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1!'''This page contains unmarked spoilers for ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'' and ''Film/{{Split}}''. Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned!'''
2[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/d6956cf5ba05b4c34695e1e8420a1a79.jpg]]
3[[caption-width-right:350:''[[TagLine You cannot contain what you are.]]'']]
4->''"Everything we will see and do will have a basis in science. But it will have limits. This is the real world, not a cartoon. And yet some of us don't die from bullets. Some of us can still bend steel. That is not a fantasy."''
5-->-- '''Mr. Glass'''
6
7''Glass'' is a psychological superhero thriller film. It is the crossover sequel to both 2000's ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'' and 2017's ''Film/{{Split}}'', directed and written like them by Creator/MNightShyamalan, and stars Creator/BruceWillis as David Dunn/The Overseer, Creator/SamuelLJackson as Elijah Price/Mr. Glass, Creator/JamesMcAvoy as Kevin Wendell Crumb/The Horde, Creator/AnyaTaylorJoy as Casey Cooke, Spencer Treat Clark as Joseph Dunn, Creator/CharlayneWoodard as Ms. Price and Creator/SarahPaulson as Dr. Ellie Staple. It was released on January 18, 2019.
8
9The Overseer tries to stay one step ahead of the law while delivering vigilante justice on the streets of Philadelphia. His special abilities soon put him on a collision course with the Beast – a psychotic madman who has superhuman strength and 23 distinct personalities. Their encounter leads them to Mr. Glass, a criminal mastermind who holds critical secrets for both men.
10
11Also notable for the fact that Creator/UniversalPictures and Creator/{{Disney}} have produced and distributed the movie together, with Disney using the Buena Vista International brand for the release of the film.
12
13'''Previews:''' [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=95ghQs5AmNk Trailer 1]] ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AD1V61gy-Y preview 1]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zNINvh0eMc preview 2]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4GKU1tpQ1Y preview 3]]), [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7ztHi9ejp4&t=79s Trailer 2]].
14
15[[SimilarlyNamedWorks Has nothing to do]] with the InteractiveFiction [[VideoGame/Glass2006 retelling]] of ''Literature/{{Cinderella}}'' by Creator/EmilyShort, or the ''Franchise/YuGiOh'' [[Fanfic/GlassBellamyTaft fanfic]].
16----
17!!''Glass'' contains examples of:
18* AbandonedHospital: Although the asylum was not abandoned in the film itself, some of the asylum scenes have the look, with long dark corridors and empty space. The scenes were filmed in the actual abandoned (and since demolished) Allentown State Hospital, a former mental hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
19* AboveGoodAndEvil: [[spoiler: The AncientConspiracy]] considers itself this. Ironically, the things it does firmly establish it's the greatest evil of all in the setting.
20-->'''[[spoiler:Dr. Staple]]:''' [[spoiler:They got it wrong in the comics. They talk about secret evil groups trying to stop the heroes. I don't think we are particularly evil, and we don't choose sides. We try to stop both of you. If there is one of you, the opposite of you appears. It escalates. We step in. There just can't be gods amongst us.]]
21* AbsurdlyYouthfulMother: Once again, Charlayne Woodard as Mr. Glass' mother. Woodard is five years younger than Samuel L. Jackson. This is because most of her scenes in ''Unbreakable'' were flashbacks to Mr. Glass' youth, and only had one scene in the present day.
22* ActionizedSequel: Both prior films were mostly slow burns with only one or two actual "action" scenes. While this film retains the psychological thriller elements, the action quotient is heightened.
23* ActorAllusion: This is yet another M. Night film with Bruce Willis, so of course, he threw in a subtle reference to Bruce Willis in ''Film/TheSixthSense'' (trying to talk to a vision of his dead wife), but he also added a major reference to Bruce Willis as John [=McClane=] in ''Film/DieHard'' (the villain's scheme is [[spoiler: to suggest a fake terrorist plot against a large corporation tower]]).
24* AncientConspiracy: [[spoiler:There is a group of people that has spent millennia enforcing the {{Masquerade}}, and killing or imprisoning superhumans whenever they start attracting attention. Dr. Staple claims they have been doing this for ''10,000 years''. Deconstructed in that TheReveal explains that they're [[WellIntentionedExtremist Well Intentioned Extremists]] that view the existence of superpowered people as fundamentally unfair to ordinary people and want to prevent a BewareTheSuperman scenario from happening.]]
