Follow TV Tropes

Following

History YMMV / OneHundredBullets

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MagnificentBastard: Agent Philip Graves is the man who delivers the attache cases, offering people who have been wronged a chance for 'carte blanche' vengeance. Often having multiple hidden agendas to his actions, Graves strategically uses some attaches to gain favors or followers, and is eventually revealed to have faked his death with those of his squad, the Minutemen, who he manipulates back into service. Revealed to be secretly working in conjunction with his supposed rival Augustus Medici to slowly dismantle the infamous Trust and bring it down until only Augustus, Grave and their ally Javier Vasco remain, Graves is also revealed to be a man of principle, which separates him from the monstrous Augustus, willing to slect his principles over even his life in the end.

to:

* MagnificentBastard: Agent Philip Graves is the man who delivers the attache cases, offering people who have been wronged a chance for 'carte blanche' carte blanche vengeance. Often having multiple hidden agendas to his actions, Graves strategically uses some attaches to gain favors or followers, and is eventually revealed to have faked his death with those of his squad, the Minutemen, who he manipulates back into service. Revealed to be secretly working in conjunction with his supposed rival Augustus Medici to slowly dismantle the infamous Trust and bring it down until only Augustus, Grave and their ally Javier Vasco remain, Graves is also revealed to be a man of principle, which separates him from the monstrous Augustus, willing to slect his principles over even his life in the end.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Coop, the CoolOldGuy leader of Joan's bodyguards, for his bravery against Remi and nice interactions with both his boss and coworkers.
** DeadpanSnarker, Anti-Medici Trust member Fulvio Carlito gets a little appreciation despite only appearing in three issues.

to:

** Coop, the CoolOldGuy leader of Joan's bodyguards, for his bravery against Remi and nice interactions with both his boss and coworkers. \n He's only in one issue, but it (and Coop) tend to be well-remembered.
** The surprisingly brave, DeadpanSnarker, Anti-Medici Trust member Fulvio Carlito gets a little appreciation despite only appearing in three issues.four issues and having no dialogue in two of them.

Added: 126

Changed: 72

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Of the Trust, Joan D'Arcy is one of the more popular members due to being more intelligent and more morally gray than most of her peers, despite not having any dialogue, or even a name, until less than fifteen issues before the end.

to:

** Of the Trust, Joan D'Arcy is one of the more popular members of the Trust due to being more intelligent and more morally gray than most of her peers, despite not having any dialogue, or even a name, until less than fifteen issues before the end.



** Milo Garret is the least-appearing Minuteman, but as a HardBoiledDetective who refuses to return to Graves thrall, he has his fanbase.

to:

** Milo Garret is the least-appearing Minuteman, but as a HardBoiledDetective with a BandagedFace who refuses to return to Graves thrall, he has his fanbase.



** For some, the gang of criminals from the issue who were with him in an off-screen heist.

to:

** For some, the gang of criminals from the issue Victor first appears in, who were with him in an off-screen heist.


Added DiffLines:

** DeadpanSnarker, Anti-Medici Trust member Fulvio Carlito gets a little appreciation despite only appearing in three issues.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** For some, the gang of criminals from the issue who were with him in an off-screen heist.
** Coop, the CoolOldGuy leader of Joan's bodyguards, for his bravery against Remi and nice interactions with both his boss and coworkers.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* EvilIsSexy: Megan and Echo. Some of the minor female Trust members are also pretty hot, but it's not emphasized to the same degree as those two.

to:

* EvilIsSexy: Megan and Echo. Some of the minor female Trust members (Joan, Anna, Helena and Constance) are also pretty hot, but it's not neither their attractiveness or their evilness (assuming their evil at all) is emphasized to the same degree as those two.

Added: 150

Changed: 3

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Sinister FemmeFatale Megan might count as a female version given how often she's associated with the series.



** Benito, for getting a fair amount of CharacterDevelopment and being a WildCard in the Trust-Muntemen War.

to:

** Benito, for getting a fair amount of CharacterDevelopment and being a WildCard in the Trust-Muntemen War.Trust-Minutemen War.
** Resident FemmeFatale Megan Dietrich.

