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** In [[WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie2TheSecondPart the sequel]], [[spoiler:Finn and Bianca's mother orders her children to put away their LEGO playsets, unknowingly causing the destruction of the LEGO universe, but she only does so as a last resort because she's tired of them constantly fighting.]]
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* Alma from ''WesternAnimation/{{Encanto}}'' is the main antagonist, her toxic treatment of her family being the core drama of the movie. However, she has a rather tragic backstory as a displacement victim and all she did was to try to protect her family and ensure her community survives. [[spoiler:In the end, she more than redeems herself by apologising to Mirabel.]]

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* Alma from ''WesternAnimation/{{Encanto}}'' is the main antagonist, her toxic treatment of her family being the core drama of the movie. However, she has a rather tragic backstory as a displacement victim and all she did was to try to protect her family and ensure her community survives. [[spoiler:In the end, she more than redeems herself by apologising to Mirabel.her family.]]
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He is the protagonist, and thus cannot be an Anti-Villain (anti-hero is more correct)


* ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'': Ralph is only a villain in the sense that he plays one, and is otherwise a decent (if clumsy) guy. This also applies to his role in the game, where his forest home is demolished to build an apartment complex for the Nicelanders, sending Ralph into a wrecking frenzy.

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* ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'': Ralph is only a villain in the sense that he plays one, and is otherwise a decent (if clumsy) guy. This also applies to his role in the game, where his forest home is demolished to build an apartment complex for the Nicelanders, sending Ralph into a wrecking frenzy.
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Anti-villain's cannot be the protagonist.


* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'' has, well, [[ProtagonistTitle Megamind]] as this. Metro City (or to him, Metrocity) has treated him like he's an EvilGenius who needs to be stopped, even when he was a child. The truth is that he isn't and was never evil. When he was a kid, all he was trying to do was make [[IJustWantToHaveFriends friends]] and impress them with his inventions, which horribly backfired on him. Once he defeats his longtime foe, Metro Man, he decides that he's done being the bad guy. [[spoiler:That is if you don't count him giving Hal powers and said character turning into a ''real'' villain.]]
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* AUTO from ''WesternAnimation/WallE'' opposes WALL•E, EVE and Captain [=McCrea=] and tries to prevent the Axiom from returning to Earth, but only because he can't deviate from his directive, and he [[WellIntentionedExtremist genuinely believes]] that humanity won't survive on Earth. It's the actions he takes in pursuit of that directive, such as trying to kill WALL•E, mutinying against the captain, and endangering the entire population of the Axiom, that ultimately make him a villain.



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* Amos Slade from ''WesternAnimation/TheFoxAndTheHound'' is a more shaded antagonist than a typical Disney villain. He may be a curmudgeon who wants to kill Tod, but he's shown to legitimately care for Copper and Chief, and his hatred for Tod is driven mostly by misunderstandings or his supposed injuring of the latter. He eventually [[spoiler:[[HeelFaceTurn lets go of his hatred for Tod]] after the fox rescues him and Copper from a bear and the latter protects him for it]].
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* The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.

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* The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lorax|2012}}'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.
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* In ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'', Ming is neither truly evil nor even a bad person. The problem is that Ming's overly controlling behavior often makes her an antagonistic obstacle in Mei's path in growing up and accepting her gifts. Everything she does is out of concern for Mei's well-being, but she just takes it too far, especially [[spoiler:during the climax when she unwittingly unleashes her enormous red panda form and attacks her daughter in a blind rage.]]
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* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'': Ego is merely doing his job as France's top food critic, and even though he inadvertently caused Gusteau's death and damaged his reputation, with no remorse for the majority of the film, he finally changes his tune (along with his appearance) after tasting Rémy's ratatouille. He admits in his monologue at the end of the film that harsh criticism is "fun to read and fun to write," and that as a critic, he's gained some sense of authority to decide whether something has value or not.
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* ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'': Ralph is only a villain in the sense that he plays one, and is otherwise a decent (if clumsy) guy. This also applies to his role in the game, where his forest home is demolished to build an apartment complex for the Nicelanders, sending Ralph into a wrecking frenzy.
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None

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* ''WesternAnimation/SouthParkBiggerLongerAndUncut'': For being the Prince of Darkness, Satan's actually a big softy and is by far the most sympathetic villain in the BigBadEnsemble.
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* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Home}}'', the Gorg may have destroyed the Boov's original home planet, but [[spoiler:his children were stolen from him. It's not entirely hard to see why he’d be so upset]].

