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6
7->''"Pride goeth before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall."''
8-->-- '''[[Literature/BookOfProverbs Proverbs 16:18]]''', ''Literature/TheBible''
9
10A character is introduced as an insufferable jerk; [[{{Pride}} arrogant]] because of some [[Main/InsufferableGenius amazing talent]] or high station in life. Everyone hopes, as soon as he's introduced, that he's going to eventually get what's coming to him...
11
12...and then he does. Immediately. Right at the start of the story. The character is overthrown and [[HowTheMightyHaveFallen knocked out of that high station]]; or has his marvelous talents somehow taken from him, and spends the rest of the story learning to cope, with varying levels of success.
13
14That's right, this trope ''begins'' with his fall from a position of power or influence to learn Main/AnAesop, rather than giving him his due late in the story. Alternatively, we may meet the character just after his fall from power, and learn about his stuck-up, careless past and subsequent karmic punishment via Main/FlashBack. The story spends just enough time showing the audience (or, if the writers are in a hurry, [[Main/InformedAbility telling us]]) that he's an arrogant bastard to convince us, before knocking him off his high horse.
15
16The major conflict of the story usually involves the character learning to be humble. Or at the very least, learning not to indignantly ask everyone he runs into "Do you KNOW who I AM?!" as he is often, despite being hit over the head with the humility stick, still very interested in continuing his thoughtless ways.
17
18The story arc completes with character accepting the Aesop. [[AnAesop The Aesop]] can vary, but a typical lesson would be how dependent on other people he is, and how other people need to depend on him. With this change of character, the arc may continue to his return to a power as a juster, kinder soul.
19
20On a cultural or setting level see LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair, SoiledCityOnAHill, and AndManGrewProud.
21
22May overlap with FallenPrincess and TragicHero. Compare with TheAtoner (who is necessarily repentant by definition), BreakTheHaughty (for a slower descent), ATasteOfPower (for when this happens in video games), and ThirdActStupidity (when near the end of a story).
23
24If you're looking for pride before a ''literal'' fall, see DisneyVillainDeath.
25
26----
27!!Examples:
28[[index]]
29* PrideBeforeAFall/AnimeAndManga
30* PrideBeforeAFall/FanWorks
31* PrideBeforeAFall/VideoGames
32[[/index]]
33
34[[foldercontrol]]
35
36[[folder:Comic Books]]
37* In ''ComicBook/{{Barracuda}}'', Maria starts as a haughty young noblewoman, still in her teens, but in the first volume she is captured by pirates and sold into slavery. She is thoroughly demeaned and defiled, when she hits rock bottom, she resolves to take back control of her destiny, and begins her totally ruthless climb back to the top.
38* Marvel's ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'', at least a few times.
39* Comicbook/DoctorStrange was an [[DrJerk insufferable]] but talented young neurosurgeon with everything he could ever want, until he suffered nerve damage in his hands in a car accident. Cue the [[BreakTheHaughty plummet to rock bottom]], which ended only when he started to care about people other than himself.
40* ''ComicBook/ThePowerpuffGirls'' story "Smart And Smarter" (''ComicBook/CartoonNetworkBlockParty'' #59, DC), Blossom lets admittance to a school for especially smart children go to her head to the point that she not only alienates her sisters but also arch-foe Mojo Jojo. During a face-to-face battle, Mojo cuts [[BreakTheHaughty Blossom down to size]], with Bubbles and Buttercup's blessings.
41* In ''ComicBook/WhiteSand'', this is what happens to Sand Masters as a whole - they've grown so prideful and haughty, they've stopped caring about other people's opinions and figured they're too powerful to ever be attacked, so they've stopped training for combat as well. They are then invaded by an army and slaughtered almost to a man.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
45* ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast''. A prince refuses to provide shelter for an old woman. She turns out to be a powerful enchantress who curses him (and everybody in his castle, including a kid) for his judging her by her appearance. To be restored, the beast must learn to [[ThePowerOfLove love another and receive love in return]].
46* Emperor Kuzco of ''WesternAnimation/TheEmperorsNewGroove''. We're made aware that he's a careless, self-absorbed emperor, and then the story begins as he's overthrown by Yzma and [[ForcedTransformation turned into a llama]].
47* Stitch in ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch''. He goes from being a badass mutant escapee to a little girl's "dog". He learns an Aesop about the value of family and his gleeful feral edge is ... softened.