Added: 992

Changed: 47

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* EnsembleDarkhorse: Cole Burns and because of MisaimedFandom, Lono.

to:

* EnsembleDarkhorse: EnsembleDarkhorse:
**
Cole Burns is OutOfFocus for large parts of the story and because arguably has the fewest fight scenes of the Minutemen, but he's still popular with just about everyone in the fanbase.
** Because
of MisaimedFandom, Lono.and [[MadeOfIron how much he keeps surviving]] Lono.
** Of the Trust, Joan D'Arcy is one of the more popular members due to being more intelligent and more morally gray than most of her peers, despite not having any dialogue, or even a name, until less than fifteen issues before the end.
** Benito, for getting a fair amount of CharacterDevelopment and being a WildCard in the Trust-Muntemen War.
** Jack's friend Mikey is decently liked for having a minor arc of his own, with many feeling pleased at his happy ending of sorts.
** Remi's brother Ronnie has his fans, due to being a non-Minuteman tough guy who with some interesting family dynamics.
** Milo Garret is the least-appearing Minuteman, but as a HardBoiledDetective who refuses to return to Graves thrall, he has his fanbase.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* AlternateCharacterInterpretation:
** Near the end of the series, Augustus and his allies assert that they only need to kill one more person before its over. [[spoiler: That person was Joan D'Arcy, but that raises the question of why they intended to spare Megan and Tibo. Was it simple PragmaticVillainy to make it easier to absorb and control their assets, or due to doubts that they'd be able to kill them as quickly and efficiently as their plans required? Was it a form of VillainRespect that came from watching those two counter their moves and feeling that there was a place for them in their new vision for the Trust? Or did Augustus and Vasco see them as MoralityPet's given that Tibo had been working with Vasco in publicly challenging Augustus's agenda for a while, and Megan had a sexual relationship with Augustus that might have led to him developing stronger feelings for her than he'd anticipated]].
** Did Roland Dietrich really conspire with Rose Madrid to move against the Medici's (which led to her death)? Roland did ask for Graves and the Minutemen to support him with something right after they were deactivated [[spoiler: and right before Gravesb betrayed him]] which might have been that, but Augustus himself (or one of his allies) wold have also had motive to have been manipulating Rose that to further the divide between the Trust and the Minutemen that came from her execution.
** Did the remaining younger Trust heads really kill [[spoiler: Benito]]? Graves confidently asserts that they did, but they seem genuinely shocked and rattled by his fate (particularly Joan) even when alone with each other, and continue to deny it, while Lono (who was lurking around) and Augustus [[spoiler: who was seen watching Benito and Megan in the pool]] also had motives.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* HesJustHiding: It's interesting that in the final issue, Tibo's face isn't visible when they find his body, Joan's body doesn't have any clear marks on it, and Megan isn't seen in the frame with Cole when he burns to death (and might have had the insight to run when she saw him drop the lighter). Likewise, Jack and Crete might have been capable of fighting off the alligators that came after them. Finally, while Ronnie Rome likely died as a result of his brother's suicide, perhaps Victor's laugh afterwards was because Remi failed to hit him when he jumped off the roof.


Added DiffLines:

* RootingForTheEmpire: It’s not that hard to root for some of the Trust members given that so many of the Minutemen are vicious killers it kind of makes sense to retire, and while the Trust are a conspiracy they don’t seem to be that malignant of one, at least by what we see of them in present day. [[spoiler: the fact that Augustus, the face of The Trust, is using the Minutemen to clean house makes it even worse]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Approved by the thread.

