can't find where he hid it within a time limit. [[spoiler:Other Yugi triggers the toy's beeping, which reveals that the vain teacher hid it under his wig. And reveals to everyone that the teacher is actually bald.]]
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder: Films -- Animated]]
34* [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] and [[SubvertedTrope subverted]] in ''WesternAnimation/MonsterHouse'': Mr. Nebbercracker cultivated the "scary, cranky old man" image, and would snatch the toys that ended up landing on his lawn [[spoiler:to protect kids from trying to retrieve them, because his house was sentient, possessed by the vengeful spirit of his wife who had big issues with nasty, pranking hooligan children and couldn't tell them from non-malicious children being playful. The truth is that he was a kind-hearted sweet old man who was happy to give the toys back once the danger was over]].
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder: Films -- Live-Action]]
38* ''Film/DeadlyFriend'': As if Elvira Parker, the local [[EvilOldFolks vile old spinster]], had not been mean enough by screaming at people to get away from her house (which is fortified like a prison) when they so much as breathe wrong near it, she [[KickTheDog Kicks the Dog further]] by taking the protagonist teens' basketball when it lands on her porch... Which becomes a ChekhovsGun of the most BloodyHilarious sort later in the movie.
39-->'''Tom "Slime" Toomey''': Hey, you can't do that!\
40'''Elvira Parker''': Yes, I can. My property, my house... ({{Beat}}, smug little smile appears on her face) my ball. (Tosses the ball inside her home, walks back in and closes the door)
41* ''Film/TheSandlot'' has one. He even has an AngryGuardDog called The Beast; this ends up being a subversion as neither is really as bad as the children originally believed.
42* Mr. Strickland in the ''Franchise/BackToTheFuture'' trilogy.
43* Ms. Stout from ''[[Film/AirBuddies The Search for Santa Paws]]'' hates Christmas for no explained reason and will confiscate any toys or Christmas decorations the girls in her OrphanageOfFear have. She actually goes a step further by throwing them in a furnace.
44* A brief gag in ''Film/AChristmasStory'' has the children in Ralphie's class wear fake buck teeth when their teacher comes in. Without saying a word, she holds out her hand and the students hand them over. The teacher isn't so much shown as fun-hating than no-nonsense though, and the fact that the students know the drill and she already has a drawer full of confiscated novelty items implies this is far from the first time they've done something like that.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder: {{Literature}}]]
48* Filch from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' had a room full of things confiscated from students, including the Marauders' Map, which the Weasley twins liberated and then gave to Harry.
49* In ''[[Literature/HorridHenry Horrid Henry and the Demon Dinner Lady]]'', a new lunchroom monitor starts confiscating all the unhealthy snacks the kids have in their packed lunches [[{{Hypocrite}} and eating them herself]].
50* ''Literature/TheSecretOfCrickleyHall'': In their temporary occupation of the titular house, the Caleighs, in its attic, find several 1940s toys. During UsefulNotes/WorldWar2, [[BrotherSisterTeam August and Magda Cribben]] took charge of several BlitzEvacuees, for whom a local charity provided some toys. Being [[TheFundamentalist fanatical disciplinarians]], the Cribbens stowed the toys in the attic.
51* ''Literature/JustWilliam'' had to deal with several of these, and generally came out on top.
52* In the children's book, ''Literature/TheWonderfulFarm'', one story has an unusual variant in that the girls have their ball confiscated by an angry old ''goose'', who proceeds to lecture them on not taking proper care of their things (they were, the ball had just flown past one of them and had the bad luck of rolling too close to the pond). Interestingly, he is quite happy to play with it himself and let his own children play with it. The girls, meanwhile, spend the rest of the story trying to get it back to avoid a scolding from their parents. [[spoiler:In the end, the family's donkey uses some clever trickery and the goose ultimately relents.]]
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder: LiveActionTV]]
56* There was an episode of ''Series/CrossingJordan'' where the Fun Hating Confiscating Adult in Jordan's childhood neighborhood had recently died and a skeleton was found in the baseboards of her floor soon [[spoiler:turns out that it was the remains of her husband who she killed several years ago to protect her mentally disabled son. This trope was played with in the sense that over the course of the investigation, she was shown to be a more of a human being.]] Though they did find the cedar chest where she kept all of the toys.
57* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'': Cheri Oteri's recurring character Rita [=DelVecchio=], who would tell kids "I keep it now! It's mine now!" when their football/novelty flying disc/etc. would land on her lawn or porch. Parodied in a Thanksgiving skit where some kids throw the head of her Miles Standish decoration at her door and Rita starts shouting that she's keeping it, only to remember it was already her property.
58* ''Series/TheTroop'': Jake and Phoebe each have something confiscated by their neighbor. Jake's takes advantage of [[spoiler:the neighbor having been temporarily petrified by a Basilisk]] to get their stuff back from his box of confiscated toys.
59* Brent and Hank of ''Series/CornerGas'' lived near one of these as kids, and as middle-aged men they raid his shed to get their toys back.
60* ''Series/ColdCase'': In "The Brush Man", one of the suspects is a reclusive Vietnam veteran who keeps any toy who lands on his property. When the police search his home, they find a huge stash of bikes and balls.
61* ''Series/Goosebumps1995'': Major [=McCall=] in the "[[Recap/Goosebumps1995S2E8RevengeOfTheLawnGnomes Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes]]" adaptation, who confiscates anything that lands on his lawn.
