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11%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=a2r2zp6nfb2bxn7y7uymfjo1
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13[[quoteright:200:[[WesternAnimation/TheNightmareBeforeChristmas https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pulling-themselves-together_tnbc_3392.png]]]]
14
15->'''Mr. Potato Head:''' Where's my nose?\
16'''Mrs. Potato Head:''' Here it is.\
17'''Mr. Potato Head:''' Here's your arm.\
18'''Mrs. Potato Head:''' Gimme that. That's mine.\
19'''Mr. Potato Head:''' Honey? The moustache?
20-->-- ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3''
21
22An enemy is beaten, blown to pieces, or else [[LiterallyShatteredLives frozen/petrified then shattered]]. But wait! The pieces are combining! It's reassembling itself! Time to leg it!
23
24This Subtrope of NighInvulnerability may be greeted with shock, horror, and cries of "WhyWontYouDie!" This is different than FromASingleCell, where a monster/character regrows itself from a single part instead of reassembling itself from the already existing parts that were blown off. Can be seen as a specific form of HealingFactor, that manages to avoid the ShapeshifterBaggage otherwise involved.
25
26This trope is particularly common among undead beings. Zombies are typically portrayed as halfway to falling apart by default, and often lack much in the way of physical sensation; as such, more intelligent ones may become very sanguine about having to pick up fallen body parts and sew them back on. Similarly, skeletons will often collapse into piles of loose bones at the slightest jostling but just as quickly reassemble themselves, sometimes with the bones moving back together under their own power. In some cases, collapsed skeletons' component bits may simply reassemble at random, without seeming to recompose the original skeletons that made them up to begin with. Constructed beings, such as golems or living scarecrows, also commonly possess similar abilities.
27
28See also HelpingHands, LosingYourHead, WhoNeedsTheirWholeBody, AppendageAssimilation, and GoodThingYouCanHeal. CraniumChase is a subtrope that involves the head. For DemBones, this is a [[SlidingScaleOfUndeadRegeneration way for them to "heal" from damage]]. Depending on which characters are doing this, it can quickly turn into NightmareFuel.
29
30For the intentional combat/utility version see DetachmentCombat.
31
32[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused with]] the OTHER kind of [[GetAholdOfYourselfMan pulling yourself together]].
33----
34!!Examples:
35
36[[foldercontrol]]
37
38[[folder:Advertising]]
39* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VXcDY1U2PE A few Cadbury adverts]] feature Creme Eggs doing this, however they [[CameBackWrong come back wrong]] and end up as the then-new [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creme_Egg_Twisted Creme Egg Twisted.]]
40* Happens to a minivan in a Liberty Mutual auto insurance ad, after a collision causes the (unoccupied) car to fly apart into dozens of components.
41* This happened to Vince and Larry the [[Advertising/TheCrashDummies Incredible Crash Dummies]] a lot in a 1980s safety campaign for the U.S. Department of Transportation.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
45* In ''Manga/{{Ajin}}'', the eponymous ajin [[ResurrectiveImmortality regenerate from any damage and resurrect upon dying]]. If the lost organic matter (be it blood, flesh, body parts or whatever) is too distantly separated, the whole body regenerates ''ex nihilo'' from the biggest piece available; however, if, say, one's decapitated head is close enough to the rest of the body, this trope occurs, with the lost body part being pulled back towards the rest by threads of [[InvisibleToNormals IBM matter]]. [[spoiler:This is {{exploited|Trope}} by [[MagnificentBastard notoriously savvy villain]] Satou in a gunfight when he cuts his hand off, tapes it to the wall and uses this as an anchor of sorts so he can afford to step out into the enemy's sights, knowing that if they kill him his corpse will simply be pulled back towards his hand upon regeneration.]]
46* Nosferatu Zodd from ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'' can reattach his own severed limbs on the rare occasions someone is able to deal that much damage to him. The Ogre that attacks Enoch village demonstrates the same ability when Guts chops off his arm.
47* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'':
48** Giselle Gewelle nonchalantly reattaches ''half of her torso'' after being nearly split into two.
49** After Kenpachi [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe cuts Gerard Valkyrie vertically in half]], his core pulls both halves back together.
50* Chevaliers from ''Anime/BloodPlus'' have been shown to be able to reattach severed limbs and use them normally within a short time span.
51* ''Manga/CallOfTheNight'': In a [[DidntSeeThatComing completely unexpected turn of events]] (since there was no precedent of [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]] being able to do such a thing), [[spoiler:Yamori]] telekinetically reattaches his severed arm after Susuki [[AnArmAndALeg disarms him]] by [[TeleFrag weaponizing]] her {{intangibility}}.
52* ''Manga/{{Claymore}}'':
53** Clare, and presumably others of her kind that cannot regenerate limbs outright, have a limited ability to do this if the wound is fresh, the limb is intact, and she has a bit of time to concentrate on making them knit together solidly.
54** A better, more recent example is the nigh-indestructible [[spoiler:Abyssal Eaters]].
55* ''Anime/DragonBallZ'': Majin Buu takes it to another level by being able to reform himself after being blown into a cloud of atoms, as he's made of a bubblegum-like substance. It's only after every atom is his body is completely vaporized that he is truly defeated. Though in the fight against [[FusionDance Vegito]], Buu is beaten so badly at one point that he's having visible difficulty putting himself back together.
56* Alucard of ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}'' absolutely ''loves'' doing this after letting his enemies blow him to pieces, using his incredibly powerful HealingFactor to reform his body just before tearing said enemies apart.
57* Comes to bite Shibugarasu in the ass in ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}''. After having stolen the Shikon Jewel, which makes demons incredibly strong and allows them to reassemble their bodies when killed, it loses a foot while trying to flee from Kagome and Inuyasha. Even though Kagome is not a good archer by that point and the demon is already way out of reach, she ties the foot to a magic arrow and shoots in the general direction. With the foot trying to reattach itself to the body, the shot is an instant hit. Unfortunately, she blew up the Jewel in doing so, scattering pieces of it across Japan and kick-starting the plot.
58* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'':
59** DIO has done this a few times in the series, due to being a vampire. In ''[[Manga/JojosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood Phantom Blood]]'', after being essentially split lengthwise, pushes his two halves together to allow them to heal. ''[[Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Stardust Crusaders]]'' has him calmly asking a horrified onlooker to fetch his dismembered leg during his fight with Jotaro.
60** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency Battle Tendency]]'': [[FaceHeelTurn Former ally Straizo]] does this after being blown up by a ''bouquet of grenades''. While it gives Joseph and Smokey a chance to run, it shows how much Joseph is unprepared to even fight a vampire, let alone a Hamon master vampire. Straizo has trained for years to fight against vampires, so he knows everything they can do and thus can perform these moves with little difficulty.
61** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureGoldenWind Golden Wind]]'': Cioccolata dissembles himself as a mass of [[{{Squick}} squirming, dismembered]] body parts, he uses his surgical knowledge and skill to literally sew himself back together again.
62** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]'': Jolyne loses her arm after getting ambushed by Pucci, but once Pucci arrives to finish her, she immediately uses [[MasterOfThreads Stone Free]] to reattach her arm back.
63* In ''Anime/KillLaKill'', [[spoiler:[[GoodAllAlong Satsuki]]]] tries to decapitate [[BigBad Ragyo]]; her head goes flying, but since she's fused with Life Fibers, a thread keeps it connected to her body, and she's able to pick it up and reattach it. The only way to kill her is to cut the Life Fibers in a way that they can't regenerate. This ability is common to all hybrids of human and Life Fibers, which means that [[spoiler:Nui Harime]] and [[spoiler:Ryuko]] display it, too.
64* ''Anime/MazingerZ'': Several [[{{Robeast}} Mechanical Monsters]] have this capacity (and [[MadScientist Dr. Hell]] perfects the trick every time). Deimos F3 can reassemble itself every time that it is blown apart. Belgas V5 can disassemble and reassemble itself at will, and every body part is weaponized and can attack and fight separately. Briver A3 can reassemble itself every time that it is blown apart, every body part is weaponized, ''and'' the head has greater attack capability than the rest and is better protected.