Added DiffLines:

* MagnificentBastard: Agent Philip Graves is the man who delivers the attache cases, offering people who have been wronged a chance for 'carte blanche' vengeance. Often having multiple hidden agendas to his actions, Graves strategically uses some attaches to gain favors or followers, and is eventually revealed to have faked his death with those of his squad, the Minutemen, who he manipulates back into service. Revealed to be secretly working in conjunction with his supposed rival Augustus Medici to slowly dismantle the infamous Trust and bring it down until only Augustus, Grave and their ally Javier Vasco remain, Graves is also revealed to be a man of principle, which separates him from the monstrous Augustus, willing to slect his principles over even his life in the end.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and [[TheChessmaster the one pulling the strings of every other character]]. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who puts into motion a grand and intricate plan to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists the sociopathic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces despite a very large age difference. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus resigns his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen. When confronted by a disgusted Graves over killing his own child, Augustus justifies himself by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.

to:

* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and [[TheChessmaster the one pulling the strings of every other character]]. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who puts into motion a grand and intricate plan to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists the sociopathic WildCard Minuteman Lono [[WildCard Lono]] to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces despite a very large age difference. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus resigns his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen. When confronted by a disgusted Graves over killing his own child, Augustus justifies himself by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.

Changed: 64

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and the one pulling the wires of every other character. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who puts into motion a grand and intricate plan to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists the sociopathic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces despite a very large age difference. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus crosses the MoralEventHorizon by resigning his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen. When confronted by a disgusted Graves over killing his own child, Augustus justifies himself by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.

to:

* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and [[TheChessmaster the one pulling the wires strings of every other character.character]]. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who puts into motion a grand and intricate plan to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists the sociopathic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces despite a very large age difference. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus crosses the MoralEventHorizon by resigning resigns his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen. When confronted by a disgusted Graves over killing his own child, Augustus justifies himself by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.

Changed: 120

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and the one [[DiabolicalMastermind pulling the wires of every other character]]. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who [[TheChessmaster puts into motion a grand and intricate plan]] to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists {{the sociopath}}ic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces [[DirtyOldMan despite a very large age difference]]. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus crosses the MoralEventHorizon by resigning his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately [[KillEmAll kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen]]. When confronted by a [[EvenEvilHasStandards disgusted Graves]] over killing his own child, Augustus [[NeverMyFault justifies himself]] by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.

to:

* CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and the one [[DiabolicalMastermind pulling the wires of every other character]]. character. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who [[TheChessmaster puts into motion a grand and intricate plan]] plan to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists {{the sociopath}}ic the sociopathic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces [[DirtyOldMan despite a very large age difference]]. difference. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus crosses the MoralEventHorizon by resigning his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately [[KillEmAll kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen]]. Minutemen. When confronted by a [[EvenEvilHasStandards disgusted Graves]] Graves over killing his own child, Augustus [[NeverMyFault justifies himself]] himself by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: The first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.

to:

* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: The first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again. Even more odd is that the two gangsters, Bosco and Spain, were introduced in previous volumes (Spain was mentioned in 4) in stories that ran parallel to the main plot, there was a ShaggyDogStory arc running all along.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigLippedAlligatorMoment[=/=]{{Narm}}: The first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.

to:

* BigLippedAlligatorMoment[=/=]{{Narm}}: BigLippedAlligatorMoment: The first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Issue 79, [[spoiler: the death of Wylie Times, the most good-hearted Minuteman and the moral core the story at this point. His death is as pointless as it is tragic, as Remi Rome, in an impulsive haste possibly spurred by his envy of Wylie, shoots him when Wylie reaches for matches, too focused on Cole, who knows Wylie well enough to relax his own guard. Even Graves is utterly horrified, and a dying Wylie is welcomed to the afterlife by his beloved Rose.]] The effect on the Minutemen is startling, as Victor Ray is seen in genuine mourning for the first time, to the point of nearly provoking a fight with a completely unrepentant Remi later.

to:

** Issue 79, [[spoiler: the death of Wylie Times, the most good-hearted Minuteman and the moral core the story at this point. His death is as pointless as it is tragic, as Remi Rome, in an impulsive haste possibly spurred by his envy of Wylie, shoots him when Wylie reaches for matches, too focused on Cole, who knows Wylie well enough to relax his own guard. Even Graves is utterly horrified, and a dying Wylie is welcomed to the afterlife by his beloved Rose.]] The effect on the Minutemen is startling, as Victor Ray is seen in genuine mourning for the first time, to the point of nearly provoking a fight with a completely unrepentant Remi later. Tellingly, the news is enough to enrage short, fat, cowardly Branch to grab the nearest weapon he can and lunge at a ''Minuteman'' with a scream of fury in grief over his friend.