25* AllForNothing: [[spoiler:The ancient conspiracy has spent ten thousand years trying to uphold the masquerade, and everything they have done to preserve it has been destroyed by a single video.]]
26* {{Anticlimax}}: Seemingly an InvokedTrope. [[spoiler:Rather than any kind of standard heroic death scene, the Overseer is unceremoniously drowned in a puddle, as superhuman ability aside, he’s still just an old man being faced with his greatest weakness.]]
27* ArchetypalCharacter: Both The Overseer, The Horde, and Mr. Glass end up played as archetypal figures for larger-than-life figures in comic books. [[spoiler:The end implies they'll end up as the "founding myths/archetypes" for a new era of superheroes and supervillains.]]
28* ArcWelding: The ending of ''Split'' revealed that it was a SharedUniverse with ''Unbreakable'', but it wasn't until then that the Overseer was aware of the Horde's existence. Now, the Overseer is actively hunting him down. [[spoiler:It also turns out that Kevin's father was killed in the same train crash that Mr. Glass engineered to reveal the Overseer's powers.]]
29* ArmorPiercingQuestion: Dr. Staple, in an attempt to convince The Overseer, The Horde, and Mr. Glass that they couldn't possibly have superpowers, asks them why there's only three of them in the whole world. This is devastating enough that even the Overseer and some of the Horde start to doubt their powers. [[spoiler:The answer: because the AncientConspiracy kills them all.]]
30* TheBadGuyWins: [[spoiler:PlayedWith. While Mr. Glass posthumously succeeds in his BrokenMasquerade, his villainy had already been eclipsed by the CapeBusters AncientConspiracy by that point, making it feel like a more heroic aim. The same can be said for the AncientConspiracy; as while they basically get away with successfully killing the Overseer, the Horde, and Mr. Glass, their main goal to hide the existence of superhumans is foiled by Mr. Glass outwitting them.]]
31* BeingGoodSucks: Dr. Staple is able to get the Overseer to surrender to the police at the beginning by pointing out to him that, while he might be able to get away, [[ChronicHeroSyndrome he'd have to hurt innocent police officers to do so.]]
32* BewareTheSuperman:
33** Carried over from ''Split'', the Beast is depicted as this in contrast to the Overseer. A direct contrast is made between the Overseer pushing a group of riot police into a a cargo container and nonlethally trapping them for their own safety...with the Beast being likewise confronted with a group of riot police and slaughtering them with his bare hands.
34** [[spoiler:This trope is also deconstructed, with the AncientConspiracy all but said to be so paranoid about this trope coming to pass that they gaslight and kill ''anyone'', heroic or villainous, who develops superpowers.]]
35* BigBad:
36** Mr. Glass and the Horde/Beast begin a VillainTeamUp, acting as the movie's BigBadDuumvirate.
37** [[spoiler:The climax unveils Dr. Staple as the real main antagonist—as she's acting on behalf of an AncientConspiracy seeking to prevent the rise of superhumans.]]
38* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler:On one hand, Mr. Glass, the Overseer, and the Horde are dead at the hands of an AncientConspiracy that's dedicated to keeping superheroes and supervillains from the public eye. Ms. Price has lost her son, Casey lost a friend, and Joseph is now an orphan due to losing his mom and now his father. On the other hand, the AncientConspiracy failed, as Mr. Glass was able to leak footage of the climactic fight to the public with the help of Joseph, Casey, and his mother, thereby ruining the conspiracy's 10,000-year plan in a single bound and ushering in an era of true blue heroes and villains.]]
39* BookEnds:
40** Not counting flashbacks, the entire trilogy began when the Overseer was taking a train back to Philadelphia, with the resulting crash secretly awakening a superhero [[spoiler:and a supervillain]]. This film ends with [[spoiler:Casey, Joseph, and Ms. Price sitting in the Philadelphia train station and being responsible for superheroes being known to the general public. As this happens, the sound of a train stopping can be heard, symbolising a chapter closing on the Overseer, the Horde, and Mr. Glass, and a new one opening for those who are inspired by their actions]].
41** The endings of ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'' and this film involved the Overseer [[spoiler:shaking hands with a hidden villain and learning about their past crimes. Before, it was with Mr. Glass, and the shock caused him to call the authorities and arrest that man. Now, he finds out that Dr. Staple is part of a group that kills off super-powered beings, [[DroppedABridgeOnHim but he fatally ends up at the mercy of his water weakness]] to do anything that can stop her misdeeds]].
