Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / JokerImmunity

Go To

1%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1305314375095105000
2%% Please do not change or remove without starting a new thread.
3%%
4[[quoteright:322:[[ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jokerfall_001_2536.jpg]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:322:"Do you have any idea how many suits I go through because of these situations?"]]
6
7->''"I know [[Franchise/StarWars Darth Vader]]'s really got you annoyed,\
8But remember if you kill him then you'll be unemployed"''
9-->-- '''Music/WeirdAlYankovic''', "[[Music/DareToBeStupid Yoda]]"
10
11Let's face it — some {{Big Bad}}s are popular enough that it might be a bad idea to [[KilledOffForReal kill them for real]]. Because of this, even though the good guy usually beats him, the villain always finds a way to come back. It's a specific form of ContractualImmortality, which could be for any one of a number of reasons:
12* The villain is so popular and lucrative that getting rid of him risks losing the fans' interest in the franchise. This is especially true in a VillainBasedFranchise or works where defeating the villain is the SeriesGoal, so killing off the villain will effectively end the series.
13* The story exists in ComicBookTime, so even though it ''seems'' like the villain has been active for a long time, we're really seeing a short reign of terror stretched out over several installments.
14* The installments are in AnachronicOrder and the villain's death has already been established or shown; logically, [[SavedByCanon he'll survive any story that occurs before then chronologically]].
15* The villain is a real person RippedFromTheHeadlines who isn't dead yet; this is rare nowadays, but you see it often in {{Wartime Cartoon}}s, where the characters fight UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler but can't kill him because he hadn't died yet in RealLife.
16* The villain is very heavily identified with a particular hero, and their exploits are thus part of the hero's overall story. This is what happened with the {{Trope Namer|s}}, the Joker; he's so influential to Franchise/{{Batman}} that killing him off would essentially rob the series of a big part of its identity, even if it could continue in theory without him.
17
18InUniverse, the explanations tend to be [[HandWave somewhat flimsier]]. The strongest such explanation is that heroes with [[ThouShaltNotKill a strong moral code against killing]] aren't just going to [[WhyDontYouJustShootHim kill the villain]] — even if doing so makes things easier on them in the long run — because that would place them on [[IfYouKillHimYouWillBeJustLikeHim the same level of immorality as their nemesis]]. Writers who go overboard with this trope risk losing the audience's patience, [[TheWorfEffect undermining the hero's perceived effectiveness]], or forcing the villain over the MoralEventHorizon such that the audience will demand his immunity revoked, but Joker Immunity ''can'' be revoked eventually, if the villain indeed crosses the MoralEventHorizon, suffers VillainDecay, or gets [[SortingAlgorithmOfEvil overshadowed by something even more evil]] (who will often [[MakeWayForTheNewVillains revoke the immunity himself]] to show how much of a threat he is). Out-of-universe, this tends to happen only when the villain has either declined in popularity or the writers are running out of ideas for new stories with him. Or a villain's immunity may be revoked in the GrandFinale.
19
20The heroic equivalent is an InvincibleHero. Compare VillainExitStageLeft (where the heroes stop the villain's plan but do nothing to stop him escaping), as well as CardboardPrison and TailorMadePrison (where the heroes ''think'' they've stopped the villain but he breaks out of confinement). Strongly related to ReportsOfMyDeathWereGreatlyExaggerated and its subtropes, as well as to the DeathIsCheap trope (a.k.a. ''Comic Book Death''). Contrast SuperheroMovieVillainsDie (villains who otherwise have Joker Immunity get KilledOffForReal in the film adaptation). See also JustEatGilligan (someone other than the direct villain has the immunity); PopularityPower (the character gets his way because the fans like him); and KarmaHoudini (the villain escapes legal and cosmic punishment).
21
22'''Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease''' Standard procedure for [[{{Villains}} villain tropes]]; you can't really call a RealLife figure a villain, nor are there cosmic fanboys who can save you from death.
23
24[[noreallife]]
25----
26!!Example subpages:
27[[index]]
28* JokerImmunity/ComicBooks
29* JokerImmunity/LiveActionTV
30* JokerImmunity/VideoGames
31* JokerImmunity/WesternAnimation
32[[/index]]
33
34!!Other examples:
35[[foldercontrol]]
36
37%%[[folder:Advertising]]
38%%* Played for laughs with ''Mortein'''s cartoon mascot Louie the Fly.
39%%[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
42* In ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', Jessie and James of Team Rocket try something villainous OncePerEpisode and always fail, but they're always back to try again. This in spite of them occasionally being last seen in situations where NoOneCouldSurviveThat, only to be [[SnapBack right back at it next episode]] with no explanation as to how they survived. Over time, their consistent failure to do anything meaningful has led to VillainDecay, so on the rare occasions that Ash actually bothers to tell the authorities about them, they're not considered a priority (at least compared to their more villainous teammates). They're also [[VillainExitStageLeft very adept at escaping custody]]. Their boss Giovanni shares this immortality, surviving Mewtwo's destruction of Team Rocket's headquarters without so much as a scratch in ''Anime/PokemonTheFirstMovie'' and [[KarmaHoudini never facing justice at any point in the series]].
43* ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'' was infamous for its repeated use of Naraku, who's the only antagonist still causing trouble after several hundred issues, despite half of feudal Japan wanting his head. Author Rumiko Takahashi knew the fans wouldn't believe he would be gone unless he was DeaderThanDead, so [[spoiler:Kagome wishes what was left of his spirit ''out of existence'' along with the Shikon no Tama]].
44* The three main bandits in ''Anime/KoihimeMusou.'' Simply why can't the Black-Haired Bandit Hunter just kill them?
45* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', [[AGodAmI Aizen]] was the BigBad for about 400 chapters. His eventual defeat left room for a vague comeback [[spoiler:because he's not dead, only {{depower}}ed, partly because he actually has [[CompleteImmortality complete immortality]]]].