65* In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing'', Heero breaks his leg after jumping out of a hospital building and being too out of it to pull his parachute in time. He nonchalantly pops it back into place, much to [[TheLancer Duo]]'s disgust.
66* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
67** Sasori's puppet body is punched to pieces by Sakura, but he pulls it right back together by the strings because [[spoiler:his body is just a shell that he can reassemble and [[HeartDrive his heart]] is the only important part.]]
68** Kakuzu's body mostly consists of black threads that allow him to detach and extend limbs to great distances. Hidan can survive being torn apart but needs Kakuzu to stitch him back together; otherwise, decapitation would pretty much render him harmless.
69** Orochimaru can rapidly reattach severed parts (up to being [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe bisected]]), because apparently his whole body is ''[[TheWormThatWalks made]]'' of snakes.
70** Any physical damage suffered by those brought back to life with Impure World Resurrection is reversed by the pieces coming together like an object made of ash crumbling in reverse.
71* In ''Manga/NurseHitomisMonsterInfirmary'', RevenantZombie Fujimi is constantly falling apart, and often has to get Hitomi-sensei to sew her up again, much like Sally in the page image.
72* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
73** Buggy the Clown ate the Bara Bara no Mi Devil Fruit, which allows him to separate any part of himself and levitate it, but also to reassemble himself after doing it or be cut.
74** The Logia users can do this too, turning their body into their element and shapeshifting it back into them. Aokiji (and Crocodile and Kizaru to a lesser extent) seems to be the best example of this, as most other Logia users just let attacks pass through them without effect, rather than actively "pulling themselves together" after the attack lands.
75** After the TimeSkip, [[spoiler:it is revealed that Brook can put his bones back together if they are knocked apart]].
76* ''Literature/RebuildWorld'': After a certain SuperSerum is developed based on the LostTechnology {{nano|machines}}medicine of Old World {{Precursors}}, combatants start appearing capable of doing this and healing FromASingleCell. When Akira first encounters this in the Inner Kuzusuhara Ruins Assault, with an arm Akira severs with his sword attaching right back to its host, he says WhatTheHellAreYou. Later, there's a monstrous mass capable of the same, as well as a SuperSoldier, each of which can split into multiple beings and recombine themselves.
77* Akasha Bloodriver from ''Manga/RosarioPlusVampire'' has this ability, as apparently do all Shinso vampires. Even better, if her body parts are completely destroyed, she's implied to be able to regenerate on a FromASingleCell level.
78* This was what made the Daimon Nekoneru a threat in her episode of ''Anime/SailorMoon'', as she repeatedly rebuilt herself, being created after a Daimon seed entered a jigsaw puzzle of a cat. Unfortunately, this effect was negated once Sailor Moon got the Heart Scepter and used the Moon Spiral Heart Attack on it.
79* MechaMooks Decoe and Bocoe claimed to have done this in Episode 48 of 4Kids's ''Anime/SonicX''. The original Japanese version says Chuck Thorndyke repaired them.
80* In ''Manga/TokyoGhoul'', Ghouls with an abnormally powerful HealingFactor are capable of doing this. The most infamous example is Noro, who is immediately pulled back together with tendrils of... ''something'' when he's kicked in half. In the sequel, [[spoiler:Seidou Takizawa]] demonstrates the same creepy ability, as tendrils re-attach his ''still moving'' arm. Even other Ghouls find this kind of thing downright unnatural.
81* Arcueid Brunestud was able to assemble pieces of her body back together after being killed and torn apart by Shiki in ''VisualNovel/{{Tsukihime}}''. This process happened off-screen, though. She also used packing tape to do this.
82* ''Anime/TheUltraman'' has a skeletal {{kaiju}} MonsterOfTheWeek called Skeldon which can pull itself together after being blasted into pieces by the humans. Even Ultraman Joneus' FinishingMove can't stop it from reassembling. As it turns out, it needs to have its energy drained off to be properly destroyed.
83* Tora from ''Manga/UshioAndTora'' can survive being bisected or mutilated and put himself back together, though usually with some help. The only drawback is that he cannot focus his powers on being InvisibleToNormals while he's regenerating.
84* [[spoiler:Zeno]] from ''Manga/YonaOfTheDawn'' is revealed to have this ability, strong enough to the point that his ''severed head'' reattaches itself to his body.
85* Doctor Minoru Kamiya in ''Manga/YuYuHakusho'' does this to one of his arms when Yusuke shoots part of it off.
86* All of the zombies in ''Anime/ZombieLandSaga'' have this trait, with their limbs popping off like dolls (thankfully devoid of blood). This doesn't hurt them in the slightest, but it becomes a problem when it happens in public and risks revealing their nature.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Asian Animation]]
90* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'': In ''Great War in the Bizarre World'' episode 35, Darton declares that Jollie be executed, and the wolves make numerous attempts to do so. Each execution fails because Jollie simply pulls together the pieces of his eggshell afterwards.
91* In episode 3 of ''Animation/YoYoMan'', a robot made of special magic blocks is blown apart by the Yoyo Supermen, only to start reassembling itself brick-by-brick. Fefe alleviates the problem by creating a bubble buffer to prevent the robot from rebuilding itself.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Card Games]]
95* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'':
96** [[https://scryfall.com/card/afc/109/reassembling-skeleton Reassembling Skeleton]] shows a weatherbeaten skeleton with a femur lodged in its arm socket and a skeletal hand holding its face together. Its rules allow it to return from the graveyard to active battle for a mana cost.
97--->"They may show up with the wrong thigh bone or mandible, but they always show up."
98---->--'''Zul Ashur, lich lord'''
99** Nearly all skeletons in ''Magic'' regenerate, presumably in this way, going all the way back to the original [[https://scryfall.com/card/lea/106/drudge-skeletons Drudge Skeletons]] from Alpha.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Comic Books]]
103* ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'':
104** ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'': During the "Necropolis" arc, the undead Judge Mortis has his head (which is [[SkullForAHead a sheep's skull]]) blown off by a group of Academy students he was [[WouldHurtAChild trying to kill]]. Within a few seconds, the body has reattached the head and continues its pursuit.
105** ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'': Moments after Malloy blows up [[SpiderPeople Arachne]]'s body, Harris tells him that they better fast-track their escape from the compound--he just noticed Arachne's body starting to re-emerge.
106* In a [[Magazine/{{Mad}} Don Martin]] ''ComicBook/CaptainKlutz'' story, the Captain gets ripped to comedic shreds by an enemy. Told literally to "pull himself together", he yanks at one of the wings on his hat and his various pieces all slither back together and reconnect.
107* ''ComicBook/{{Cattivik}}'': The titular character will usually do this to himself after being torn apart or destroyed. In a particular episode, this happens twice to some mummies. In both cases, the results of their efforts were laughable to say the least.
108* ''ComicBook/ImmortalHulk'': After being sliced to pieces and put in jars, Hulk is able to will his organs to come back together, consuming a scientist who was trying to threaten him.
109* ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica'': {{Subverted|Trope}} to {{nightmar|eFuel}}ish effect in the Obsidian Age story arc. ComicBook/PlasticMan is frozen and shattered into thousands of pieces that lay scattered on the ocean floor far in the past. He is completely aware, yet '''unable''' to pull himself together, and survives in this manner for 3000 years before he is collected and reconstituted by the league in the present time.
110* ''ComicBook/ManThing'': Man-Thing goes through this about once an issue.
111* ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'': The Absorbing Man can shatter if he [[MaterialMimicry turns himself into some fragile material]], but he can also pull the pieces together.
112* ''ComicBook/RomSpaceKnight'': The mutant [[HalfHumanHybrid human/Dire Wraith hybrid]] Jimmy Marks can use his considerable PsychicPowers to reconstitute himself after being reduced to ''molecules''.
113* ''ComicBook/TheSavageDragon'': There was a villain named Abner Cadaver who was a mystic zombie who could sew body parts onto himself. One of his last appearances showed him sewing the body parts of various superhuman in order to do battle with the titular character.
114* ''ComicBook/SilverSurfer'': The Silver Surfer is capable of doing this, [[NighInvulnerable provided there's something capable of cutting him to pieces]].