42** Joseph's arc in ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'' ended with the Overseer subtly telling Joseph that he has embraced being a superhero, and shushes Joseph to prevent him from telling anybody else about his first superhero foray. His arc in this movie concludes with him [[spoiler:broadcasting sent videos depicting the battle between the Overseer and the Horde to the general public]]. To hammer the point home, there is a flashback of the aforementioned ''Unbreakable'' moment, just seconds before [[spoiler:Joseph does the deed]].
43* BreakThemByTalking: [[spoiler:Dr. Staple's specialty. She gives rational, logical explanations for various superpowers that cause the super-people to doubt themselves. She doles them out to Joseph, too, when he tries to convince her that his dad is wrongly imprisoned]].
44* BrokenMasquerade: [[spoiler:At the end of the movie, Joseph, Casey, and Ms. Price complete Mr. Glass's plan and blow the {{Masquerade}} wide open by broadcasting multiple recordings of the battle at the mental hospital.]]
45* BrutalBrawl: The fights between the Overseer and the Beast, rather than being slick and highly choreographed like in a modern superhero film, consist of the two of them using heavy punches, slams, and attempts to choke one another out. They are, after all, two [[UnskilledButStrong completely untrained people who both get by on the fact they have super strength]].
46* BullyingADragon: Pierce ''knows'' that Mr. Glass is an insane criminal mastermind responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people, and yet thinks being condescending to him at best and abusive at worst is a good idea. [[spoiler:Mr. Glass makes sure Pierce has a very messy, very ''final'', meeting with the Beast.]]
47* CallBack:
48** The Overseer freeing the four cheerleaders chained to pipes is very similar to when [[Film/{{Unbreakable}} he freed two children, who were similarly chained by the Orange Suit man]].
49** When Joseph is musing on the lie that the Overseer's powers are a delusion, he ruefully looks at a weightlifter in his school, referencing the Overseer's increasingly heavy bench pressing in ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}''.
50** As his [[spoiler:last words]], Mr. Glass declares "I wasn't a mistake, mama", which is a call back to one of his final lines in Film/{{Unbreakable}} ("I'm not a mistake!").
51* CapeBusters: [[spoiler:The AncientConspiracy, which includes Dr. Staple, focuses on eliminating superhumans at large, be they supervillains or superheroes.]]
52* ColdOpen: Manages to do both a VillainOpeningScene and a BatmanColdOpen. The film starts with Patricia approaching kidnapped cheerleaders in her disarming manner, and jumps into a series of credits. Then it shows some violent guys videotaping themselves beating up random people, where the Overseer confronts them at home. Cue opening title.
53* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Like in ''Unbreakable'', all three main characters have a distinctive color they're associated with, to continue the superhero and supervillain theme. As seen on the poster above, the Overseer is green, Mr. Glass is purple, and the Beast is mustard yellow. This also extends to those associated with the characters; Joseph wears a green jacket, Ms. Price wears a purple sweater, and Casey wears a red, white, and yellow [[note]]The three colors the Horde wears in the opening[[/note]] blazer. Noteworthy that [[spoiler:Dr. Staple is almost always wearing a muted grey in contrast to the more vivid colors associated with the three main characters, hinting at her more significant role opposing them.]]
54* ComicBookTime: Hinted at in a conversation between Hedwig and Dr. Staple. Hedwig is supposed to be nine years old, and presumably has been ever since he first manifested in the Horde's body however long ago. Dr. Staple pressures on him the absurdity that he is really nine years old, saying his life experiences has to compound.
55* ContinuityNod: Shyamalan's CreatorCameo brings up that he was the drug dealer at the stadium in ''Unbreakable'', who the Overseer approaches for a pat-down, and Jai, Dr. Fletcher's building manager from ''Split'', and mentioning that he was looking for added security because "one of the tenants was killed off site."
56** Casey wears a Philadelphia Zoo workers jacket, the same one given to her when found at the climax of ''Film/{{Split}}''.
57** One of the documents that Dr. Staple has is [[Film/{{Split}} Dr. Fletcher's note detailing how to stop the Beast]].
58--->''[[IKnowYourTrueName Say his name - Kevin Wendell Crumb]]''
59* ContrivedCoincidence: The train crash that revealed the Overseer to Mr. Glass in the first place also, seemingly by accident, created the Horde, by killing Kevin's father and leaving him in the care of his abusive mother. Him developing superpowers and becoming the Horde and the Beast as a result was probably not supposed to be part of the original plan for Mr. Glass.