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* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Home}}'', ''WesternAnimation/Home2015'', the Gorg may have destroyed the Boov's original home planet, but [[spoiler:his children were stolen from him. It's not entirely hard to see why he’d be so upset]].
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* Alma from ''WesternAnimation/{{Encanto}}'' is the main antagonist, her toxic treatment of her family being the core drama of the movie. However, she has a rather tragic backstory as a displacement victim and all she did was to try to protect her family and ensure her community survives. [[spoiler:In the end, she more than redeems herself by apologising to Mirabel.]]
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Actually, I don't think Silver's a Designated Villain; his bad and good deeds are treated accordingly.


* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.

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* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be starts out as the bad guy]]; guy; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.
greed. Eventually, he [[spoiler:has a HeelFaceTurn and [[FriendOrIdolDecision sacrifices said treasure to rescue Jim]]]].
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Removing some complaining.


* [[PetalPower Huaxian]] in ''Animation/LittleDoorGods'' gets a neat [[InvertedTrope inversion]] of the usual hero/villain dynamic in her fight with [[AntiHero Yu Lei]]. She is clearly not especially interested in the goal that the [[MayorPain Mayor]] sets her to, and only follows along because [[FallenOnHardTimesJob it's a job]] in an otherwise bad economy. Meanwhile, Yu Lei decides it's a [[SarcasmMode great idea]] to [[spoiler:break the seal she's guarding and suck her into a black hole in the process]], all for [[TheNeedsOfTheMany the greater good]]. It's also worth noting that at this point in the film it's not entirely certain whether [[WellIntentionedExtremist Yu Lei]] or his [[TheIdealist idealist]] brother Shen Tu is in the right, so the audience is justified in rooting for either side. It's a refreshingly serious, well-handled moment in a movie otherwise [[BottomOfTheBarrelJoke dominated by fart jokes]].

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* [[PetalPower Huaxian]] in ''Animation/LittleDoorGods'' gets a neat [[InvertedTrope inversion]] of the usual hero/villain dynamic in her fight with [[AntiHero Yu Lei]]. She is clearly not especially interested in the goal that the [[MayorPain Mayor]] sets her to, and only follows along because [[FallenOnHardTimesJob it's a job]] in an otherwise bad economy. Meanwhile, Yu Lei decides it's a [[SarcasmMode great idea]] to [[spoiler:break the seal she's guarding and suck her into a black hole in the process]], all for [[TheNeedsOfTheMany the greater good]]. It's also worth noting that at this point in the film it's not entirely certain whether [[WellIntentionedExtremist Yu Lei]] or his [[TheIdealist idealist]] brother Shen Tu is in the right, so the audience is justified in rooting for either side. It's a refreshingly serious, well-handled moment in a movie otherwise [[BottomOfTheBarrelJoke dominated by fart jokes]].