115* ''ComicBook/{{Spawn}}'': Spawn can usually reverse any damage to his [[TheUndead necroplasmic body]] at a cost but at a low point, when vivisected by The Curse, he instead [[AnimateBodyParts willed one severed hand]] to aid his [[TheSymbiote living costume]] in breaking out of its own captivity after which the latter swiftly collected, reattached itself to and reassembled him.
116* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': In ''ComicBook/TheCloneSaga'', Spidercide gains this ability after fully awakening his shapeshifting powers.
117* ''ComicBook/TheStrangeTalentOfLutherStrode'': This is how the students of the Hercules Method heal themselves. The students can control their bodies to the point where they force their flesh, blood, and bone back together like the BigBad from ''Anime/NinjaScroll''.
118* ''ComicBook/TerrorInc'': Terror has the ability to [[AppendageAssimilation replace parts of his body with those of others]], including animals. Good thing too, since his body is constantly rotting away. He can secrete a substance akin to an extremely fast-working digestive enzyme from his skin, which makes tearing off body parts even from still-living people easy. An added perk is that he gains access to memories and skills related to the body parts he assimilates: an eye allows him to see what the original person saw, an arm from an artist can help him draw accurate sketches, and so on.
119* ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'': Dr. Manhattan does this after being disintegrated in a FreakLabAccident in his origin story. It takes months and several partial manifestations before he fully reappears in his present form. He does it again [[spoiler:towards the end, this time within minutes]].
120* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: The magic that is reanimating former Amazonian Champion Artemis' vengeful [[DemBones skeleton]] quickly pulls her back together if someone manages to disassemble any of her. The only way to get her to slow down is to steal her sword, which is where the magic reanimating her is focused.
121* ''ComicBook/XMen2099'': The villain Junkpile does a variation. Though he doesn't heal himself with his own body parts, he repairs damage to his body by pulling metal objects to him telekinetically and using them for raw materials to replace broken or damaged body parts.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Fan Works]]
125* ''Fanfic/AllForLuz'': After being [[LudicrousGibs blown to pieces]] by her [[WhyAmITicking cousin Riley]], [[spoiler:Luz]] does this with a combination of her [[HealingFactor Super Regeneration]] and recently acquired MultiArmedAndDangerous Quirk, much to the [[MassOhCrap shock and horror of the enemies that witnessed the scene]], as its described as a LovecraftianSuperpower.
126* [[SnarkyNonhumanSidekick Jack]] from ''Fanfic/CalvinAndHobbesTheSeries'' has this. [[ExploitedTrope Exploited]] by Calvin at one point, taking him apart to make him fit in his backpack.
127* ''Fanfic/{{Evershade}}'': Karen's healing forces lost body parts to return to her and reassemble her body whole again.
128* ''Fanfic/HardBeingPure'': When Noa tries to fling her cut-off hand away from her, the hand spider-crawls back to her.
129* Vampires in ''Fanfic/{{Luminosity}}'' have this ability. Even if someone tears them apart, unless the flesh is actually kept separate, the pieces will slowly reassemble over time. [[spoiler:Bella figures out how to make her power function as an even stronger version of this trope, reassembling rapidly after being broken into pieces and set on fire (the standard way to kill a vampire).]]
130* ''Fanfic/NoPlumbersAllowed'': Armsmaster's best guess at how the Bob-omb's NonFatalExplosions work is that they're breaking apart at the moment of detonation and near-instantly reforming so fast that even with his best cameras he could only capture what happened in a single frame.
131* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/5280116/1/The-Silly-Adventures-of-Seras-and-Pip The Silly Adventures of Seras and Pip]]'' opens with Integra calling Seras for a post-mission report. While Seras is being cheerful, it gradually transpires that one of her coworkers accidentally blew her up with an RPG and she spends the call reattaching pieces of herself.
132* ''Fanfic/TouhouIbunshu'': Nightmarishly invoked with the Kashoyo, dead fairies exposed to a horrid flame that removed [[ThePowerOfCreation creation]] from them, turning them into ambulatory voids desperate to be filled with ''[[HorrorHunger anything]]''. Patchouli and Koakuma encounter a group when taking a stroll, and the former is so unnerved she uses a spellcard invoking the power of an assault rifle, reducing them to LudicrousGibs... and the whole mass flows together into a lumbering humanoid shape, still intent on eating them. One of Remilia's spellcards is enough to destroy it, inflicting so much damage it's simply unable to keep doing this because of material capacity restrictions, but it's a taxing card, and more and more Kashoyo keep popping up in random parts of Gensokyo.
133* ''Fanfic/UnderTheNorthernLights'': The lich Wiglek can restore any damage to himself and simply reabsorb any parts of him that are cut off, although he will never look better than a walking corpse.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
137* The dead characters in ''WesternAnimation/{{Coco}}'', being animate ''calacas'' (stylized skeletons based on how they looked when alive), keep getting knocked apart and having to reassemble themselves quite a bit--particularly [[ButtMonkey Hector]].
138* ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheBirthOfJapan'' has a race of living Dogu statues as enemies, the first one which Doraemon defeats with ease by [[HoistByHisOwnPetard reflecting its hypersonic waves upon itself]] causing it to smash into bits against a rock. But unbeknownst to the gang, those statues are actually futuristic robots from the 23rd Century made of "memory clay"; seconds after being smashed, the robot simply reassembles itself together and continues their rampage.
139* In ''Anime/DragonBallZTheReturnOfCooler'', Meta Cooler's metallic body can pull itself back together by use of whip-like metallic tendons that sprout from the body parts.
140* In ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'', this seems to be a property of Elsa's {{Snowlem}}s, as demonstrated by Olaf [[spoiler:and [[TheStinger Marshmallow]]]]. Sure you could fairly easily kick their heads off, split them in half, or toss them off cliffs in pieces, but since all of the pieces remain animated, and they're made of snow, they could just put themselves back together, as good as new.
141* ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant'': The Giant can do this to an amazing degree when he gets smashed to pieces by an oncoming train; he just transmits a signal to his detached parts which automatically move towards him and connect back to his body, down to his smallest part, a football-sized screw for his jaw. [[spoiler:The ending reveals that even after [[HeroicSacrifice being blown up in the atmosphere]] by a ''nuclear explosion'', his countless paperweight-sized pieces can be seen migrating to an unknown location so he can reassemble himself.]]
142* ''WesternAnimation/MuneGuardianOfTheMoon'':
143** Glim and her father might be made of fragile wax, but they can reassemble missing bits just by heating them and sticking them back. As demonstrated when Glim's father accidentally rips off her arm, and she just sounds annoyed, asking in a deadpan voice to give it back, before putting it in place.
144** The assistant to the Guardian of the Sun is a RockMonster made of several stone slabs simply stacked together and holding thanks to gravity. It just takes a push or a trip to disassemble him completely into disparate pieces, but he can just will himself back into shape. It happens several times in the movie, and he implies that he's very much used to it.
145* ''WesternAnimation/TheNightmareBeforeChristmas'': Sally the ragdoll, whose detachable limbs often fall off at the slightest physical provocation. Fortunately, she carries a sewing kit around with her for that exact reason.
146* [[BigBad Genma]] from ''Anime/NinjaScroll'' is able to re-attach his body parts after they've been sliced off.
147* ''Franchise/ToyStory'':
148** Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head have detachable parts. For Mr. Potato Head, it becomes something of a RunningGag. Also counts as OrganAutonomy.
149** Bo Peep in ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory4''. She's made of porcelain so she can break easily. One of her arms broke off, and she just put it back with band-aid tape. It works just fine afterwards, looking no worse for wear.
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
153* ''Film/Asylum1972Horror'': In "Frozen Fear", Walter murders his wife Ruth and cuts her body into pieces. Later the individual pieces start moving around on their own to exact revenge on him and his lover.
154* ''Film/BedknobsAndBroomsticks'': An [[AnimatedArmor animated suit of armor]] is blown apart by a grenade, quickly re-assembles itself, and continues attacking. On [=YouTube=] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtgcJBXD4sA here, starting at 6:45.]]