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
51* At the beginning of the movie ''Film/{{Bella}}'', we see the main character as a famous up-and-coming soccer player driving with his manager a few years ago. He is then shown in the present day working as a chef at his brother's restaurant. Through flashbacks throughout the movie, we find out that [[spoiler: when he was driving, he accidentally hit and killed a small girl, causing him to stop playing soccer.]]
52* ''Film/FridayNightLights'': Boobie, the star running back on the team, is extra cocky at the outset, basking in various recruitment offers from top colleges. Of course, [[spoiler: this all comes to a halt when he suffers a career-ending injury during a game]].
53* Stephen Chow's character in ''Film/GodOfCookery''. When he starts to regain his former glory halfway through the film, he begins to revert to his haughty attitude, until tragedy forces him to re-evaluate his priorities.
54* ''Film/PacificRim'' shows [[HumongousMecha Jaeger]] pilot Raleigh Beckett's pride before the fall in the beginning. At first, he's brash, eager to fight, and sees the sighting of the {{Kaiju}} codenamed "Knifehead" as another potential notch in his and his co-pilot brother Yancy's belt instead of rightly giving it the regard as a threat it deserves. What results is him getting to witness his brother's DespairEventHorizon in his own head as he dies, the mental strain of piloting a Jaeger by himself, and the shattering of the invincible mystique of the Jaegers against the Kaiju menace. He becomes a ShellShockedVeteran and later has to be [[DareToBeBadass dared]] to come back into the service.
55* Vizzini, in ''Film/ThePrincessBride''. When he meets Westley, he says, "Have you ever heard of Plato? Aristotle? Socrates? Morons." Within five minutes, he has been outwitted to the point of death.
56* You know, despite the fact Count Dooku was a Sith, Anakin really should have heeded his warning about "Twice the pride, double the fall" in ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith''.
57* ''Film/{{Thor}}'': Thor believes he can take on Jötunheim with just his buddies and nearly starts a war as a result. He ends up getting exiled from Asgard and losing Mjölnir until he learns some humility.
58* ''Film/SpiderMan2'': probably just a symbolic coincedence, but when Otto Octavius performs his cold fusion experiment, at first it goes smoothly, but as soon as he whispers "The power of sun in the palm of my hand!", it immediately spirals out of control and causes a disaster.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Jokes]]
62* So a cat thought it could take down a bird of any size, until one day it suffered a [[{{Pun}} bittern]] defeat.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Literature]]
66* Humpty Dumpty in ''Through the Looking-Glass and what Alice found there'', Lewis Carroll's 1871 sequel to ''[[Literature/AliceInWonderland Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]]''. Martin Gardner, in his [[TheAnnotatedEdition The Annotated Alice]], points out Humpty Dumpty's frequent use of the word "proud", lampshading the pride that goes before his fall.
67* Kennedy in ''Film/BubbaHoTep''.
68* The first chapter of ''Melusine'', the first book in ''Literature/DoctrineOfLabyrinths'', sees arrogant Lord Felix revealed as a commoner and former prostitute.
69* The classic children's historical novel ''Literature/JohnnyTremain''. The main character is more skilled and harder-working than his fellow apprentices Dove and Dusty, and doesn't hesitate to remind them of that. Later their master, Mr. Lapham, has Johnny read the part in their Bible about [[ForeShadowing pride coming before a fall]]. While rushing to finish an order, Johnny gets a cracked crucible from Dove (who had picked a bad crucible to make Johnny look like a fool but not get injured), resulting in molten silver spilling onto his hand, which fuses his thumb to his palm and ends his career as a smith.
70* ''Literature/TheLegendOfDrizzt'': A subtler version--or at least, one that would have been, had it not been for the [[ContemplateOurNavels journal entry]] that hammered the reader over the head with AnAesop--was when Drizzt left his friends to go dissuade the drow from invading Mithral Hall. Why? Because he didn't want to put them in danger, and only trusted in his own abilities to... scare off an entire city of his kinsmen, many of whom were more powerful than him? He is promptly captured (and not even by drow!).
71* Literature/PrinceRoger in ''March Upcountry'' doesn't get knocked down quite in the first few pages, but pretty quickly nonetheless.
72* {{Inverted}} in ''Literature/ThePilgrimsProgress'' with Mr. Fearing. One of the challenges someone must go through is going down a hill into the Valley of Humiliation, something many strong pilgrims have a lot of trouble with. Not so with Mr. Fearing, who has a very low opinion of himself. He has absolutely no trouble going down the hill and a most pleasant time in the valley.