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* Human Twilight in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsFriendshipGames'' is motivated by a desire to understand the magic that emerges from Canterlot High School. At first, she's blackmailed into participating in the Friendship Games by [[NonActionBigBad Principal Cinch]], but Twilight's own desires still keep her going even when her amulet starts stealing magic and opening rifts in reality. [[spoiler:At the movie's climax, she unleashes the stolen magic and transforms into Midnight Sparkle, getting DrunkOnTheDarkSide and almost destroying the world.]]
* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.
* King Haggard of ''WesternAnimation/TheLastUnicorn'', as shown in the scene where he explains ''why'' he [[spoiler:captured the Unicorns. Not from greed, or power... but because they're the only things that makes him ''happy''.]]
* Rameses in ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' (yes, ''the'' Pharaoh). Unlike the Pharaoh of Literature/TheBible, he's shown to be a well-meaning man who genuinely loves his brother Moses and is [[WellDoneSonGuy struggling with his father's shadow]], but because of his upbringing, he's blind to certain things in life, like the suffering of the slaves. Yet he's not villainous at all until Moses starts demanding that he let his people go. The writers deliberately humanized him, but made him so sympathetic and tragic that, at some points, they had to rewrite some scenes between him and Moses because ''Moses'' came off as being cruel to him. ''And even then, he still is a very tragic figure''.

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* Human Twilight in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsFriendshipGames'' is motivated by a desire to understand the magic that emerges from Canterlot High School. At first, she's blackmailed into participating %%%
%%
%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples
in the Friendship Games by [[NonActionBigBad Principal Cinch]], but Twilight's own desires still keep her going even when her amulet starts stealing magic and opening rifts in reality. [[spoiler:At the movie's climax, she unleashes the stolen magic and transforms into Midnight Sparkle, getting DrunkOnTheDarkSide and almost destroying the world.]]
* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.
* King Haggard of ''WesternAnimation/TheLastUnicorn'', as shown in the scene where he explains ''why'' he [[spoiler:captured the Unicorns. Not from greed, or power... but because they're the only things that makes him ''happy''.]]
* Rameses in ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' (yes, ''the'' Pharaoh). Unlike the Pharaoh of Literature/TheBible, he's shown to be a well-meaning man who genuinely loves his brother Moses and is [[WellDoneSonGuy struggling with his father's shadow]], but because of his upbringing, he's blind to certain things in life, like the suffering of the slaves. Yet he's not villainous at all until Moses starts demanding that he let his people go. The writers deliberately humanized him, but made him so sympathetic and tragic that, at some points, they had to rewrite some scenes between him and Moses because ''Moses'' came off as being cruel to him. ''And even then, he still is a very tragic figure''.
correct order. Thanks!
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* The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.

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* The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.%%* Yokai/Professor Callaghan from ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6''



* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie'', the BigBad [[spoiler:is an ordinary guy who just wants to keep his LEGO models organised, although he has a rather {{Jerkass}} way of going about it]].



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'' has, well, [[ProtagonistTitle Megamind]] as this. Metro City (or to him, Metrocity) has treated him like he's an EvilGenius who needs to be stopped, even when he was a child. The truth is that he isn't and was never evil. When he was a kid, all he was trying to do was make [[IJustWantToHaveFriends friends]] and impress them with his inventions, which horribly backfired on him. Once he defeats his longtime foe, Metro Man, he decides that he's done being the bad guy. [[spoiler:That is if you don't count him giving Hal powers and said character turning into a ''real'' villain.]]

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* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'' has, well, [[ProtagonistTitle Megamind]] King Haggard of ''WesternAnimation/TheLastUnicorn'', as this. Metro City (or to him, Metrocity) has treated him like he's an EvilGenius who needs to be stopped, even when shown in the scene where he was a child. The truth is explains ''why'' he [[spoiler:captured the Unicorns. Not from greed, or power... but because they're the only things that he isn't and was never evil. When he was a kid, all he was trying makes him ''happy''.]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie'', the BigBad [[spoiler:is an ordinary guy who just wants
to do was make [[IJustWantToHaveFriends friends]] and impress them with keep his inventions, which horribly backfired on him. Once LEGO models organised, although he defeats his longtime foe, Metro Man, he decides that he's done being the bad guy. [[spoiler:That is if you don't count him giving Hal powers and said character turning into has a ''real'' villain.]]rather {{Jerkass}} way of going about it]].