155* In ''Film/DeadAndBuried'', one of the [[spoiler:undead]] locals loses an arm by getting hit by a car. The figure, whose face is not seen, grabs the detached arm from the car's grill and runs off. Later in the film, a shopkeeper is seen [[spoiler:using a small brush to apply paint to the area of his own shoulder where the arm was severed]], implying that he's re-attached the lost limb and [[spoiler:is touching up the seam to conceal any sign that his unhealing, dead flesh was damaged]].
156* In ''Film/FearStreet, Part One: 1994'': After being blasted apart, the killers simply reform from their splattered remains. It's at this point the teens realize how screwed they are.
157* In ''Film/GhostRider2007'', Johnny blasts [[spoiler:Legion]] apart with a Hellfire-powered shotgun. He just pulls himself back together like nothing happened. [[spoiler:It did provide enough of a distraction for Johnny to deliver the finishing blow, though.]]
158* In ''Film/HellboyIITheGoldenArmy'', the titular army can do this after being smashed to pieces.
159* Played for laughs in ''Film/HotShotsPartDeux'', when Saddam Hussein does this in an obvious homage to ''T2'' [[spoiler:and ''Film/TheFly1986'']].
160* In ''Film/JustVisiting'', a medieval knight and his sidekick are accidentally sent to the present time by a cocky/kooky wizard, who goes in after them. In one scene, the wizard's potion goes awry and explodes, tearing him apart (in a non-gory fashion). Just when it seems there is no hope for the displaced knight, behold! -- pieces of the wizard (whose body parts have turned into metal for some reason) crawl towards each other and the wizard puts himself back together!
161%%* The Film/{{Leprechaun}} does this in the first, fourth, and fifth films.%%Administrivia/ZeroContentExample
162* ''Film/LittleMonsters'': After being blown to kingdom come with lights, along with [[spoiler:Boy (who actually dies this time)]], Snik has all of his loose body parts put back together so he can continue fighting. It mostly succeeds, albeit with one of his legs missing a shin and calf.
163* In ''Film/MenInBlackII'', the villainess has captured the damsel and apparently killed her guardians, the worms. J and K find them lying in pieces in their apartment -- then they wake up, start grumbling, and drag themselves over to their lower halves to reattach them.
164* Mentioned, though not seen, in ''Film/MightyMorphinPowerRangersTheMovie''. After the Rangers defeat a dinosaur skeleton, Rocky suggests they leave ASAP in case he pulls himself together.
165* Wolfman pulls himself back together after being blown apart with dynamite in ''Film/TheMonsterSquad'' to show that, yes, ''only'' a SilverBullet will do the trick.
166* ''Film/TheReturnOfSwampThing'': After being blown to bits by a grenade, Swamp Thing's remains travel to Arcane's mansion and regenerates himself in a bathtub meant for Dr. Zurell.
167%%* Hector does this in ''Film/Saturn3''.%%Administrivia/ZeroContentExample
168* In ''Film/ScarecrowSlayer'', the Scarecrow reassembles itself after being smashed to smithereens by Mary's CarFu.
169* In ''Film/ScaryStoriesToTellInTheDark'', one of the monsters does this; its limbs appear first, then it slowly assembles itself. It can also reassemble itself when attacked, even after being sandwiched between two cars.
170%%* In ''Film/TheSpirit'', this is how the Octopus and the Spirit are revealed to be practically immortal.%%Administrivia/ZeroContentExample
171* In ''[[Film/TheLastJedi Star Wars: The Last Jedi]]'', after the blast into the fighter launch bay sends Poe and BB-8 flying, BB's head separates from his sphere body. The body quickly rolls over to his upside-down head, and magnetically draw back together.
172* The T-1000 from ''Film/Terminator2JudgmentDay''. At one point, it gets a piece of an arm shot off; said piece just liquefies and flows back into its foot. The major example is when, after being [[KillItWithIce frozen with liquid nitrogen]] and [[LiterallyShatteredLives shattered by a bullet]], the hundreds of pieces liquefy and it completely reforms. Bonus points for it not being in perfect order after reforming, losing control of its shape on occasions (although this is implied to be due to molecular damage from being frozen rather than from being blown apart). This is made more clear in the extended version.
173* ''Film/TheThingThatCouldntDie'': Once his body is found, it gets up, stumbles about, and once the head is re-attached, Gideon appears fully restored.
174* Sam pulls himself together after being blasted about by Kreeg's shotgun in ''Film/TrickRTreat''.
175* ''Film/XMenOriginsWolverine'': The end of the film shows [[spoiler:Wade Wilson]]'s hand looking around for his decapitated head before he [[BreakingTheFourthWall shushes the audience]].
176[[/folder]]
177
178[[folder:Literature]]
179* ''Across a Billion Years'' by Creator/RobertSilverberg has an AbsentMindedProfessor with a bad habit of detaching his limbs when deep in thought or nervous[[note]]He is a HumanoidAlien from the planet where gradually replacing body parts with mechanical implants is an honoured tradition. Adolescents normally have at least one artificial limb. Professor Pilazinool is old and respected and about 90% machine.[[/note]]. In one [[FunnyForeigner comic relief scene]] he managed to unscrew both his arms and legs simultaneously and needed outside assistance.
180* In ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'', after immortal characters are injured, their blood, flesh, internal organs, and bones will start flowing back to their body, ultimately leaving them with no physical damage at all. This works even if the person is on a speeding train and [[WhatADrag the parts are left smeared on the tracks]] (eventually). [[{{Squick}} Yikes.]]
181* Stephen King's ''Literature/{{Christine}}'': Both the novel and [[Film/{{Christine}} movie adaptation]] involves a murderous vintage automobile that can heal itself from ANY damage, via a sort of time reverse power. Even after being crunched under the car crusher, Dennis still has nightmares four years later of Christine finally repairing herself and coming after him for revenge. Just look at the impressive visuals in this clip from the movie on 8:54: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yTcspRQHXo&feature=related.
182* ''Literature/ColtRegan'': Nihil tend to do this unless [[KillItWithFire severely discouraged from doing so]].
183* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}''
184** Reg Shoe is a zombie and becomes a member of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch after a career as an undead rights activist. He's repeatedly injured in combat, but can and does sew his parts back together as long as he still has one hand in place.
185** In ''Literature/FeetOfClay'', the golem Meshugah can do this, a necessity because the sub-par clay and improper oven used to construct it both make it much more fragile than other golems.
186** The Igors can apparently do this, although to a lesser degree than the undead characters. We are given a before and after description of one Igor stitching her own scalp back on her head.
187** A vampire photographer in ''Literature/TheTruth'' carries a glass vial of emergency blood on a string around his neck. If he's reduced to dust by the bright light of his camera's flash, the vial falls and breaks, and contact with the blood causes the pile of dust to re-form into a solid body.
188** At one point in ''Literature/SoulMusic'', [[TheGrimReaper Death]] does this. And it's awesome.
189** ''{{Literature/Pyramids}}'': When all the mummies are returned to life, the king has to seek out his organs by hand (his eyes are in a closed canopic jar), relying on his memory of the room when he was still a ghost. [[NightmareFuel Only when he puts his eyes back in does he realize he did this in full view of the two mortuary employees.]]
190* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''
191** The [[FallenAngel Denarian]] Tessa's alternate warrior-form body can rebuild itself if badly damaged by transforming into thousands of tiny mantis-like insects that reform together into the original body.
192** In ''Literature/WhiteNight'', the blood and ichor from the uberghouls do the same thing.
193* The main characters in ''Literature/EdenGreen'' are immortal thanks to their alien needle symbiote. When one, the villain Tedrin, has his arm blown off, he picks it up and fits it against his shoulder to allow it to heal back into place.
194* ''Literature/FamilySkeletonMysteries'': Sid the ambulatory skeleton can disassemble and reassemble himself as needed. In book 2, he learns how to do it from longer distances.
195* In ''Literature/GrandmasterOfDemonicCultivationMoDaoZuShi'', the dismembered pieces of the fierce corpse [[spoiler:of Nie Mingjue]] will try to reassemble themself when left to their own devices. As the head is missing due to the killer keeping a CreepySouvenir, the pieces need to be supervised lest they try to [[AppendageAssimilation assimilate a replacement]] that someone else is already using.