Added: 1242

Changed: 545

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* TearJerker: The scenes in ''Wylie Runs The Voodoo Down'' when Wylie kills [[spoiler:Martin]] and Rose respectively (Rose was in a flashback), the above mentioned fate of [[spoiler:the Rome brothers]], and much of the final issue.
** And [[spoiler:Wylie's death]]. That got me right ''here''.

to:

* TearJerker: The scenes in ''Wylie Runs The Voodoo Down'' when has a plethora of these, namely:
** The death of Martin, who loses his jaw in a bear trap, destroying his talent for his trumpet. After lacking the resolve to shoot himself, Gabe makes Wylie do it. Wylie tells him to close his eyes and picture where he needs to go...and Gabe envisions playing his horn to his beloved April's admiration, just as Wylie, in tears and looking away pulls the trigger.
** Rose's death in a flashback.
Wylie kills [[spoiler:Martin]] the woman he loves on a job, interspliced in dialogue and imagery to his current rage at Shepherd. Wylie executes Rose respectively (Rose was in after a flashback), the above mentioned fate of [[spoiler:the Rome brothers]], and much of the final issue.
kiss and promising her they're going to run away together. After, he cradles her in his arms, whispering he'll love her forever.
** And [[spoiler:Wylie's death]]. That got me right ''here''.Shepherd's reaction to having to make Wylie do the job. As much as Shepherd knows what has to be done, it's clear it's broken his heart as well. In present, he refuses to fight back against Wylie and only has two final words for him when it seems his death is inevitable: "I'm sorry."
** Issue 79, [[spoiler: the death of Wylie Times, the most good-hearted Minuteman and the moral core the story at this point. His death is as pointless as it is tragic, as Remi Rome, in an impulsive haste possibly spurred by his envy of Wylie, shoots him when Wylie reaches for matches, too focused on Cole, who knows Wylie well enough to relax his own guard. Even Graves is utterly horrified, and a dying Wylie is welcomed to the afterlife by his beloved Rose.]] The effect on the Minutemen is startling, as Victor Ray is seen in genuine mourning for the first time, to the point of nearly provoking a fight with a completely unrepentant Remi later.

Added: 54

Changed: 1696

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Approved by the thread.


* CrossesTheLineTwice: "Did you bust a nut when I...?"

to:

* *CompleteMonster: [[BigBad Augustus Medici]] is the most powerful member of [[AncientConspiracy the Trust]] and the one [[DiabolicalMastermind pulling the wires of every other character]]. The Trust is a coalition of thirteen families that secretly founded the United States, but this is not enough for Augustus, who [[TheChessmaster puts into motion a grand and intricate plan]] to take the other members' holdings for himself. Augustus proposes that the Trust and their enforcers, [[CarnivalOfKillers the Minutemen]], take over another country, to which the Minutemen refuse and are marked for death by the Trust. The Minutemen's leader, Agent Philip Graves, secretly working for Augustus, would then lead the Minutemen on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill the Trust members Augustus wanted dead. After Augustus's son Benito is almost killed, Augustus enlists {{the sociopath}}ic WildCard Minuteman Lono to torture and kill another trust head who had a hand in the hit and his heirs, and also orchestrate a [[FalseFlagOperation false flag assassination]] of female Trust head Megan Dietrich, whom Augustus then seduces [[DirtyOldMan despite a very large age difference]]. When a rival Trust head has two of Augustus's key allies killed, Augustus crosses the MoralEventHorizon by resigning his seat in favor of Benito, knowing that [[OffingTheOffspring this will lead to Benito's murder at Megan's hands]] and a power vacuum that ultimately [[KillEmAll kills all the other Trust members and most of the Minutemen]]. When confronted by a [[EvenEvilHasStandards disgusted Graves]] over killing his own child, Augustus [[NeverMyFault justifies himself]] by saying that he didn't ''technically'' make Megan do anything.
*
CrossesTheLineTwice: "Did you bust a nut when I...?"
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigLippedAlligatorMoment[=/=]{{Narm}}: the first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.