%%* Yokai/Professor Callaghan from ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6''

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%%* Yokai/Professor Callaghan * The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'' has, well, [[ProtagonistTitle Megamind]] as this. Metro City (or to him, Metrocity) has treated him like he's an EvilGenius who needs to be stopped, even when he was a child. The truth is that he isn't and was never evil. When he was a kid, all he was trying to do was make [[IJustWantToHaveFriends friends]] and impress them with his inventions, which horribly backfired on him. Once he defeats his longtime foe, Metro Man, he decides that he's done being the bad guy. [[spoiler:That is if you don't count him giving Hal powers and said character turning into a ''real'' villain.]]
* Human Twilight in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsFriendshipGames'' is motivated by a desire to understand the magic that emerges
from ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6''Canterlot High School. At first, she's blackmailed into participating in the Friendship Games by [[NonActionBigBad Principal Cinch]], but Twilight's own desires still keep her going even when her amulet starts stealing magic and opening rifts in reality. [[spoiler:At the movie's climax, she unleashes the stolen magic and transforms into Midnight Sparkle, getting DrunkOnTheDarkSide and almost destroying the world.]]
* Rameses in ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' (yes, ''the'' Pharaoh). Unlike the Pharaoh of Literature/TheBible, he's shown to be a well-meaning man who genuinely loves his brother Moses and is [[WellDoneSonGuy struggling with his father's shadow]], but because of his upbringing, he's blind to certain things in life, like the suffering of the slaves. Yet he's not villainous at all until Moses starts demanding that he let his people go. The writers deliberately humanized him, but made him so sympathetic and tragic that, at some points, they had to rewrite some scenes between him and Moses because ''Moses'' came off as being cruel to him. ''And even then, he still is a very tragic figure''.


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* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.
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Disney has been depreciated as a namespace.


* In Disney's ''Disney/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.

to:

* In Disney's ''Disney/TreasurePlanet'', ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.



* Aladdin's father in ''Disney/AladdinAndTheKingOfThieves''. As implied by the title, he is the leader of the forty thieves. However, it's implied that his only motivation for wanting to lead them, as well as stealing various treasures, and why he left the family to lead them, was to allow his family to not be impoverished anymore. He also intended to return to his family once he had amassed enough wealth, but by the time he returned, he was unable to find them, and thus he believed they had died.

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* Aladdin's father in ''Disney/AladdinAndTheKingOfThieves''.''WesternAnimation/AladdinAndTheKingOfThieves''. As implied by the title, he is the leader of the forty thieves. However, it's implied that his only motivation for wanting to lead them, as well as stealing various treasures, and why he left the family to lead them, was to allow his family to not be impoverished anymore. He also intended to return to his family once he had amassed enough wealth, but by the time he returned, he was unable to find them, and thus he believed they had died.



%%* Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''

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%%* Yokai/Professor callaghan Callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''''WesternAnimation/BigHero6''
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** Gabby Gabby from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory4'' is introduced to Woody and Forky as a fairly unsettling doll with an gang of puppets at her disposal, willing to take what she wants by force (in this case, Woody's functional voice box), and Bo Peep suggests just staying away from her. But as the audience learns from her private time with Forky, she's just really desperate to have an owner, having watched the antique store owner's granddaughter Harmony from afar for who knows how many years. [[spoiler:When she has a heart-to-heart with Woody later, he willingly surrenders his box to her, and she sets up a meeting with Harmony... who immediately tosses her aside when offered a home. Gabby tells Woody he can have his box back with no fuss, resigned to her fate as a worthless toy. Thankfully, Woody has other ideas.]]