196* Ted Hughes' ''Literature/TheIronMan'' (on which the ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant'' is loosely based) starts this way. The Iron Man walks out of nowhere and falls over a cliff. One hand scuttles about blindly until it finds an eye, then picks up an arm and reassembles the whole body from there.
197* In ''Literature/JonathanStrangeAndMrNorrell'' the [[TheFairFolk Gentleman with the Thistledown Hair]] keeps trying to put his body back after it's been ground to powder, but the pressure keeps up and he eventually dies.
198* A passing remark in ''Literature/TheLovelyBones'': "I was in my heaven by that time, fitting my limbs together." The protagonist is a PosthumousCharacter whose murderer cut her body up before disposing of it. [[JacobMarleyApparel Evidently this affected her soul (or whatever) as well.]]
199* In ''Literature/TheNekropolisArchives'', zombie protagonist Matthew Richter gets a spell that allows him to do this in ''Dark War''. However, the effects are only temporary; more in-depth repair is eventually necessary to fully reattach the severed parts or they'll end up falling off again.
200* Referenced as a joke in one of the ''{{Literature/Nightside}}'' novels, in which Alex books an act by "Mr. Explodo" to entertain his bar patrons. Mr. Explodo [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin explodes on stage]], then invokes this trope.
201* In Creator/RobertEHoward's ''Literature/TheScarletCitadel'', Tsotha-lanti tells Literature/ConanTheBarbarian that "''if you hack me in pieces, the bits of flesh and bone will reunite and haunt you to your doom!'' The next moment, Conan [[LosingYourHead cuts off his head]]. [[NightmareFuel The head remained alive, and the body attempted to recover it]]. Fortunately, at that moment, a friendly sorcerer took away the head, the body ran after him, and the king was rid of the need to find a solution.
202* In ''Literature/SkulduggeryPleasant'', the title living skeleton occasionally loses limbs in combat, and simply pops them back into the joint and carries on. In fact, he had to reassemble himself entirely after his original death/resurrection. Apparently, he's even capable of replacing missing parts with other people's bones, as his skull in the first three books was [[LosingyourHead not his own]]. He does need medical attention if any of the bones are broken or cut, though.
203** [[spoiler:Darquesse]] quite literally [[LosingyourHead lost her head]] in the fight against [[spoiler:alternate!Mevolent]] who beheads her with [[NamedWeapons Godkiller]]. It took her less than 30 seconds to put it back on again...
204* The vampires in Stephenie Meyer's ''[[Literature/TheTwilightSaga Twilight]] Saga'' can do this if they aren't incinerated after dismemberment. This process is only alluded to in the main novels, but is prominently featured in the novella ''The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner''.
205* In the ''Literature/WildCards'' novel ''Inside Straight'', Jonathan Hive is sliced in two by an assassin. Fortunately for him, he's TheWormThatWalks and has plenty of practice reintegrating.
206[[/folder]]
207
208[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
209* ''Series/{{Angel}}'':
210** "[[Recap/AngelS01E04IFallToPieces I Fall to Pieces]]" had a psycho stalker doctor who could disassemble and reassemble himself.
211** "[[Recap/AngelS02E09TheTrial The Trial]]" had a lizard warrior that would come back together every time he got chopped up. Angel eventually cut him in half, then chained up the pieces on opposite sides of the room, before moving on.
212* ''Series/AshVsEvilDead'': Kelly takes out Ruby with a grenade, which severs one of her arms and legs. Ruby's HealingFactor is still working fine, however, so all she has to do is re-attach the missing limbs.
213* Herrick is pulling himself together offscreen during the entire second series of ''Series/{{Being Human|UK}}''.
214* In an episode of ''Series/{{Bewitched}}'' Samantha's Father turns Darren into a statue and smashes him. Reluctantly he later puts him back together.
215* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': Dracula in the episode "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS5E1BuffyVsDracula Buffy vs. Dracula]]". Even after she dusts him, the dust pulls itself back together to reconstitute him. Also subverted as Buffy isn't the least bit startled and just restabs him.
216-->''(Buffy stakes Dracula after he's reforming)''\
217'''Buffy:''' You think I don't watch your movies? You always come back...\
218''(Dracula's dust starts to reform)''\
219'''Buffy:''' I'm standing right here!
220* ''Series/DeadLikeMe'' reapers can reattach fingers fairly easily.
221* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
222** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS8E5TheDaemons "The Dæmons"]]: Gargoyle creature Bok reforms himself after being blown apart by a bazooka.
223** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E12ThePandoricaOpens "The Pandorica Opens"]]: A battered Cyberman guarding the Underhenge, which had its head cut off by locals, manages to retrieve it while attacking the Doctor and Amy.
224** [[Recap/DoctorWho2019NYSResolution "Resolution"]]: The [[spoiler:Dalek recon scout]] manages to teleport in its missing parts from thousands of kilometres away after one-third of its body is re-energized by being placed under a UV lamp.
225* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'': [[spoiler:[[AnIcePerson Tracy Strauss]]]] does this at the very beginning of Volume 5.
226* ''Series/KamenRiderDouble'': On the DarkerAndEdgier side of the Toku coin, the Clay Doll Dopant's ability, asides from shooting large blasts, is to reassemble herself after she's been crushed to a billion pieces. In fact, [[Recap/KamenRiderDoubleE13E14TheRadioQ an arc]] from Double shows this power in action. It's DarkerAndEdgier because [[spoiler:you don't know it's going to happen the first time, and it ''looks'' like a sympathetic character just got completely crushed. You don't learn the truth [[ToBeContinued until next week]]]].
227* The Djieiene spider in the ''Series/LostGirl'' episode "Arachno Faebia" can do this as long as its heart is safe in its SoulJar.
228* This happens to the earth elemental in "The Accidental Occidental Conception", the second episode of ''Series/TheMiddleman''.
229* ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers''
230** One of the more memorable MonsterOfTheWeek types was Hatchasaurus, a very strong dino-bird thing who could reassemble himself no matter how thoroughly trashed, because [[SoulJar the important part was elsewhere]].
231** An even more memorable monster was Bones, who is pretty much Hatchasaurus, except that his SoulJar is his head.
232** Also, Eye-Guy was a monster who was made of eyes, and he had a similar ability; in this case, the SoulJar was his main central eye, which he could separate from the rest of his body and keep elsewhere, keeping most of him safe.
233* In episode 6 of ''Series/MythQuest'', a mysterious knight is beheaded, willingly, by Caradoc, and then gets up, retrieves his head, and places it back on his shoulders.
234* The Replicators from ''Series/StargateSG1'', as long as they have enough intact blocks remaining.
235* In one episode of ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'', Odo transforms into a glass, which is then [[LiterallyShatteredLives dropped and shattered]]. In classic Terminator manner, the shards transform into liquid and melt together to reform Odo.
236* In ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'', the Leviathans have a regular HealingFactor, but when their heads get cut off, it instead re-attaches itself to the body if left alone for too long. [[spoiler:The Winchesters and Bobby use this to figure out a semi-permanent way of dispatching them by storing the body parts far away from each other.]]
237* Quite a few {{Kaiju}} in the Franchise/UltraSeries of Tokusatsu science fiction shows can do this.
238** Depparas, a Walrus Kaiju from ''Series/UltramanTaro'' is a bit of a special example of this case; if blown apart, he can pull himself back together, but none of the damage he suffered during the explosion is repaired, resulting in him becoming a shambling mutilated mess that only just resembles his original form.
239** Even the heroes do that from time to time [[Series/UltramanLeo due to a DeusExMachina]] or [[Series/ReturnOfUltraman one of their weapons]].
240** There's also Sakuna Oni from ''Series/UltramanTiga'', an {{Oni}} slain years ago, sliced to pieces, and subsequently buried all over the countryside... until the seal holding the Oni in its place wore off. Cue giant oni limbs popping up all around the countryside and merging together into a monster.