46* Orochimaru from ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' just won't stay dead or sealed, even if he can be PutOnABus for quite long periods. By the time of the SequelSeries he's outright a KarmaHoudini kept around because [[CantKillYouStillNeedYou he's a potential asset]] as well as the fact that [[HazyFeelTurn he became slightly less villainous over time]].
47* ''Manga/{{Monster}}'''s sequel ''Another Monster'' shows that [[spoiler:Johan Liebert]] is still inexplicably active.
48* The end of ''Manga/{{MW}}'' shows [[spoiler:Michio Yuki]] is still around.
49* Katsuhiko Jinnai and the Bugroms from ''Anime/ElHazardTheMagnificentWorld'' always ran away so they could return in future installments.
50* ''Anime/YuGiOh'':
51** Yami Bakura consistently comes back from defeat. By the Duelist Kingdom arc, he is believed to have been sent to the card graveyard, but he [[BodySurf takes over Mokuba's body]], gets banished again, and comes back a second time at the end of the arc. Yami Marik banishes his soul to the Shadow Realm in the Battle City arc, but he returns to normal when Marik is defeated. In the last arc, multiple versions of him return as the BigBad; only here is he finally destroyed for good. This is somewhat excusable in that [[spoiler: he’s actually an EldritchAbomination within a ClingyMacguffin which physically can’t be separated from Ryou Bakura for very long.]] In the manga he never actually left Bakura until Marik seemingly killed him only to be revived later.
52** ''Anime/YuGiOh5Ds'' has Divine, Aki's EvilMentor. His confrontation with Dark Signer Carly ended with him plummeting about thirty stories from the top floor of the Arcadia building; [[UnexplainedRecovery somehow, he survived]], and appeared in a later episode, only to be [[JustDesserts swallowed by Earthbound God Ccarayhua.]] WordOfGod claims that, despite not appearing again, he survived that too, recovering along with the other victims of the Earthbound Gods, but that doesn't mean he was a KarmaHoudini; he was quickly caught by Sector Security and hauled to jail.
53* Hao from ''Manga/ShamanKing'' has been defeated and killed in ages past over and over; not only does he keep coming back, but he also retains his knowledge from his previous lives and grows more powerful each time. Even at the end of the series, [[spoiler:after becoming the Shaman King, he's not turned good, but Yoh and co. manage to appeal to his better nature and thus he is convinced to wait a bit and see how humanity is doing, instead of just killing everyone outright; and the epilogue states that even if the heroes see Hao's point, he's mellowed out by that point.]] In the 2001 anime, [[spoiler:this is actually averted has Yoh kills him in the end]].
54* If any villain in ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' deserves this designation, it's Myotismon. Like the vampire he resembles, he just refuses to stay dead. After being blown to little bits by Angewomon, he returned as [=VenomMyotismon=]. Then he was torn apart by [=WarGreymon=], only to return in the SequelSeries as [=MaloMyotismon=]. And of course, being a Digimon, he TookALevelInBadass with each evolution, as if he needed it, having defeated the [=DigiDestined=] ''multiple'' times even in his ''original'' form.
55* ''Franchise/DragonBall'':
56** DeathIsCheap in ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', but that same PlotArmor doesn't extend to villains, except for [[TheRival Vegeta]]. Originally just intended as an ArcVillain, his popularity caused him to survive his intended death and return to act as a supporting villain for the next major saga, surviving multiple brushes with death before he's killed by [[BigBad Freeza]]. And [[BackFromTheDead then he's brought back to life]] when a wish is made to revive all of Freeza's victims, and joins the main cast as the TokenEvilTeammate for the series, with all the PlotArmor to be expected if he were one of the good guys. After a FaceRealization in the final arc, Vegeta makes a HeroicSacrifice that was once again intended to have him KilledOffForReal, but once again his popularity has him brought BackFromTheDead again, but by this point he's made a full HeelFaceTurn so the trope no longer applies.
57** A better example would be Freeza. No matter what happens, ''Dragon Ball'' doesn't have a cat in a Hell's chance of ever getting enough of Freeza. Originally introduced as the main villain of the Namek Saga, Freeza shows up as a minor villain in the following saga, and thanks to his immense popularity, has unceasingly returned to the franchise through the non-canonical movies, anime filler and ''[[Anime/DragonBallGT GT]]''. After his grand return as the main villain in ''[[Anime/DragonBallZResurrectionF Resurrection 'F']]'', Freeza had major appearances in [[Anime/DragonBallSuper the Tournament of Power]] and ''[[Anime/DragonBallSuperBroly DBS: Broly]]''. At this point, Freeza is a deeply-rooted part of the lore who is unlikely to go anytime soon, having become not only the most iconic villain of the franchise, but also the closest thing that Goku has to an arch-nemesis.
58* ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'' has an organizational case of this with Laughing Coffin, a gang of [[PlayerKilling player killers]] who show as early as the Aincrad arc. With Sword Art Online shut down, several members escape unscathed and able to torment the heroes. It takes several more arcs and the former brass getting stopped to finally make dents in Laughing Coffin.
59* [[NebulousEvilOrganisation Black Ghost]] in ''Manga/Cyborg009'' are an organization-wide example. No matter how many times the 00 Cyborgs stop their grand plans, defeat their executives or destroy their bases, there will always be enough [[TheRemnant leftover cells]] to reform the whole organization and make another attempt at [[WarForFunAndProfit starting a global war]].
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Asian Animation]]
63* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'''s main villain Wolffy is always subjected to some sort of slapstick, such as being whacked by his wife Wolnie's FryingPanOfDoom, while trying to catch the goats; a number of episodes end with him being blown into the sky. Despite this, he's always back in perfect shape by the next episode, ready to try to catch the goats again.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Fan Works]]
67* Referenced in ''Fanfic/TheTwoSidesOfDaringDo''. Apparently, Yearling's audience complains about Ahuizotl having Joker Immunity. It's also justified with the real Ahuizotl; he's actually immortal and ''can't'' die.