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** Gabby Gabby from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory4'' is introduced to Woody and Forky as a fairly unsettling doll with an a gang of puppets at her disposal, willing to take what she wants by force (in this case, Woody's functional voice box), and Bo Peep suggests just staying away from her. But as the audience learns from her private time with Forky, she's just really desperate to have an owner, having watched the antique store owner's granddaughter Harmony from afar for who knows how many years. [[spoiler:When she has a heart-to-heart with Woody later, he willingly surrenders his box to her, and she sets up a meeting with Harmony... who immediately tosses her aside when offered a home. Gabby tells Woody he can have his box back with no fuss, resigned to her fate as a worthless toy. Thankfully, Woody has other ideas.]]
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None

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** Gabby Gabby from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory4'' is introduced to Woody and Forky as a fairly unsettling doll with an gang of puppets at her disposal, willing to take what she wants by force (in this case, Woody's functional voice box), and Bo Peep suggests just staying away from her. But as the audience learns from her private time with Forky, she's just really desperate to have an owner, having watched the antique store owner's granddaughter Harmony from afar for who knows how many years. [[spoiler:When she has a heart-to-heart with Woody later, he willingly surrenders his box to her, and she sets up a meeting with Harmony... who immediately tosses her aside when offered a home. Gabby tells Woody he can have his box back with no fuss, resigned to her fate as a worthless toy. Thankfully, Woody has other ideas.]]
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** Stinky Pete the Prospector from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory2'' also counts as well. His main goal is to travel to Japan to be treasured forever after so many years of receiving no fulfillment. He convinces Woody, Jessie and Bullseye to travel with him in order to make the set complete and to do what is right for them, even if he takes extremes measures such as manipulation and threats in order to do so. Plus, the ending shows that he is capable of redemption once he finally got to be played with by a girl who loves to paint on her dolls.
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* The Cleric from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStoryThatTimeForgot''. He lies to all the other Battlesaurs, manipulates them, and tries to destroy Woody and Buzz, all to keep the Battlesaurs from realizing they’re toys. [[WellIntentionedExtremist But he only does it because he cares about them]]; he genuinely believes that they wouldn’t be able to handle the truth and that he ''has'' to keep them in the dark to save them from a collective nervous breakdown.
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Adding Little Door Gods example

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* [[PetalPower Huaxian]] in ''Animation/LittleDoorGods'' gets a neat [[InvertedTrope inversion]] of the usual hero/villain dynamic in her fight with [[AntiHero Yu Lei]]. She is clearly not especially interested in the goal that the [[MayorPain Mayor]] sets her to, and only follows along because [[FallenOnHardTimesJob it's a job]] in an otherwise bad economy. Meanwhile, Yu Lei decides it's a [[SarcasmMode great idea]] to [[spoiler:break the seal she's guarding and suck her into a black hole in the process]], all for [[TheNeedsOfTheMany the greater good]]. It's also worth noting that at this point in the film it's not entirely certain whether [[WellIntentionedExtremist Yu Lei]] or his [[TheIdealist idealist]] brother Shen Tu is in the right, so the audience is justified in rooting for either side. It's a refreshingly serious, well-handled moment in a movie otherwise [[BottomOfTheBarrelJoke dominated by fart jokes]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
ZCE


* Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''

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* %%* Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''
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Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''

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* Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''
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Yokai/Professor callaghan from ''Disney/BigHero6''
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* Xibalba from ''WesternAnimation/TheBookOfLife'' is a Type 2. He only wants to rule his wife's world out of loneliness.

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* Xibalba from ''WesternAnimation/TheBookOfLife'' is a Type 2. He only wants to rule his wife's world out of loneliness.loneliness as his land of the dead is full of the souls of the dead who's family had forgotten about and/or no longer venerate on Dia de los Muertos and the land itself is full of smoke and dust and none of the life and joy of his wife's world.
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Splitting live-action and animation.