241** The pilot of ''Series/UltramanDyna'' has a rather weak monster, Darambia, attacking the Martian Base, which Ultraman Dyna defeats in ''seconds''. Unfortunately, Darambia's pieces then merges together into a second, far stronger form of Neo Darambia.
242** Sigma-Zuigul from ''Series/UltramanGaia'' has this ability as well, which Gaia found out ''after'' defeating it, where the cyborg's body parts then reforms again. It needs to be blasted in its [[CyberCyclops central red eye]] to be permanently killed.
243** Inpelaizer from ''Series/UltramanMebius'' could do this via a self-repair system. The only way to beat them was by either destroying said system or completely vaporizing the robot.
244* ''Series/TheYoungOnes'': "Bambi" reveals that Vyvyan is apparently capable of this, despite it not being explicitly shown.
245[[/folder]]
246
247[[folder:Music Video]]
248* Dave From The Grave has this implied happen to him mostly offscreen in the song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Gd9i0rK_YI Ash On Yo Head]] due to going from a [[LosingYourHead head]] and [[HelpingHands right hand]] to a full body with none of his other body parts being seen prior to him becoming whole again.
249* Happens in Daimhnait Doyle's song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u05XzEQqw-4 Tattooed]]" where she starts off in 6 pieces (head, torso, arms, and legs) but then reassembles herself during the first chorus of the song.
250* Similar to that of the above song done by Daimhnait Doyle, Exit Project's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fI-SirsiMBk Healing Slow]]" has an identical premise, only the singer starts off in 5 pieces (head, upper torso, arms, and lower half), is reassembled for the entire run of the song, and unlike Doyle is unable to reattach her head.
251* Happens to Holly Henderson in the song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pxH4CUykys Breakdown]]" as a result of her right arm, right hand, left leg, left foot, and left ear being detached from her body.
252[[/folder]]
253
254[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
255* From Myth/EgyptianMythology, the sorcerer Nefrekeptah had to face a serpent both [[AntiMagic immune to magic]] and who had this ability as the FinalBoss guarding the [[MacGuffin Book of Thoth]]. When standard freezing spells didn't work, Nefrekeptah went for the direct approach and cut off the serpent's head, and threw it far into the river. However, the head came back almost instantly and blocked his path again. Nefrekeptah again cut off its head, threw it into the river, and this time put sand on the neck before the head could come back. The head couldn't reattach, and though the serpent couldn't die, it just lay there, helpless.
256* Similar to the above example, the English folk tale of Literature/TheLambtonWorm and the Scottish story of MichaelScott both feature serpents who can bring themselves together again. In the former, if the snake is fought mid-stream and then hacked to pieces, it cannot re-form. In the latter, the middle section of the snake has to be taken and cooked for it to remain dead.
257[[/folder]]
258
259[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
260* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
261** Trolls, and anything with regeneration, can reattach severed body parts by holding them against their stumps for a round or so, including heads if they have a spare.
262** ''TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}}'': Lebendtod, a type of undead, can remove and re-attach their heads or limbs at will. An anecdote in their 3E monster description tells how a necromancer sent several boxes of loose body parts to a rival's home; [[TrojanHorse once inside]], the parts re-assembled themselves, and the lebendtod attacked.
263** Some skeletal undead have been depicted with the ability to reassemble themselves in various ''D&D'' editions and ''Dragon'' articles. One type of skeleton, once several are knocked to pieces, even combine their bits into a bigger, more dangerous monster.
264* ''TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated'': Some Frankensteins have the Spare Parts Bestowment, which allows them to reattach severed limbs with a minimal amount of fuss. It also allows them to heal injuries or readjust their Physical Attributes by replacing the missing limb with someone else's, as long as there's still meat on the bone.
265* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Necrons are known to do this, sometimes even reforming after being reduced to molten slag. Their former masters the shattered C'tan are also able to do this, and it would be a ''very'' bad thing for everyone (''especially'' the Necrons) if they succeed.
266* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy'': The Great Necromancer Nagash did this after his body was chopped into pieces, burned to ashes, taken in several containers far away from each other, and scattered to the winds. The process took over a thousand years though, and his hand, which wasn't burned because it crawled away after being severed, never returned to him.
267[[/folder]]
268
269[[folder:Toys]]
270* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}''
271** [[TheWormThatWalks Zaktan]] is able to do this. In fact, the first time he ever did it [[HorrifyingTheHorror he even freaked out the guy who caused it]] (as in, his BadBoss who just ''disintegrated'' him) along with everyone else in the room as he slowly pulled all his scattered molecules back together. [[spoiler:Which is why the writer could easily {{Retcon}} his apparent "death".]]
272** While Zaktan is a cut above the others (in that he could come back from almost-complete disintegration), almost any character is capable of doing this if their pieces are still intact and they know the secret of how to rebuild themselves, as most beings in this universe are mechanical with only some organic tissue. When the six Toa Mata first arrived in their transport pods and woke up from stasis, their muscles had rotten away and their body parts were jumbled. They simply rebuilt themselves and generated new muscle (this process, sans muscles, was depicted in the unreleased ''The Legend of Mata Nui'' PC game's promos and intro). Later, after the Bohrok-Kal arc, the entire Matoran population of Mata Nui rebuilt themselves into stronger forms.
273* In ''Toys/TreasureX'', the skeletons of Xeo and Apexia are able to pull their limbs and heads out of their sockets. A lot of times they end up with the wrong limbs in the end when they try to piece themselves back together. The ''lack'' of this ability is considered a quirk of Rexia's world.
274[[/folder]]
275
276[[folder:Video Games]]
277* ''VideoGame/TheBindingOfIsaac'': Globins and Globin-related enemies collapse into a puddle of meat on death. If you don't kill the meat fast enough, they'll come right back to life. Also, any monster can potentially do this if they're a dark red Champion variant.
278* ''VideoGame/BrainDead13'': Lance does this in miraculous ways in some scenes whenever he loses a limb, like his hand or [[OffWithHisHead his head]]. Heck, there's even one resurrection scene that has the pieces of his body falling on top of each other and reconnecting him if he dies in the confrontation with Fritz.
279* Skeletons in ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' ''start'' as a pile of bones on the ground, which reassembles when the player approaches. They shatter again from any particularly hard hit, but will instantly reform until they run out of HP. And even then, nearby necromancers can and will revive them after a few seconds until [[ShootTheMedicFirst they, too, have been taken care of]], unless the player was using a Divine weapon or knocked them off a cliff.
280* ''VideoGame/DeadSpace'': The Hunter, a recurring boss, is capable of both of this and regenerating its limbs. It's not as perfect as some of the other examples, though, but the only ways to stop it are [[spoiler:freezing it solid and burning to a crisp with a rocket engine.]]
281* ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'': With high enough Marksman skill, the Skeletons will shatter, only to come back together as if nothing had happened; in this case, it's a (possibly unintentional) side effect of the game using the same animation for paralysis and death.
282* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
283** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'': In ''The "Reunion'', a mysterious signal beckoning those who are injected with Jenova's cells. This is actually how Jenova, an extraterrestrial creature, puts itself back together after being disassembled. The various test subjects Cloud meets throughout the game -- mostly homeless men who were driven insane from the lab trials -- all assemble at the North Crater, as they carry Jenova's cells. Professor Hojo postulates the "JENOVA Reunion Theory" in his notes.
284** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyCrystalChroniclesTheCrystalBearers'': The being known as Goldenrod can do this, as we learn when she and Layle fall from a height. It can be postulated that any Yuke can do it.
285* ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddys'': "Pulling X back together" are ArcWords and mostly has to do with the Animatronics and souls possessing them in some way. Possibly including the child from ''4'', whom was the first one to be told these words.
286* ''VideoGame/{{Jazzpunk}}'' features a robot who can spontaneously fall apart on cue and then un-fall-apart.
287* ''VideoGame/KnightsOfPenAndPaper2'': Scarecrows, as said by the Farmer, presumably literally, since they were destroyed not too long ago:
288-->'''Farmer:''' They'll pull themselves back together before long. Like I said, they're adaptive. And brainless. They just keep coming back for more.
289* ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'': Zac's passive splits him into four balls of goo on death that each have a quarter of his total health. If they reconnect before his enemies can destroy them, he respawns on the spot with a portion of his health.
290* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
291** Stalfos, skeletal enemies, do this in some of the games. It necessitates either defeating all of them quickly or blowing up their collapsed bodies with bombs. The Stal enemies in ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild Breath of the Wild]]'' only die for real when [[RemovingTheHeadOrDestroyingTheBrain their heads are destroyed]] (which theoretically isn't difficult, since they only have [[OneHitPointWonder 1 HP]]; their tendency to jump around before rejoining the body is what adds a little challenge). Most of a Stal's bones will always reassemble with each other instead of mixing with others', with two exceptions: arms drop as weapons, and an armless Stal will happily grab whatever matching limb is on hand and shove into its empty sockets; likewise, detached skulls aren't picky about which neck they reattach to and will simply bond with whatever headless body happens to be closest to them at the moment.
292** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'': You can use your sword to slice wooden signs to pieces, then play Zelda's Lullaby on your ocarina to cause the pieces to float up, reattach themselves, and reconstitute the sign. This can be done in other games, such as by playing the Song of Healing in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'' and conducting the Wind God's Aria in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheWindWaker''.
293* ''VideoGame/LocoRoco'': For a player example, some of the hazards and enemies can split Locoroco up into several pieces. However, a bit of "Noi! Cheburatta roi!" and they're back together in no time.
294* ''VideoGame/MetalArmsGlitchInTheSystem'': The zombie robots. Using the tether to bodyjack an enemy robot causes Glitch to have to do this afterwards. [[spoiler:One BossFight also requires you to do this to yourself to escape an impossible situation.]]
295* ''VideoGame/MySimsKingdom'': [[SdrawkcabName T.O.B.O.R.]] is strewn across Rocket reef by the explosion of the rocket he was test-piloting. While you have to gather every part to where his head is, once you do so, he pulls himself together in a tornado of assembly, slightly ''better'' for wear, but unwilling to risk being caught in another explosion.
296* ''VideoGame/NeverDead'': This is the central gimmick. The protagonist is immortal and has a HealingFactor but is not immune to having limbs or his head shot off, so you have to eventually collect your missing parts in order to remain useful in combat -- although each part remains functional in the meantime; for instance, amputated arms can still fire the guns they're holding.
297* ''VideoGame/{{Paladins}}'': Terminus is an undead stone warrior who shatters into bits when killed, but his ultimate resurrects him on the spot by magically reassembling his parts, allowing him to continue the fight.
298* ''VideoGame/Portal2'': The game puts on a visual showcase by having the entire Enrichment Center do this after [=GLaDOS=] wakes up.
299* ''VideoGame/ProfessorLaytonAndTheLastSpecter'': During the final battle, Layton, Luke, and Emmy manage to deactivate Descole's CombiningMecha and smash it to pieces. Unfortunately, it effortlessly reassembles itself immediately afterward, forcing Loosha to resort to KillItWithWater.
300* ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil6'': Rasklapanje can pull itself back together in very short order, but its dismembered torso, legs, and hands can all chase after you independently of one another before they decide to recombine.
301* In the prologue of the first ''VideoGame/ShadowHearts1'' game, Yuri gets his arm torn off. He then calmly reattaches it. This is the only time in the entire game where he displays any kind of HealingFactor.
302* ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'': Ms. Fortune's backstory involves her getting cut up into pieces and having the parts thrown at the bottom of a river. However, as she had swallowed the [[ImmortalityInducer Life Gem]], she survived and gained the ability to detach and reattach her limbs at will. A central gameplay mechanic is the ability to remove her head and [[PuppetFighter have it act separately from the body]], and her ultimate attack is to shoot out all her limbs like rockets to pull her opponent towards her head and engulf them in a giant blood explosion.
303* ''VideoGame/SpaceQuestVIRogerWilcoInTheSpinalFrontier'': The endodroid can pull the same stunt as the T-1000. Just [[http://tmd.alienharmony.com/rw/sq6/1/e.htm don't let it happen around Roger]].
304* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
305** Dry Bones and Bony Beetles, two types of skeletal Koopas, will collapse into piles of bones when struck by an attack. After a few seconds, the bones will pull themselves back into shape and the skeleton will continue on its way.
306** ''VideoGame/LuigisMansionDarkMoon'': Luigi has to fight Greenies possessing suits of armor in the Treacherous Mansion; in most cases, he has to defeat them by knocking them over, causing the armor to break apart and making the ghost vulnerable. However, in the BossBattle with the Tough Possessor later, it can possess two -- and then three -- suits of armor at once, and if Luigi knocks only ''one'' down, it will put itself together quickly. To make the Tough Possessor vulnerable, [[spoiler:he has to knock them all down at the same time.]] (Unfortunately, once he manages to do that twice, it possesses one [[AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever gigantic suit of armor...]]
307** ''VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiDreamTeam'': The boss Earthwake can do this after it's knocked into the water by Luigi's hammer attack. It also takes itself apart when chasing Giant Luigi across the battle arena or using things like its hammer or forcefield attack. Considering this thing has FloatingLimbs and is made of about twenty separate buildings, this isn't particularly difficult for it to do.
308* ''VideoGame/UltimaVIII'' skeletons are incredibly fast and powerful, and if you somehow manage to put one down... you've not got long before it's back on its feet at full strength. Options are to throw it in a lake first or just use a necromantic spell to put it down for good. ''IX'''s much weaker skeletons will also pull themselves together shortly after defeat, though you can prevent this by picking up one of the parts, such as the skull (preventing it from rejoining the group). For added fun, collect a full skeleton then drop the bones in a populated city.
309* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'': Some bosses do this, most notably the {{Superboss}} Viscidus from Ahn'Qiraj and the water elemental boss from Violet Hold. In both cases, they are NighInvulnerable while in their normal form -- the objective is to shatter them and then kill the pieces.
310[[/folder]]
311
312[[folder:Web Comics]]
313%%* Majin Buu from ''Webcomic/DragonBallMultiverse''.
314* ''Webcomic/ElijahAndAzuu'' has Legion, which repairs damage done to their possessed host simply by tying wounds closed with the host's own veins and sinew.
315* This happens to Helix in ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' after Florence gets angry at him and pulls off his limbs/head. {{Justified|Trope}} as he is a robot.
316* Nova does that in one ''Webcomic/KeychainOfCreation'' strip.
317* ''Webcomic/LookingForGroup'' has a TownWithADarkSecret where [[http://www.lfgcomic.com/page/248 all the villagers have this ability.]] [[GoodThingYouCanHeal Good thing, too, once you realize who the mayor is.]]
318* Schlock of ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', being a Carboscilicate Amorph, can "pull himself together" if he gets blown apart or if someone steps on him. Which is [[GoodThingYouCanHeal fortunate]], since it happens a lot given that for most of the series he's unable to wear armor for protection. [[note]]Even after the team manages to devise armor for him, he often has to get out of the "bubble" to use his enhanced senses.[[/note]] He has to be a bit careful with this trick, though. Difficult to pull oneself together when one is split up, then carefully picked up and put in sixty separate plastic bags.
319* In ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'', [[http://rustyandco.com/comic/level-6-42/ the vampire does this,]] [[http://rustyandco.com/comic/level-6-43/ though Madeline can still manage to annoy it,]] and [[http://rustyandco.com/comic/level-6-48/ Cube figures out a way to use it against her.]]
320* The demon K'Z'K from ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' pulls this trick after Bun-Bun [[http://www.sluggy.com/comics/archives/daily/990217 runs him through a meat grinder.]]
321* In ''Webcomic/UndeadFriend'' the undead characters tend to lose their limbs in combat a lot, but their ghost partners have the ability to stitch their limbs back on with ease.
322* ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'':
323** Waterwomen can pull themselves together and heal from nearly any injury provided they're in enough water, as Minnow does when River's waterwomen rip her arms off. If their "heart" has been removed they have to regrow their bodies instead.
324** Duane has to pull himself together after waterwomen tear him apart in their anger at their sister's pain at the hands of humans. Some of the waterwomen help him gather limbs as his undead situation is unique and interesting to them.