68* ''Fanfic/SoulEaterTroubledSouls'' gives Medusa Gorgon Joker Immunity. She [[spoiler:survives expulsion from Rachel’s body via Majin Hunter by using the same spell she used to live in her battle against Stein and Spirit. Now, she is the ArcVillain of one of the fic's darkest Story Arcs]]. This woman refuses to stay dead.
69* ''Blog/AskErnstStavroBlofeld'' survived death ''at least'' three times. He survived [[Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService getting his neck apparently snapped when it hit a branch while he was bobsleighing]], [[Film/DiamondsAreForever being in the middle of his oil rig lair while it burst into flames]], and [[Film/ForYourEyesOnly being dropped down a factory's chimney from a helicopter while wheelchair-bound]].
70* Invoked and subverted in ''Fanfic/AbsolutePowerSucksAbsolutely''. Deus is aware of how Joker always seems to get away and knows it's because of his popularity in the comics. So when the two of them meet while the latter is in the middle of a mass murder spree, the first thing Deus does is wipe [[DeaderThanDead Joker from existence.]]
71* Discussed and subverted in ''Fanfic/KaraOfRokyn''. After [[Characters/SupermanLexLuthor Lex Luthor]]'s latest plan has almost succeeded in killing Characters/{{Superman|TheCharacter}} and taking over the world, [[Characters/SupermanLoisLane Lois Lane]] complains that he'll be thrown into a cell, which he will break out of time whenever he wants, and then he will start the cycle over again. Then she is told Luthor has passed away.
72-->'''Lois:''' And all that'll happen to him is that he'll go back to jail.\
73'''Superman:''' Lois.\
74'''Lois:''' All that’ll happen, after all this, almost killing you a hundred times, almost conquering the world, is that he'll go back to a nice, comfortable cell that he can break out of, anytime he wants, and–\
75'''Superman:''' Lois. Lex Luthor won't be going anywhere.\
76'''Lois:''' What? What are you saying?\
77'''Superman:''' Lex and I, we've done a strange dance for thirty years or so. I'm not sure who was leading, most of the time. We always wondered how long the dance would last. Now, I know. Lex Luthor and I... we've just had our last waltz, Lois.
78* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': Discussed in chapter 12 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', where Daring says that this is the narrative reason why Caballeron keeps escaping - she needs recurring villains to make the stories more exciting. The in-story reason (and the truth, based on her real life, though the readers don't know that part) is that he really is just that good at escaping from the guards.
79* In ''[[https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/its-an-unliving-young-justice-si.865009/page-14#post-69006994 It's An Unliving]]'', Destiny of the Endless steps in before the [[SelfInsertFic Self-Insert]] Black Lantern can kill the Joker. Subverted when Destiny explains it was the best chance to talk to him[[note]]As the Black Lantern is an Outsider, he doesn't appear in Destiny's book. Destiny can see where he's been but not where he is or where he'll be. So when Black Lantern was going on a rampage killing the worst of the worst in Arkham, Destiny appeared outside of Joker's cell and waited[[/note]] and allows him to kill the Joker.
80* In ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'' story ''Fanfic/HereThereBeMonsters'', [[Characters/ShazamMarvelFamily Mary Marvel]] expresses frustration at the endless "Fighting super-villain > Turning them over to the cops > Fighting them again when they invariably break out of jail" cycle which has been going on and on during the last fourteen years. It is frustrating, tiresome, and something the Marvels cannot do anything about because they are not killers, and all in all their nemeses have not murdered anyone so far... as long as they know or are able to prove.
81-->'''Mary Marvel:''' Both of the guys think their Sivana is the worst, but I can tell you, Mom, Georgia has got to be the nastiest one of the pack. She's actually killed somebody, do you know that? Took a newspaper editor and shot him in cold blood. They couldn't pin the rap on her, but we know she did it."\
82'''Edith Bromfield:''' "Why don't you put her away?"\
83'''Mary Marvel:''' "We do, but they never stay in for very long. They know so much. They can always cook up a new way of getting out of jail. In the old days, Doc Sivana could even walk through walls. Can you believe that? Even I can't do that. It's more like, we go out there, we dance with them, and we bring them back home when the dance is over."
84* ''Fanfic/FuneralForAFlash'': The Flash and his Rogues have become so accustomed to -and indifferent towards- the "Rogues commit new crimes after serving their sentence/breaking out of jail, and Flash inevitably catch them once again" cycle that the latter have developed tricks such like hiding their loot in anticipation of their eventual and assured capture.
85-->One of the tips was: always stash a good portion of your loot where it won't be found when you get sent back to the joint. Because, fighting the Flash, you were inevitably going to be sent back to the joint. But you'd also get out, and it paid to have a nest egg.
86* In nyame's ''Fanfic/OneDayAtATimeNyame'', this immunity is PlayedForHorror: it is revealed that the Joker we know is the ''third'' Joker to exist; and every time a Joker is killed, a copycat inevitably surfaces (through no rhyme or reason, with no connection at all, the very second the previous Joker dies someone around the world, someone [[TheyLookJustLikeEveryoneElse who was a perfectly normal person up to that specific second]] snaps and turns into a new one [[NothingIsScarier and there is no way to predict it]]) and they are also inevitably [[SortingAlgorithmOfEvil worse (in terms of atrocities and being more efficient at being evil) than the one before them]]. Jason Todd makes mention of this as he laments having done what he always wanted to do -- kill the Joker and get revenge [[ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily for his own death]] -- when the next Joker [[HeroKiller kills Bruce Wayne]].