73* "Literature/TheTortoiseAndTheHare": The eponymous hare is so confident in his victory that he decides to take a nap partway through the race, but when he wakes up, he sees that the tortoise has already won.
74* ''Literature/TheTrialsOfApollo'' begins with the prideful [[JerkassGods Greco-Roman god]] Apollo being turned mortal and cast from Olympus. The rest of the series revolves around him [[TookALevelInKindness taking a level in kindness]] to regain his godhood.
75* The appropriately nicknamed Prince Brat in the children's book ''Literature/TheWhippingBoy''.
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
79* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
80** This is part of the {{backstory}} for the humans, who after winning a war with the Dilgar refuse to listen to cautionary advice given to them by the Centauri, and proceed to boldly stumble into a war with the Minbari because they were too proud to just leave the Minbari alone. This is complicated by the Minbari warrior caste's blind assumption that a race they had never met would be familiar with a Warrior Caste greeting tradition[[note]]That is, approaching the unknown ship with their gunports open[[/note]], that even their own religious leader had to have explained to him. This is ''further'' complicated by said Minbari religious leader making the unilateral decision to take his ship, with the Minbari's governing body, on an ill-advised expedition to Z'Ha'Dum, the homeworld of the long-dormant [[BigBad Shadows]], on a whim, just to see if they were back yet. If any of these parties had swallowed their pride enough to actually listen to anyone else before acting, the disastrous Earth-Minbari War would have been avoided. Of course, then the Babylon Project would have never happened either...
81** The fate of the Centauri Republic later in the show (actually an empire) all happens due to Ambassador Londo's pride... and given how most of the other emperors had behaved (save for the sweet dying Emperor Turhan Bey [[spoiler:and future Emperor Vir]] ), it's a given that most of the Centauri upper class have the same failing. Similarly, their arch-nemeses, the Narn Regime, is too proud to back down from trying to pick a fight with the Centauri in retaliation for their past occupation and slavery at the Centauris' hands, and this leads ''them'' into a similarly disastrous and one-sided war with the Centauri [[spoiler: and the Shadows.]]
82** The movie ''[[Film/BabylonFiveThirdspace Thirdspace]]'' reveals that even the Vorlons fell victim to their pride.
83--->'''Vorlon Race Memory:''' Our great mistake, our failing and now your failing. The error is compounded.\
84'''Delenn:''' What mistake?\
85'''Vorlon Race Memory:''' The first one. The one from which all mistakes precede. The error of pride.
86* [[VillainProtagonist Walter White]] of ''Series/BreakingBad'''s journey can be summed up with this trope. All of Walt's losses, both major and minor, are due to Walt's arrogance and ego.
87* The short-lived drama ''Citizen Baines'' qualifies as this, as Baines is a senator-soon-turned-former senator suddenly having to raise his kids.
88* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
89** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan The Daleks' Master Plan]]", a council of galactic leaders delude themselves into thinking the Daleks will give them power. This is most pronounced with [[PresidentEvil Guardian]] Mavic Chen of the Solar System, who actually orders the Daleks around. [[spoiler:Those others on the council who survive are able to warn their galaxies when the Daleks turn on them, but Chen is exterminated, his LastWords being "You cannot kill me!".]]
90** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS6E3TheInvasion The Invasion]]", CorruptCorporateExecutive Tobias Vaughn thinks that he can play the Cybermen for patsies. [[spoiler:He soon realizes that he is OutGambitted, and [[RedemptionEqualsDeath is deleted trying to stop them]].]] Interestingly, both Vaughn and Chen were played by the same actor.
91* UK soap ''Series/{{Eastenders}}'' does this '''all the time'''. Every single time anybody is the least bit proud of anything, the fall is just around the corner. Sure as eggs is eggs.
92* Dominar Rygel XVI of ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' definitely qualifies as a slow learner -- despite having been deposed and imprisoned some 130 [[{{Microts}} "cycles"]] before the events of the series, he's still an [[{{Jerkass}} arrogant bastard]] when Crichton arrives. It takes most of the show's run for him to work his way to [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold something more tolerable]].
93* ''Series/TheHexer'': Witchers get this treatment from the first episode, considering themselves to be unshakeable and the best thing ever, despite ongoing corruption and power-plays hollowing their school inside-out. The kicker? Barely any of them learn their lesson, being all just designed for killing and not thinking too much. This ultimately leads to much slower and painful BreakTheHaughty for the whole guild in the following years, until they eventually collapse.