325* ''Webcomic/{{Zomgan}}'': In the first episode, Jeff, an elite guard of Craven, slashes Mirae On into dozens of pieces with his blade. However, thanks to Mirea's HealingFactor, he's able to casually put himself back in one piece, catching Jeff off-guard.
326[[/folder]]
327
328[[folder:Web Videos]]
329* ''WebVideo/LoadingReadyRun'' plays with this in the video [[http://loadingreadyrun.com/videos/view/227/Pull-Yourself-Together Pull Yourself Together.]] The main character has accidentally been leaving different aspects of his personality at his friends' houses.
330[[/folder]]
331
332[[folder:Western Animation]]
333* ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius'': When Jimmy Neutron commands his robotic dog Goddard to play dead, rather than falling over, the dog ''explodes'' -- then the pieces fly back together, unharmed.
334* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'': The Warners have this ability.
335* Both Martian Manhunter and Plastic Man can do this in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold''.
336* ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'': Waspinator is regularly blown to pieces, but is able to reassemble himself. [[MythologyGag This is referenced]] in Waspinator's appearance in ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'', as the episode ends with his body's one remaining arm picking up his severed head.
337* In the cartoon version of ''WesternAnimation/{{Beetlejuice}}'', this tended to happen to Jacque, a beret-wearing skeleton with a French accent, rather often, especially when he was a victim of the title character's pranks.
338* ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' features a character named Fall-Apart Rabbit, whose schtick is to literally fall to pieces and then reattach himself again, usually with the parts in all the wrong places.
339* Creator/ColumbiaCartoons: ''Willoughby's Magic Hat'', an odd 1940s Columbia Studios cartoon, had a little schnook of a guy, imbued with superhuman strength from a cap knit from Samson's hair, fighting a Frankensteinian robot, who, when he's knocked into pieces, reassembles into a monster tank.
340* In the ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' episode ''Reality Trip'', Danny got turned into an orange jelly version of himself and promptly got run over by a roller coaster car, leaving his splattered remains on the grass. A minute or two later, he is completely back to normal and a bit disoriented.
341* In French-German ''[[WesternAnimation/DraculitoMonSaigneur Draculito, mon saigneur]]'' Draculito's grandmother loses limbs [[OncePerEpisode nearly in every episode]]. Which doesn't stop her from being [[NeverMessWithGranny the most badass protagonist]].
342* Venomous Drool from ''WesternAnimation/{{Fangbone}}''. His body parts seem to have a certain degree of self-autonomy, as he was able to command his servants to put him back together [[SealedEvilInASixPack after he was originally split apart]] and still-separated parts react to the presence of him or his minions. Fangbone and Bill witness this firsthand in "The Field Trip of Mayhem" when Drool is blown to pieces, only for his head to talk back to them.
343* In ''WesternAnimation/FilmationsGhostbusters'', there was Scared Stiff, [[BigBad Prime Evil's]] cowardly ButtMonkey "robot ghost" henchman; he tended to fall apart a lot.
344* Nine of ''WesternAnimation/FrankensteinsCat'' has the ability to do this.
345* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'': Bender can do this as well. In "I Second That Emotion", he dismantles himself so that he can flush himself down the toilet bit by bit, and is next seen in the sewer with his arms and legs all mixed up, regretting the fact that he threw out his own assembly instructions. In the pilot, Bender is seen putting both his arms back in their sockets one after another... [[OffscreenRealityWarp somehow.]] That is, first, he uses his left arm to reattach his right arm, then his right arm grabs his left arm and also puts it back in. Fry, who is standing right next to him, is dumbfounded.
346-->'''Fry:''' [[LampshadeHanging I don't know how you did that!]]
347* ''WesternAnimation/GadgetAndTheGadgetinis'': Penny built Digit and Fidget with "Rebuilding Systems".
348* On ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'', Grim can take himself apart, and can put himself together rather easily, apparently stashing his robe and scythe in {{Hammerspace}}. He can even be disassembled and carried in a backpack. (Although he doesn't like that much.)
349* The Dummies of the CGI animated short ''WesternAnimation/TheIncredibleCrashDummies'' regularly had limbs knocked off with no problems.
350-->''(Slick and Spin crash a motorcycle)''\
351'''Slick:''' That was beautiful, Spin -- I just went to pieces!\
352'''Spin:''' Really? Did the camera get it?\
353'''Slick:''' I forgot to take the lens-cap off.\
354'''Spin:''' Get me my leg so I can run away!
355* On ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'', Lucius VI is constantly losing body parts. It might have something to do with how old he is.
356* In ''[[WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Justice League Unlimited]]'', J'onn gets torn in half by the Annihilator, but turns intangible and reforms himself.
357* Mr. Cat from ''WesternAnimation/{{Kaeloo}}'' can simply reattach his limbs if they come off. The same applies to Quack Quack, who is NighInvulnerable.
358%% ZCE * Also happened in ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes''.
359* ''WesternAnimation/MegasXLR'': The [[MonsterOfTheWeek R.E.C.R.]] is a robot that can separate into two tanks, two fighter jets, and a UFO respectively when forcibly separated. He can also combine himself back together instantly.
360* An alien criminal in ''WesternAnimation/MenInBlackTheSeries'' was given powers similar to Grenader above. They eventually caught on to the idea of grabbing his head before it could reattach.
361* Mr. Scatterbrain from ''WesternAnimation/TheMrMenShow''. His nose came off in the episodes "Hobbies" and "Reptiles", and his entire ''face'' came off in the episode "Bugs".
362** Also, in the episode "Bugs", Mr. Persnickety loses his mustache, which happens again in the episode "Dance Dance Dance", along with Miss Sunshine's hair.
363*** And yet, somehow, they're always back to normal by the next episode.
364* In ''WesternAnimation/SkeletonWarriors'', the titular monsters have the power to effortlessly reassemble themselves no matter how badly they are smashed apart, referring to this as "the power of invulnerability". Combined with [[MonsterProgenitor Baron Dark's]] ability to [[TheVirus convert any human he touches into a new Skeleton Warrior]], they are an extremely demoralizing foe to face.
365* Grenader, the [[ActionBomb walking, talking grenade]] and minor threat to the ''WesternAnimation/SkysurferStrikeForce'' is able to do this after he blows up.
366* The characters of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' have been known to fall apart and reattach themselves on a regular basis. In one instance we see that Plankton has his left and right legs marked, suggesting that he has lost them before.
367* Durge from ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsCloneWars''. He does it several more times in the Expanded Universe.
368* In ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012'', the rock titan General Traag reassembles himself with nary a scratch after being at the epicenter of a bomb explosion.
369* Robin finally manages to freeze and shatter Madame Rouge in ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003''. He barely has enough time to disable the trap before Rouge reforms and captures him.
370%% Needs Context * Happened to Tom of ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry'' at least once.
371* The Junkions in ''WesternAnimation/TransformersTheMovie'' can do this: they're MadeOfPlasticine but can simply pull their arms and legs back on after taking a hit, making them surprisingly tenacious foes.
372-->'''Springer:''' It's not hard to knock 'em down, it's getting them to ''stay'' down that's the trick!\
373'''Arcee:''' They're indestructible!\
374'''Daniel:''' [[ZergRush And they're everywhere!]]
375* ''WesternAnimation/UglyAmericans'' has an episode where Mark's nightmares started coming true (as one of three trials). In one scene where he runs through a door, only to wind up in outer space, falling back to earth. When he landed on the ground, he instantly liquefied into a puddle of blood. (skydiving from space without a parachute hurts, kids) Mark's coworker Leonard was not impressed as Mark was late for an important event, so cue Mark's skeleton pulling itself out of the puddle, with the rest of the body reforming as he stood up.
376* Eeyore from ''Franchise/WinnieThePooh''. The RunningGag of his tail falling off and having to be reattached [[TheEeyore is one of the reasons why he's always so upset]].
377* ''WesternAnimation/ZakStorm'': Skullivar's regular soldiers can automatically put themself together ad infinitum, no matter into how many pieces they have been smashed, short or sliced. Due to this, while they're easy to beat, Zak and his crew tend to make their escape at the first opportunity they get during most of their skirmishes.
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