to:

* BigLippedAlligatorMoment[=/=]{{Narm}}: the The first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigLippedAlligatorMoment/{{Narm}}: the first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.

to:

* BigLippedAlligatorMoment/{{Narm}}: BigLippedAlligatorMoment[=/=]{{Narm}}: the first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* BigLippedAlligatorMoment/{{Narm}}: the first few issues of Volume 9 have a running subplot about an EscalatingWar between two gangsters in Miami that has nothing to do with the main plot. The things they do to each other get increasingly ridiculous ([[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext "Terry ate your dog.""]]) and it ultimately culminates in one decapitating the other with a katana and the second one's uzi flying through the air, spraying bullets everywhere and killing everyone else in the room. This plot never interacts with the main plot and is never mentioned again.



* UglyCute: Martin/Gabe from the "Wylie Runs the Voodoo Down" arc, a deformed and strangely endearing little guy who's employed as a janitor, but is actually a musical genius.

to:

* UglyCute: Martin/Gabe from the "Wylie Runs the Voodoo Down" arc, a deformed and strangely endearing little guy who's employed as a janitor, but is actually a musical genius.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* UglyCute: Martin/Gabe from the "Wylie Runs the Voodoo Down" arc, a deformed and strangely endearing little guy who's employed as a janitor, but is actually a musical genius.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* DracoInLeatherPants: Azzarello was disturbed to discover that Lono was inexplicably popular among female fans. Keep in mind that the character is, among many other unpleasant things, a misogynistic rapist.

Removed: 663

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CompleteMonster: Lono, known as 'The Dog,' is the most violent and evil member of the squad of hitmen called The Minutemen. Our first introduction to his depravity is when a man hits him with a car to steal Lono's money. Lono's response is to hunt him down and murder him after raping the man's girlfriend for hours out of boredom. A sadist with a penchant for torture, Lono would also castrate a man after torture before presenting him with his sons' severed heads and finishing the job. With many onscreen murders for profit and personal satisfaction, Lono makes even hardened assassins express [[EvenEvilHasStandards moral disgust]] at his psychotic actions.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* EvilIsSexy: Megan and Echo. Some of the minor female Trust members are also pretty hot, but it's not emphasized to the same degree as those two.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* CompleteMonster: Lono, known as 'The Dog,' is the most violent and evil member of the squad of hitmen called The Minutemen. Our first introduction to his depravity is when a man hits him with a car to steal Lono's money. Lono's response is to hunt him down and murder him after raping the man's girlfriend for hours out of boredom. A sadist with a penchant for torture, Lono would also castrate a man after torture before presenting him with his sons' severed heads and finishing the job. With many onscreen murders for profit and personal satisfaction, Lono makes even hardened assassins express [[EvenEvilHasStandards moral disgust]] at his psychotic actions.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* DracoInLeatherPants: Lono. His first appearance is him killing a guy and raping his girlfriend, robbing Loop and walking out.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CrowningMomentOfAwesome:
** Every Minuteman gets at least one.
** Lono [[spoiler:stepping off the bus at the prison, shit-eating-grin and all]].
** Wylie Times gunning down Coochie's entire gang gunsakimbo. While out in the open desert. Without getting hit himself. It all happens off screen, but still.
** Dizzy [[spoiler:going toe to toe with '''Lono''' and holding her damn own.]]
** Loop's {{plan}} in prison.



** Correction: His first appearance is in issue #5, but there he's just some guy in the cafe. But yeah, that whole thing is the first time we see Lono in ACTION.
*** In issue #5, he's a then-unnamed character shooting down a helicopter. The cafe scene, wherein he's formally introduced, comes later.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Zapping X Just X


** Loop's XanatosGambit in prison.

to:

** Loop's XanatosGambit {{plan}} in prison.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* FridgeBrilliance: The fact that the Trust is composed of '''13''' families initially just seems like a detail added in to make them seem more evil (because, y'know...'''13''' is an unlucky number). Then we find out that the Trust were the real founders of the United States--a nation that started out as a union of '''13''' colonies. One colony for each house of the Trust.

Top