94* ''Series/MyNameIsEarl''. A petty criminal with no respect for authority has a lottery ticket. He loses his ticket and sets out to reform himself. When he starts, the ticket returns to him, and he sees it as a sign that he's meant to use the money to keep trying.
95* In the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS2E16QWho Q Who]]", Picard's pride in Starfleet and what they can handle leads Q to send the ''Enterprise''-D into Borg Space. Despite Guinian warning him to turn right back around, Picard marches forth and leads to 18 members of the crew getting captured and assimilated by the Borg before Picard begs Q to get them out of there.
96* In an episode of ''Series/TheWestWing'', Josh attempts to run a press conference while CJ is out. Danny Kincannon warns him not to go up, and in response Josh rubs his [[IvyLeagueForEveryone Harvard and Yale background]] in his face. Josh then proceeds to get blindsided on two different fronts and become the White House's goat for the day.
97* ''Series/TheWheelOfTime2021'': In episode 7 Agelmar, the ruler of Fal Dara, reacts to Moiraine rather harshly when he thinks the Aes Sedai sent help without him asking. His kingdom has survived long enough without outside assistance. In episode 8, after seeing the size of Trolloc army, he admits he should've called for help. [[spoiler:His city survives, but he does not.]]
98[[/folder]]
99
100[[folder:Music]]
101* Verse three of Music/TheBeatles' "I'm A Loser":
102-->What have I done to deserve such a fate?\
103I realise I have left it too late.\
104And so it's true, pride comes before a fall,\
105I'm telling you so that you won't lose all.
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
109* Of course, the archetypal example is {{Satan}}, dating back [[OlderThanSteam at least]] to ''Paradise Lost''. He has respectively been portrayed as too proud to take second place to man, or too proud to take second place to ''God'', both of which result in him leading a rebellion against God, leading to him and his fellow rebel angels getting booted out of heaven.
110** It may go back to ''Literature/TheBible'' with Isaiah 14, but interpretations differ.[[note]]Details: The "Lucifer" of Isaiah may refer instead to the king of Babylon, the oppressor of Israel. Before this, all references in the Hebrew ''Bible'' to "Satan" are used either to describe obstacles or opponents, or to refer to an "Accuser," an un-fallen member of the heavenly host whose duty it is to bring humanity's sins before God (the ''Book of Job'').[[/note]]
111** The titular character of DC Comics' ''Lucifer'' was a portrayal of the second type. He actually ends up [[spoiler: making his ''own'' Creation outside of the first one, just to show the old man up. It gets complicated from there.]]
112** Horus, son of the [[CrystalDragonJesus Emperor of Mankind]] in the ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' universe, parallels Lucifer's Fall so closely [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotSymbolic that it cannot possibly have been an accident]].
113[[/folder]]
114
115[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
116* [[https://youtu.be/-Ccj493kUaE?si=UGWqF1E6ZdeC3t0L One promo from this segment]] of the October 22nd, 2018 edition of ''Wrestling/WWERaw'' has Wrestling/TheUndertaker and Wrestling/{{Kane}} paraphrase the Bible verse that names the trope while addressing Wrestling/TripleH and Wrestling/ShawnMichaels before their match at the Crown Jewel PPV.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
120* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' 4th edition core setting, Asmodeus is a Satan analogue who served a god known only as He Who Was, who was implied to be the creator of humanity and the strongest of the gods, and their leader during the war with the [[EldritchAbomination primordials]]. Asmodeus used increasingly violent tactics in the war, often slaughtering innocent mortals in the crossfire. He Who Was ordered Asmodeus to stop, and in his pride, Asmodeus refused, and He Who Was cast Asmodeus and his army down as punishment. Pretty standard so far. Until Asmodeus rose up and slew He Who Was at the most oppertune moment. While the other gods publicly cursed Asmodeus, privately they thanked him; he had slain a weak willed general who in his pride had cast down their strongest warrior and greatest army, hoping to teach them a lesson in humility, even at the cost of the war.