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
90* As many {{Slasher Movie}}s are part of a VillainBasedFranchise, their antagonists tend to have severe Joker Immunity. These include Freddy Krueger of ''Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet'', Michael Myers of ''Franchise/{{Halloween}}'', Jason Voorhees of ''Franchise/FridayThe13th'', and Chucky from ''Franchise/ChildsPlay'' (who explicitly references his immunity in ''Film/BrideOfChucky'', gloating that he can always come back from death). These characters are all extremely difficult to kill, and even when they are killed, they always are resurrected somehow. In fact, the ending of the original ''Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet1984'' was altered to ensure that Freddy survived (which ''really'' pissed off Creator/WesCraven). {{Discussed|Trope}} in ''Film/TheMonsterSquad'' where the dad is confused by how horror movies keep having all these sequels when the last one was said to have killed the villain once and for all. The ''Film/{{Scream}}'' franchise [[AvertedTrope averts]] this, however. Even though Ghostface appears in every film, it's always a different person assuming the identity (usually two people per movie), as they are always [[KilledOffForReal killed off]].
91* ''Franchise/JamesBond'':
92** Jaws from ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'' is MadeOfIron and routinely survives otherwise catastrophic disasters by just dusting himself off. This allowed him to survive for ''Film/{{Moonraker}}'', where he underwent a HeelFaceTurn.
93** ''Film/LiveAndLetDie'' has voodoo master Baron Samedi thrown into poisonous snakes, only for the film's last shot to show him laughing on the engine of Bond's train.
94** Ernst Stavro Blofeld appears to die thrice; in ''Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService'', he comes back in the same movie. He is then [[UncertainDoom seemingly killed off-camera]] in ''Film/DiamondsAreForever'', and later an unnamed character [[WritingAroundTrademarks obviously meant to be]] Blofeld is killed in the pre-credit scene of ''Film/ForYourEyesOnly'' (the name was not used because of a copyright dispute) apparently killing him for good in the original continuity. He came back decades later in the ContinuityReboot film ''Film/{{Spectre}}'', where [[spoiler:Bond refuses to kill him when he has the chance and has M arrest him instead, and he later dies in the [[Film/NoTimeToDie next and final movie]]]].
95* Most {{kaiju}} have this ability, Franchise/{{Godzilla}} being the best example. Future appearances had him dropped into lava, or blown up by some super-weapon. He always returns to menace Tokyo (and other cities) again. However, the continuity for ''Godzilla'' movies is loopy at worst, tenuous at best. The [[Film/Godzilla1954 original monster]] killed by the Oxygen Destroyer often stays dead, and it's an all new mutated monster attacking this time. Or time traveling aliens messed with history. Or they abandon all notion of the '54 Godzilla existing and that Godzilla is the first encounter (as in ''Film/ShinGodzilla'').
96** Save for his appearance in ''Film/DestroyAllMonsters'', in which he was killed by a host of Earth's monsters going up against him together, King Ghidorah tends to survive most of his encounters with the King (and later, ''Series/ZoneFighter'') during the Showa era, normally by [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere running when the situation gets dire]].
97%% * Applied to all the [[MonsterMash classic Universal and Hammer movie monsters]], including those that [[Film/TheWolfMan1941 would've far preferred]] to [[Film/BrideOfFrankenstein just stay dead]].
98* Although comic book villains are very prone to [[SuperheroMovieVillainsDie lose their immunity in film adaptations]], Loki in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse survived the first four films he appeared in, despite faking his death in both ''Film/{{Thor}}'' and ''Film/ThorTheDarkWorld''. In ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'', [[spoiler:his immunity is finally revoked in when an even greater villain, Thanos, kills him. And even then, the TimeyWimeyBall "revives" Loki in sequel ''Film/AvengersEndgame'', as when the Avengers time travel, the Loki from the past escapes captivity.]] After that, he would go on to star in [[Series/Loki2021 his own streaming series.]]
99* The ''Film/DoctorMabuse'' films apply this trope to the extreme. Mabuse [[spoiler:dies in ''Film/TheTestamentOfDrMabuse''; the rest of the movie concerns an insane and possessed psychologist enacting his plans]]. In the '60s films from ''Film/Die1000AugenDesDrMabuse'' onward, he dies in seemingly every installment but comes back for each sequel. When [[spoiler:he finally [[KilledOffForReal dies for real]] in ''The Terror of Dr. Mabuse'', he comes back [[AssPull as a ghost]] in the next movie]].
100* In ''Film/FlashGordonSerial'', Ming the Merciless had the annoying tendency to not stay dead. In the first movie, he supposedly fakes his death by walking inside a crematorium, but they NeverFoundTheBody. In the second movie, he is trapped inside a chamber and bombarded with death rays, and the characters are sure he's dead this time ([[TakeOurWordForIt and his body is now shown to the viewer]]), but in the third movie, he inexplicably returns to life once again. Flash finally finishes him off by crashing a spaceship into his tower while he's locked inside it.
101* [[Franchise/UltramanZero Ultraman Belial]], the SatanicArchetype from the ''Franchise/UltraSeries'', has survived being defeated by Ultraman Zero several times. [[spoiler: This trope seems to be subverted as of ''Series/UltramanGeed'', where he's killed off by his ''own son'', the titular Geed, in the final episode.]]
102* The ''Film/MissionImpossibleFilmSeries'' has Solomon Lane, first introduced in ''Film/MissionImpossibleRogueNation'' and is also in ''Film/MissionImpossibleFallout''. [[spoiler: Both movies end with him being captured, not killed, making him the only villain in the series to not die.]]
103* Megatron from the ''Film/{{Transformers|FilmSeries}}'' movies definitely qualifies. Despite dying in nearly half the movies, he always comes back and [[VillainExitStageLeft sometimes simply leaves.]] This has led to criticism of the franchise, as the films are simply [[StrictlyFormula too predictable now.]]