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* Human Twilight in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsFriendshipGames'' is motivated by a desire to understand the magic that emerges from Canterlot High School. At first, she's blackmailed into participating in the Friendship Games by [[NonActionBigBad Principal Cinch]], but Twilight's own desires still keep her going even when her amulet starts stealing magic and opening rifts in reality. [[spoiler:At the movie's climax, she unleashes the stolen magic and transforms into Midnight Sparkle, getting DrunkOnTheDarkSide and almost destroying the world.]]
* In Disney's ''Disney/TreasurePlanet'', John Silver is [[DesignatedVillain supposed to be the bad guy]]; and he does it pretty well, most of the time. But he also turns out to be a great father figure to Jim Hawkins and his soft spot for the lad pushes him to do the right thing now and then. His core motivation of wanting to get what is, in his eyes, rightfully owed to him, is more complex than just standard pirate-related greed.
* King Haggard of ''WesternAnimation/TheLastUnicorn'', as shown in the scene where he explains ''why'' he [[spoiler:captured the Unicorns. Not from greed, or power... but because they're the only things that makes him ''happy''.]]
* Rameses in ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' (yes, ''the'' Pharaoh). Unlike the Pharaoh of Literature/TheBible, he's shown to be a well-meaning man who genuinely loves his brother Moses and is [[WellDoneSonGuy struggling with his father's shadow]], but because of his upbringing, he's blind to certain things in life, like the suffering of the slaves. Yet he's not villainous at all until Moses starts demanding that he let his people go. The writers deliberately humanized him, but made him so sympathetic and tragic that, at some points, they had to rewrite some scenes between him and Moses because ''Moses'' came off as being cruel to him. ''And even then, he still is a very tragic figure''.
* Aladdin's father in ''Disney/AladdinAndTheKingOfThieves''. As implied by the title, he is the leader of the forty thieves. However, it's implied that his only motivation for wanting to lead them, as well as stealing various treasures, and why he left the family to lead them, was to allow his family to not be impoverished anymore. He also intended to return to his family once he had amassed enough wealth, but by the time he returned, he was unable to find them, and thus he believed they had died.
* Tony in ''WesternAnimation/AlphaAndOmega'' demands that pack traditions be upheld and is pretty willing to lead an all-out war to claim the Western Pack's territory. However, [[WellIntentionedExtremist he's only willing to do so in order to ensure that his pack survives with the food and resources that the Western Pack has]]. He's a fairly decent wolf otherwise, if not a bit temperamental and a stickler for tradition. He becomes a lot [[TookaLevelinKindness nicer]] in the sequels as well.
** Princess in the sequel ''A Howl-iday Adventure'' also fills this role, greatly contrasting [[CardCarryingVillain her father King]] who serves as the film's BigBad. She's his [[TheDragon Dragon]] but is motivated by loyalty to her father, not the collective [[TheSocialDarwinist Social Darwinist]] views of King and his pack. There's also how she cares for Runt while he's their hostage, not considering him weak and worthless like the other Rogues.
* The Once-ler in the 2012 adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax'' is quite friendly and sympathetic for most of the movie, despite being the nemesis of the title character. He eventually makes a FaceHeelTurn partially due to the influence of his family and becomes a rapacious, amoral CorruptCorporateExecutive, and ''then'' he has a severe MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment after it's too late and spends the rest of his life as a guilt-wracked hermit.
* Xibalba from ''WesternAnimation/TheBookOfLife'' is a Type 2. He only wants to rule his wife's world out of loneliness.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie'', the BigBad [[spoiler:is an ordinary guy who just wants to keep his LEGO models organised, although he has a rather {{Jerkass}} way of going about it]].
* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Home}}'', the Gorg may have destroyed the Boov's original home planet, but [[spoiler:his children were stolen from him. It's not entirely hard to see why he’d be so upset]].
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Megamind}}'' has, well, [[ProtagonistTitle Megamind]] as this. Metro City (or to him, Metrocity) has treated him like he's an EvilGenius who needs to be stopped, even when he was a child. The truth is that he isn't and was never evil. When he was a kid, all he was trying to do was make [[IJustWantToHaveFriends friends]] and impress them with his inventions, which horribly backfired on him. Once he defeats his longtime foe, Metro Man, he decides that he's done being the bad guy. [[spoiler:That is if you don't count him giving Hal powers and said character turning into a ''real'' villain.]]
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