121* In the backstory of ''TabletopGame/PrincessTheHopeful'', the Kingdoms of Light grew proud and insular, each believing that their interpretation of the Light was the only valid one. That pride, and the strife that sprang from it, gave the Darkness a foothold and allowed it to grow stronger, overthrowing the Kingdoms and sealing the titular Princesses in the Dreamlands for many millennia. In the modern day, the five Radiant Courts have learned from their former failure, and make a point of reminding themselves that their fellow Radiants are servants of the Light and avatars of virtue just as they are.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Visual Novels]]
125* The protagonist of ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework'' was immensely proud of his skiing abilities, and they went to his head. Then came the Barbarossa incident, which changed him forever.
126* This is (partially) how Phoenix Wright is tricked into presenting false evidence and losing his badge in ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney''. When we see his flashback case against Klavier, he's quite full of himself, mocking Klavier's inexperience and his [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking accent]], and he presents his evidence without reflecting on it. After he's caught, he's pretty much instantly humbled, and he never reaches those heights of arrogance again.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Webcomics]]
130* ''Webcomic/TapiseriSoujourn'': Daedalus is so prideful that he believes Soujourn has no chance of defeating him, leaving his weak points exposed, leading to [[spoiler:Soujourn stabbing him there and decapitating him]].
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Web Original]]
134* Trevor James Goodkind of the Literature/WhateleyUniverse, brilliant son of the richest man on Earth, second in line to take over his father's company, and heir to the Goodkind tradition of 'recognizing the mutant threat', i.e. hating those evil mutants. In the first chapter of his first story, he manifests as a mutant freak. He is immediately disinherited, experimented on and tortured by a MadScientist, humiliated, abandoned by his family, not to mention becoming intersexed due to his mutation ... Within a week he's living in a basement with nowhere else to go.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Western Animation]]
138* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
139** Azula is very prideful and arrogant, though it does take awhile as any failures she does suffer she just brushes off, and to be fair she does win some pretty impressive victories along the way. However it isn't until she realizes that her technique of ruling through fear isn't as foolproof as she expected, and that her father considers her as expendable as Zuko, that she begins her fall.
140** Admiral Zhao's determination to make a name for himself by [[spoiler: killing the moon spirit]] not only incites the wrath of [[FourStarBadass Iroh]], who tries to explain that such an action would cause inconceivable damage to the entire world, Fire Nation included, but also enrages the spirits of the ocean and the avatar enough to [[spoiler: obliterate his entire war fleet]]. In an earlier episode, he accidentally burned his own ships after Aang's insults provoked him into being sloppy with his [[KillItWithFire firebending]], and [[spoiler: his eventual death comes from his refusal to accept help from Zuko (the scene is a bit ambiguous, but preferring death to humiliation is one interpretation of his actions)]].
141* ComicBook/CaptainAtom in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold''. As he's essentially Franchise/{{Superman}} class in this version, he has let his power go to his head, actively deriding people who don't have superpowers as useless. While he does invoke JerkassHasAPoint a couple of times, he is generally an insufferable ass who thinks he can't be harmed by anything. It takes a mishap with his arch-enemy, and some training from Franchise/{{Batman}}, to make him anything close to humble. He even subverts this: rather than being arrogant and condescending towards people weaker than him, he is now pitying and overprotective of them.
142* In ''WesternAnimation/Ben10AlienForce'', Ben's cocky attitude, which began coming about after saving the world from the Highbreed, is a prime example. His ego results in the Omnitrix resetting to its faulty first series self, as well as turning Kevin into another amalgamated monster.
143* '' WesternAnimation/LittleDogsOnThePrairie'': At the end of the short "Have Gum, Will Travel", Scout, who had to learn not to be prideful, nearly quotes the trope name word for word during the song "Too Much Pride".
144* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/SushiPack'' featured four [[SmugSuper superhero]] RealityTV contestants who spent all their scenes bragging about their deeds of derring-do, and even their [[WeaksauceWeakness weaknesses]]. Unfortunately for them, this information is used by the show's host, an alien [[FullBodyDisguise in disguise]], to incapacitate them while he sends for the rest of his invading fleet. The Sushi Pack, snubbed by the Supers, save the day by using the alien's own bragging against him.
145* In ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'', Sentinel Prime is introduced as an arrogant {{Jerkass}} who constantly belittles Optimus and his team and makes aside insults about the [[FantasticRacism "Organics"]] during a public appearance. Then came [[GrandTheftMe The Headmaster]]... It isn't until season 3 though that he starts to get along with Optimus again, but sadly he's become an even bigger ass than ever. [[spoiler:Especially after being promoted to Magnus.]]
146[[/folder]]

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