104* Cipher from ''Film/TheFastAndTheFurious'' franchise. ''Film/TheFateOfTheFurious'' ended with her [[spoiler: escaping justice, making her the first villain in the franchise to still be at large]].
105* Lampshaded by Slappy in ''Film/Goosebumps2HauntedHalloween'', as he [[spoiler: shows up in R.L. Stine's home in the final scene, mocking him for this trope before sealing him in one of his books]].
106-->'''Slappy''': [[spoiler: You know I always survive. You ''wrote'' me that way.]]
107[[/folder]]
108
109[[folder:Literature]]
110* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'':
111** Creator/CSLewis manages to {{subvert|edtrope}} this trope in ''Literature/PrinceCaspian'', where the villains' plan to resurrect the White Witch fails after all. [[Film/PrinceCaspian The movie]] played this up even more.
112** In ''Literature/TheSilverChair'', a villain shows up who ''appears'' to be the White Witch resurrected, but it's uncertain whether it's really her; nobody was left at the end of ''Prince Caspian'' to follow through on Nikabrik's plan, but she was the last member of her race ([[GenocideFromTheInside by her own doing]]), so it's not as if she could conceivably be a different witch.
113* ''Literature/ConstanceVeritySavesTheWorld'': Lady Peril has a habit of dying climactically, only to resurface no worse for wear and ready for villainy. When news gets around of her tragic death, her son Larry Peril refuses to believe that she's actually dead until they find a body. He's right of course, having faked her death and entrusting Siege Perilous to Larry for the brief period she spent being legally dead.
114--> '''Larry:''' Maybe it sounds terrible, but I'm not upset by her death. I stopped going to her funerals when I was twelve.
115* In ''Literature/WarriorCats'', Tigerstar takes this to the logical extreme, since he keeps appearing even though he dies in the first series. However, his limited interaction with the living world makes him much less of a threat then when he was alive, and his involvement in the earlier books of [=tPoT=] was somewhat lacking. Eventually, after four series, they do manage to finally make him DeaderThanDead.
116* Averted in the ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' novels for the ''Literature/{{Ravnica|Cycle}}'' setting. The leader of House Dimir (Ravnica's BigBad) was actually arrested and killed at the end of the first book. But this bites the heroes in the butt in the third book, when it's revealed why [[TheWorldIsAlwaysDoomed Ravnica has experienced a rash of major disasters]]: because the complex system running the world was dependent on having a BigBad.
117-->'''[[TheHero Agrus Kos]]''': So I should've just [[spoiler:let [[BigBad Szadek]] drain [[CosmicKeystone Selesnya's]] life away]]? That makes no sense.\
118'''Grand Arbiter Augustin IV:''' [[LampshadeHanging It is a paradox.]]
119* In the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' books, the SeriesGoal is to defeat Lord Voldemort, so obviously he can't be killed until the end of the last book. Their encounters earlier in the series mostly consist of trying to avoid getting killed. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] by the fact that the main characters are eleven years old in the first book and have just begun learning magic, while Voldemort is an adult generally regarded as one of the most powerful Wizards in the world. Even if they wanted to fight they really aren't prepared for it until much later in the series. Additionally in [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince the second to last book]] it's revealed that [[spoiler:it's ''impossible'' to permanently kill Voldemort until his [[SoulJar Horcruxes]] are destroyed. Thus killing the BigBad early wasn't actually an option until after the heroes FetchQuest in the final book to gather and destroy said Horcruxes]].
120* ''Literature/ArtemisFowl'' and Captain Holly Short will stop being tormented by Opal Koboi when readers stop finding her mania amusing. And considering all she's survived so far, it doesn't look like that world's most insane pixie will be going anywhere any time soon. In the final book, [[spoiler:she finally gets a rather nasty death in which her black magic essentially eats her from the inside out]].
121* Visser Three (or, after his promotion near the end, Visser One) in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' ended at least two books in some kind of highly ambiguous, possible-death situation only to reappear in later books.
122* Downplayed by Count Olaf in ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'', as he is rarely in explicit danger; what he repeatedly avoids is arrest, which serves the same goal as ordinary Joker Immunity. The straight form of this trope is subverted in ''TheEnd'', where he dies in the [[ArcNumber thirteenth chapter of]] [[ThirteenIsUnlucky the thirteenth book]], [[spoiler:and there's still [[TheStinger one]] chapter left]].
123* The Man in Black (''a.k.a.'' Richard Fannin, Randall Flagg, Marten Broadcloak, etc.) from ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' seems to have a form of Joker Immunity. He always turns up again even if defeated, and none of the protagonists are able to kill him. [[spoiler:Mordred, however, gobbled him up because he was hungry, effectively ending his immunity.]]
124* ''Literature/TheBlackCompany'' has Soulcatcher, {{chronic backstabb|ingDisorder}}er, who cannot be killed off no matter what the villains try despite being their primary source of grief. Similarly, the Limper can escape or survive punishment from both the good guys ''and'' the bigger villains, [[spoiler:until it stops being funny and he's KilledOffForReal]].
125* In ''Literature/TheRollingStones1952'', Hazel Stone is considering killing off the bad guy in a TV Series she created, but realizes unless she also wants the hero to die too (the series ends because the hero no longer has a purpose), you have to bring in Son of Villain, with bad breath as bad as his father and balls of steel to match.
126* The SpacePirates Rat and Jolly U in ''Literature/AliceGirlFromTheFuture''. The author actually does kill off Jolly U in the first book featuring the two, but the FirstLawOfResurrection applies and Jolly U appears in later books alive and well without any explanation of his survival. Further on, they become firmly fixed in the plot as Alice's best-known enemies, escaping punishment after each defeat to reappear again (leading to {{Fanon}} assumptions that there is no death penalty in the franchise's universe). In the later books, they are [[FriendlyEnemy friendly enemies]] with Alice, so they don't want to kill her anymore and she doesn't want them dead.