62* On ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'', in the movie ''Film/GameraVsGuiron'', there's Cornjob, who confronts the kids in the film after one of them shoots a rubber dart gun at his handkerchief, sticking it to the wall. He angrily makes them get off of their bikes, sticks the dart to the shooter's forehead, criticizes them for having 2 kids riding on one bike, and makes them walk their bikes away without riding them. Then he secretly smiles at how cute the kids are. Of course, Joel and the bots have a field day with this.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:NewspaperComics]]
66* Not an adult, but an elder sibling: In an early SundayStrip of ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'', Lucy takes all of Linus' toys away from him, leaving only a rubber band. When she sees how he plays with the rubber band, she takes that, too.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder: WesternAnimation]]
70* ''WesternAnimation/FanboyAndChumChum'': Their teacher confiscated Kyle's magic wand and told him he could have it back at the end of the year. Justified example, because Kyle was about to use it to cast a hostile spell on the titular duo.
71* Mrs. Munson from ''WesternAnimation/KidVsKat'' has confiscated hundreds if not thousands of toys in her lifetime, keeping them all locked away in her garden shed. She's been doing this for so long that when Coop manages to return all the toys to their owner's a grey haired senior is thrilled to get his long lost kite back.
72* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'':
73** Mr. Crocker has an extensive knowledge of [[ShowWithinAShow The Crimson Chin]] because of how many comic books he's confiscated over the years.
74** There's another teacher who confiscated one of the wands, and said it would be given back at the end of the semester.
75** Dr. Bender, the mean dentist, is also a Confiscator. Any toy that ends up in his yard, he gives to his son Wendell as a present. But Timmy's mother took him on to get Timmy's ball back.
76* ''WesternAnimation/KickButtowski'':
77** Kick, after setting up a RingerPloy, retrieves all the things from the garbage that Ms. Chickarelli confiscated and returns them back to their owners.
78** There's also a librarian who confiscates anything in the library. Kick defeats her and returns Gunther's book and sandwich.
79** There's also a {{subver|tedTrope}}sion. The spooky old house where no kid has ever dared try to retrieve a lost toy... Is actually owned by a sweet old lady who is happy to give them back when asked.
80* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' when Gus kicks a ball into a yard near the playground where nobody had dared recover a ball from before (complete with a legend about a kid who disappeared after trying to do so). After actually trying, they find out that the owner's a CoolOldLady who lets them take the entire lawn-ful of balls that had built up over the years.
81** Another ep plays this straight with the June Box, where [[SadistTeacher Miss Finster]] keeps all the things she confiscates during recess and doesn't give back 'til June.
82* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
83** Stacy Lavelle, the woman who invented Malibu Stacy, is implied to be this. When Lisa tracks her down, she opens her electric gate to let Lisa in. A neighbor boy takes the opportunity to get his Frisbee.
84-->'''Boy''': All right! I've been waiting nine years to get my Frisbee back. ''[He throws it, but it goes right back inside]'' Aw!
85** That's really more because she's a shut-in and never opens her gate, though.
86** Springfield Elementary has a whole room full of stuff confiscated from students over the years.
87* Miss Mucus from ''WesternAnimation/CampLazlo'' has a room in her trailer full of toys she has confiscated. Scoutmaster Lumpus also has elements of this but, in his case, he tends to confiscate items so he can use them himself rather than to deprive the children of them.
88* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' has Mr. Ratburn confiscating a toy Buster brought to school, and when the kids are theorizing what goes on in the teachers' lounge, one of them suggests they might be playing with the confiscated toys. [[spoiler:That turns out to be correct.]]
89* Entirely unsurprisingly, Miss [=MacBeth=] from ''WesternAnimation/InvisibleNetworkOfKids''. At the end of term, she incinerates all of the toys she has confiscated.
90* Played with in ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' episode "[[Recap/StevenUniverseS2E19NightmareHospital Nightmare Hospital]]": Connie's mother confiscates Rose Quartz's '''sword''' from Connie, reasonably pointing out that's it not something children should play with. Connie and Steven try to explain she wasn't playing with it and fully knew how to use it, which Connie's mother refuses to believe, [[LawfulStupid even as they're being attacked by monsters]].
91* ''WesternAnimation/FostersHomeForImaginaryFriends'': CrankyNeighbor Old Man Rivers confiscated some very important adoption forms after Bloo threw them at his grandson for making faces at him. This leads to Mac doing a RearWindowInvestigation to get them back.
92* ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'': The ChristmasEpisode "[[Recap/TheLoudHouses2e1ElevenLoudsALeapin 11 Louds A-Leapin]]" indicates that cranky Mr. Grouse is one of these. Lincoln and Clyde react with a BigNo upon realizing the former's sled has ended up in his yard. Eventually, though, Grouse gets the Christmas spirit and gives everything back.
93* At the beginning of the ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'' episode, "[[Recap/RockosModernLifeS1E12SpitballsPopcornPandemonium Spitballs]]", Rocko and Heffer play catch with Rocko's prized foul ball. When Heffer accidentally tosses the ball into Mr. Bighead's front yard, not only does Mr. Bighead refuse to give it back to him and Rocko, he destroys it with his wood chipper. Heffer takes Rocko to a baseball game to get a new foul ball, getting the main plot underway.
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder: Real Life]]
97* Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan was reported to be like this: children who kicked a soccer ball over the wall would not receive it back (as bin Laden was paranoid that fingerprints belonging to him or his close associates could be lifted from the ball). The guards usually paid the children for the ball--often handsomely--instead.
98[[/folder]]

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