127* ''Literature/FairiesOfDreamdark'' has an interesting variant: the heroes go out of their way to seal demons in the demon bottles instead of killing them because demons have souls just as fairies do, so killing them would just leave them running around the Moonlit Gardens and ruining ''that'' for all the dead.
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Music]]
131* The song "The Cat Came Back" plays the trope for laughs (and [[TheCatCameBack named its own trope in turn]]). The feline nuisance will come back no matter what anybody does to get rid of it. Some versions have the cat actually die eventually (for reasons almost entirely unrelated to the owner's attempts to dispose of it, like in the original, where it somehow dies after hearing an organ grinder’s song), only for it to come back as a ghost.
132* Played for laughs in "Scary Song", by the Frankenstein Drag Queens from Planet 13:
133-->''The boogeyman only wants to take your life\
134Can't kill him off, he'll just come right back in Part 2.''
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Mythology & Religion]]
138* In [[Myth/NorseMythology Norse folklore]], Thor repeatedly battles the Midgard Serpent, yet prior to [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt Ragnarök]] it always escapes.
139* The Mark of Cain in ''Literature/TheBible'' is often interpreted as having given him Joker Immunity. In the text itself, however, God never states that Cain ''won't'' be killed; just that if he does, whoever responsible is going to get a FateWorseThanDeath.
140[[/folder]]
141
142[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
143* Wrestling/TheUndertaker is the embodiment of this trope in the world of ProfessionalWrestling. During his career, he has been locked inside several flaming caskets, been buried alive, had his career ended following high profile matches, and at least once ''died and ascended to Heaven''. Despite this, he always returns, once Mark Callaway's nagging injuries have recovered or his holiday time is up. Promos for his match against Wrestling/MarkHenry at Wrestling/{{Unforgiven|WWE}} 2007 explicitly billed him as [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPc2LNLnSug "The Man Who Can't be Destroyed"]].
144* Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}} is a {{Heel}} who made a name for himself by always coming back (and being a KarmaHoudini in the process); [[EscapedFromHell not even Hell]] can stop him.
145* Wrestling/VinceMcMahon, being the owner of WWE both in {{Kayfabe}} and in RealLife, naturally gave himself Joker Immunity which only he can revoke. This makes him extraordinarily powerful, especially given that he can revoke any wrestler's own immunity as well. InUniverse, he's survived such events as limo explosions which allow him to take breaks from television in real life. As he plans to run the company until the day he dies, it's unlikely we'll ever see him revoke his own immunity.
146* Subverted by Wrestling/KaijuBigBattel; they really did kill off their BigBad and SeriesMascot, Dr. Cube. People thought he might have Joker Immunity when he came back thanks to TimeTravel, but it was later revealed that this Cube was an impostor wearing his helmet.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
150* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
151** The tarrasque embodies this trope as the memetic "nigh-invincible monster" of the game. It takes a Wish spell on top of massive damage and disintegration to make them stay dead. With Wish gone in fourth edition, the description of the tarrasque outright states it to be impossible to kill permanently without ''launching it into outer space.'' One campaign setting is dedicated to its functional immortality; the one civilization that ''did'' defeat it uses it as a never-ending food source (which also mutates them horribly, but whatever).
152** Strahd von Zarovich has his own personal [[DeathIsCheap Revolving Door Afterlife]]. He's played the starring role in two 1st Edition modules, a pick-a-path book, an entire 2nd Edition campaign setting, and a 3rd edition hardback adventure; in most he winds up destroyed at the end, yet it never seems to take. Ads for the hardback actually urged 3E gamers, "This time, make sure he's DEAD dead!"; yet the Count's back 'gain in 4E, for a board game and appearance in ''Open Grave''.
153* The Quori in ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' are designed to have Joker Immunity. They are spirits possessing mortal vessels, so the host's death does not kill the inhabiting Quori. Their actual bodies live in another plane of existence which cannot be reached by normal planar travel. This makes them an ideal enemy to throw repeatedly at the party.
154* Numerous characters in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' can and ''have'' been killed, but due to the general nature of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]], this is rarely permanent.
155** Eldar Phoenix Lords live on within their armor, their spirit inhabiting the next person who wears it until they are killed.
156** Lucius [[MeaningfulName the Eternal]] (and most probably other Champions of the Chaos Gods) is effectively immortal, as anyone who kills him ''becomes him'', becoming yet another person [[AndIMustScream trapped within his armor]]. What makes this stand out is that Lucius's immortality has a specific rule: he can only revive if the person who killed him took some kind of satisfaction or pleasure in his death. This has led to some ''major'' stretchings of what this counts as, such as him being killed by a Necron drone (an explicitly emotionless robot), or in one infamous case, being killed by a landmine, at which he then revived from the factory worker who built the landmine having taken pride in his work.
157** The Daemon Princes and Greater Daemons (also present in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'') can normally never be killed, upon death they are banished to the Warp where they can be summoned again though usually with downtime before they can return to realspace. They can still be permanently killed (mainly by certain artifacts like the Sword of the Emperor) but this is rare. In particular, this applies to the Daemon Primarchs as they have been defeated and banished every so often but always come back none the worse for wear.
158** The Tyranid Swarmlord can die, but if it does, its consciousness will be reabsorbed into the HiveMind and stored until the Swarmlord is needed again.
159** Kharn the Betrayer was actually killed during the Siege of Terra by Imperial forces, but Khorne deemed him too worthy of a champion to slip into the realm of the dead and granted him a perpetual body. No one has been able to kill him since.
160* In ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'', Vlad von Carstein had a magic ring that would allow him to resurrect every time he was killed, so no matter how many times the Empire thought they put him down, he and his undead hordes would return. Unfortunately for Vlad, his son [[AmbitionIsEvil Mannfred]] betrayed this secret to the Empire, who sent a master thief to steal the ring before Vlad was destroyed during the Siege of Altdorf. Then, in ''TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes'' he was resurrected yet again to serve as one of Nagash's Mortarchs, but ultimately died for good at the hands of his former wife Isabella, who had been resurrected by the Chaos Gods.
161** Nagash the Undying didn't get that name solely because he invented necromancy; he was killed four times in the old ''Warhammer'' universe, and not only did he come back every single time to wreck havoc on the world, he survived the universe collapsing and being reborn to become the de facto God of Death in ''Age of Sigmar''.
162* This trope is in full effect with most of the villain characters in ''TabletopGame/WarhammerAgeOfSigmar'' who were carried over from the previous setting, especially if [[MerchandiseDriven their miniatures are still in production]]. For example, Valkia the Bloody, Skarr Bloodwrath, Festus the Leechlord, Sigvald the Magnificent, and Dechala the Denied One, all slain during ''The End Times'', have all been resurrected in one form or another, and the latter two were resurrected as [[DemonOfHumanOrigin Daemon Princes]]. Meanwhile the Glottkin, who had been [[YouHaveFailedMe imprisoned in jars by Nurgle after they failed him]], have been freed from their imprisonment to serve his will. This also applies to the Nagash and his chief Mortarchs - Arkhan the Black, Neferata, and Mannfred von Carstein. Mannfred in particular is an egregious example, as he was the SpannerInTheWorks whose actions screwed over the Forces of Order and to the end of the previous setting. To rub salt on the wound, Nagash ''did'' initially punish him for actions before welcoming him back into his service. Even the Grand Alliance of Order is not exempt from this, as Malerion (AKA Malekith) and his mother Morathi have not only become deities themselves, but are still considered part of the Grand Alliance ''despite'' Morathi openly betraying Sigmar and seizing Anvilgard.
163* In ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', the nation/world/culture/force of Phyrexia has Joker Immunity. It affected the storyline of most of the game's sets and was the unambiguous villain of a dozen of them. When it looked like they were finally defeated for good, [[FromASingleCell one single drop of oil]] on Mirrodin was enough to ultimately turn that world into New Phyrexia. And after New Phyrexia invaded the Multiverse and was defeated, it was "locked away from the multiverse" instead of being destroyed, meaning it could come back some day.
164* In ''TabletopGame/{{Rippers}}'', [[Literature/{{Dracula}} the Count]] is given a {{handwave}}d escape from the climax of the book, temporarily fooling the heroes into thinking he was slain while really misting himself as he was staked. Apparently, having another vampire lord rise to villainy wouldn't have proven sufficient motivation for the Harkers to form a group of hunters in the setting.
165* The Servitors of the Apocalypse in ''TabletopGame/{{Deadlands}}''. The designers, understandably, didn't want [=PCs=] making things difficult by slaying them all, so they made up the most difficult quests possible: ''e.g.'' Stone can only be re-killed by the bullets that killed him (which are in him), and Reverend Grimme can only be killed by his original magic stick (which he threw into the sea and is not the one he carries).
166* The card-based version of ''TabletopGame/MarvelSuperHeroes'' has a section in the rules acknowledging that [[CListFodder only lame, unmemorable villains actually die]], and otherwise it goes down a list of possibilities to explain how a villain who seemingly died in the campaign is back later.
167* ''TabletopGame/SirenTheDrowning'': The [[OmnicidalManiac Current of Acheron]]. Its Sirens tend to have very short life expectancies; they're on literally ''everyone'' else's hit list, they run down the KarmaMeter and turn into Banshees very easily, and they're often killed when their attempts to stir up trouble fail and [[TheDogBitesBack people cotton on to the source of all their recent problems]]. And yet, Acheron sirens ''still'' keep popping up to cause trouble.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Webcomics]]
171* Both used and averted in ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'', which is partially inspired by Batman. Certain villains won't seem to die at the end of the story arc despite the Doc not considering prison an option for his foes, including Ronald [=McDonald=], Dracula, and King Radical. However, in the "DARE" arc, which was more inspired by 80's action movies, the villain dies [[spoiler:[[http://drmcninja.com/archives/comic/17p58 NOT!]]]]'', and Doc shows no mercy toward pirates.''
172** When the creators decided to call it a day, almost every bad guy in the comic had their immunity revoked and got killed off. The only two exceptions were [[spoiler:Sparklelord, who was content to simply leave after taking care of Radical and too powerful for the heroes to kill anyway, and a very minor lobster-man mobster who was literally told to get lost because nobody cared about what happened to him]].
173* Oasis from ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' fits this trope perfectly, regularly returning from the dead. The comic even {{lampshade|Hanging}}d the trope after another of her deaths. "Yes, a dynamic character with a proven ability to return from certain death falls from a great height leaving no sign of a corpse? Yeah, We'll never see her again."
174* The cast of ''Webcomic/{{Adventurers}}'' are aware of this trope. When [[BigBad Khrima's]] fortress is destroyed in an accident fairly early in the strip, Ardam asks Drecker if he thinks they've seen the last of him. Then they both burst out in laughter.
175* Jack Noir/Spades Slick of ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}''. We have seen four different incarnations of the same Archagent, and the only time one of them was seen dead was in an averted timeline. [[spoiler:Creator/AndrewHussie even goes so far as to somehow rescue Spades Slick from the destroyed A2 universe and nurse him back to health in an as-of-yet unspecified location.]]
176** Played literally with the revelation that Gamzee cannot die, not because he's God Tier, but because '''he's a clown.'''
177* Invoked in ''Webcomic/MonsterOfTheWeek'' when Mulder confronts Cancer Man:
178->Cancer Man: You can't kill me. I'm the best villain.
179->Mulder: True. I'll go yell at Skinner instead.
180* {{Inverted|Trope}} in ''CrushedTheDoomedKittyAdventures''. As MMORPG characters, the protagonists can't be permanently killed; they just respawn at the nearest temple. Villains and monsters, however, have but one life to live. The first BigBad's plan is [[spoiler:permanently undoing this, allowing the villains' greater numbers to win the day]].
181* In ''Webcomic/ScandinaviaAndTheWorld'' the countries are naturally hard to kill; however, this is really done with Nazi Germany, a nation that "lived" for twelve years but still comes back to scare the crap out of Germany.
182[[/folder]]
183
184[[folder:Web Original]]
185* Dr. Insano from ''WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment'' arguably becoming a BreakoutVillain for Website/ChannelAwesome as whole, has made a number appearances in other reviewers' shows as well as his series of origin, and his popularity and LaughablyEvil nature means it's unlikely he'll ever be killed off. Even Creator/NoahAntwiler's departure from Channel Awesome hasn't removed him.
186* ''WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall'':
187** The series' original KnightOfCerebus Mechakara, whose introductory arc ended with him getting turned to scrap, only for him to rebuilt by [[EvilOverlord Lord Vyce]] and sent after Linkara and destroyed a second time; the episode's commentary by Creator/LewisLovhaug stating he had plans to use him again in the future. Sure enough, Mechakara returned in ''WebVideo/ToBoldlyFlee'' with no explanation for his recovering, WordOfGod being he [[ItMakesSenseInContext regenerated with the magic coin]]. In short, it's unlikely he's finished.
188** Likewise Lord Vyce; Linkara originally abandoned him in a parallel dimension, only for Vyce to turn himself into living data and infect Linkara's RobotBuddy Pollo. After getting ThrownOutTheAirlock, he spends several real-world months uploading himself into Comicron-1[[note]]His old spaceship, which Linkara took over after Vyce's initial defeat[[/note]], making it look like Linkara's benevolent A.I. Nimue was going [[Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey HAL-9000]] on him. Nimue gets restored and apparently deletes Vyce in a BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind, but the end of the episode reveals that Vyce downloaded himself into the body of one of his {{Mooks}} and escaped. At this point, the immunity gets {{lampshade|Hanging}}d by an angry Linkara, who rants that he's spent the last five years dealing with this villain and he's sick of it. [[spoiler:Only time will tell if [[HoistByHisOwnPetard falling into the singularity he made for the Entity]] got rid of him for good.]]
189* Jack Slash from ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' has survived as leader of the Slaughterhouse 9 for more than 20 years, carving a blood swatch across America even as every other member of the group has been killed and replaced. [[spoiler:[[JustifiedTrope It's actually a secondary power.]] His power subconsciously communicates with the minds of other parahumans, allowing him to understand how to [[TheCorrupter manipulate them to bring out their worst urges]] and alerts him if other parahumans are attacking. It also causes other parahumans to hesitate when they have a clear shot at Jack, rationalising away their reason for not attacking then, serving as a deconstruction of PlotArmor. Jack doesn't actually know that he has this ability; he thinks that he's just that good at figuring out what makes a given person tick.]] Between this, and Siberian and Bonesaw making him [[NighInvulnerability Nigh-Invulnerable]] he always manages to avoid his well-deserved death. [[spoiler:[[FateWorseThanDeath Even at the end of the story he's not technically dead]].]]
190* ''WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses''. Ask That Guy has had a fatal heart attack, passed out from drinking his own blood, shot himself in the mouth, and been erased from existence by Creator/DougWalker. He's always back by the next scene. [[spoiler:Until the finale, that is.]]
191* [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-682 SCP-682]] of the Website/SCPFoundation, as the entire ''point'' of 682 is that any attempt to kill it (or even send it to another universe) will fail.
192** Defied with [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-3922 SCP-3922]] (a military group that invades fictional worlds to bring justice to fictional villains), where they killed the Joker in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheKillingJoke'' so thoroughly that it lasted for ''[[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill three hours]]'', which has lead to other supervillains of Batman's rogues gallery to surrender out of fear. To enforce it even further, they captured Creator/AlanMoore and forced him to say this at gunpoint:
193---> '''Alan Moore''': "...really, really, really, honestly, 110% perma-dead, will not come back, will not be resurrected, will not have his death retconned, has no backup plans, no machiavellian schemes to turn anyone else into his successor, and will not be missed, so if you're going to ask us to bring him back, don't, or suffer the consequences."
194* [[https://textsfromsuperheroes.com/image/179486856512 This page]] of Texts from Superheros, showing the in-universe consequences when someone tries to ignore Joker's own Joker Immunity.
195* In the ''Website/{{Springhole}}'' article on how to write arch-nemesis characters, Syera [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructs this trope]] by stating that a superhero who refuses to kill off a dangerous supervillain [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality because the former can't ''function'' without the latter isn't qualified to stay a superhero, as the "hero" will end up risking many innocent lives]] to keep said arch-nemesis alive.
196* In ''WebVideo/EpicRapBattlesOfHistory'':
197** Referenced in "The Joker vs Pennywise", with the TropeNamer himself boasting about his history of cheating death.
198--->'''Joker''': ''In my first appearance, the Bat was supposed to slay me,\
199But I can't be killed—that's why they cast [[Creator/JoaquinPhoenix a Phoenix]] to play me!''
200** Played straight with Adolf Hitler, who, for the first two installments of the "Darth Vader vs Hitler" trilogy, survives both of Darth Vader's attempts to kill him (first by freezing him in carbonite, and then by sending him to the Rancor Pit). Averted come the third installment, where he is sliced in half by Darth Vader, and then his ghost is captured by the Ghostbusters in the Season 4 teaser, confirming he is not coming back.
201[[/folder]]

Top