60* CoolOldGuy: The Overseer is nearing 60 by the time of this film. However, this doesn’t seem to have slowed him down in the slightest. Having super strength and super health probably helps too.
61* CooldownHug: Emulating the comic book use of this trope, [[spoiler:Casey making physical contact with The Horde manages to instigate Kevin to return to the light, despite the fact the other personalities typically overpower him]].
62* TheCowl: The Overseer's style of superheroics, being a dark, shadowy figure who finds people that have already commited violent crimes and punishes them for it, quite unlike what Mr. Glass was hoping for. Incidentally, also the style of the Overlord's costume, which is a poncho.
63* CreatorCameo: M. Night Shyamalan appears as a customer at the Overseer's shop. This is also a CallBack to ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'', as the Overseer recognizes him and Night states he's gone legit and cleaned up. The end credits reveal he was Jai, from ''Film/{{Split}}'', making he and the Overseer the only characters who have appeared in all films of the trilogy.
64* CreepyChild: The Horde's Hedwig personality, shown roller skating around the captured cheerleaders happily talking about the Beast coming to eat them.
65* {{Crossover}}: TheStinger of ''Split'' featured a cameo of the Overseer, establishing a [[SharedUniverse shared continuity]] with ''Unbreakable''. The main characters of both films all appear in ''Glass''.
66* CurbStompBattle: Riot police confront the Beast. The end result is a lot of dead police and the Beast without any visible injury.
67* DeadlyHug: The Beast's preferred FinishingMove.
68* DecoyProtagonist: [[spoiler:The marketing and opening of the movie heavily imply the Overseer is the protagonist, fighting the antagonist, the Beast. The actual protagonist is the titular Mr. Glass, and his goal is to defeat the AncientConspiracy and reveal heroes to the world.]]
69* DoingInTheWizard: Dr. Staple offers plausible explanations for the characters' more outlandish abilities, and it's convincing enough that the Overseer and the Horde begin doubting themselves. Mr. Glass counters that yes, everything they are capable of is based in science and reality, but that doesn't make them any less extraordinary.
70* DontCreateAMartyr: The less altruistic aspect of [[spoiler:Dr. Staple's work. Gaslighting superhumans into believing they don't have powers avoids the possibility of creating martyrs. Unfortunately for her, Mr. Glass creates a triple whammy of himself, the Overseer, and the Horde at the ending]].
71* DoubleMeaningTitle: The name ''Glass'' is both the supervillainous identity of Mr. Glass ("First name: Mister. Last name: Glass.") and thematically similar to the names of the previous films, ''Unbreakable'' and ''Split'', which are related to the theme of "broken" people.
72* TheDreaded: The Overseer has made a name for himself; in the BatmanColdOpen, he breaks into the home of some violent thugs and one mentions in terror "It's you!"
73** The Horde is also ''terrified'' of the Overseer. Since the whole point of the Beast is to be stronger than anyone, the alters finding out there's someone even ''stronger'' than that causes the normally unflappable Patricia to visibly worry in the asylum.
74* DroppedABridgeOnHim: The Overseer [[spoiler:is killed in an entirely anticlimactic way via simple drowning, as he is still UnskilledButStrong, is still recovering from nearly drowning in the tank, and is faced with people prepared for his abilities]].
75* DyingAsYourself: [[spoiler:At the end, Casey helps the Beast revert back to Kevin through gentleness and compassion. A sniper uses that opportunity to shoot him in the chest while he is no longer NighInvulnerable. The other personalities take over and try to say their LastWords, but Kevin manages to regain control and is determined to hold on to the light.]]
76* EvasiveFightThreadEpisode: Put up against each other, neither the Overseer or the Beast are quite able to get the advantage over the other. The Overseer seems to have a more practiced and precise form of fighting, while the Beast is [[TheBerserker a berserker]] who stays ahead primarily through dexterity and speed. [[spoiler:The Beast throws the Overseer into the water tank and tries to drown him, but the Overseer holds him off long enough to punch his way out and they spill out into the lawn. Both are winded, but any attempt to continue is interrupted.]]
77* EvenEvilHasStandards:
78** The Beast doesn't kill the homeless and the disabled. Why would he, they are broken and thus pure. He even likens himself to them.
79** The Beast also objects [[spoiler:to Mr. Glass causing the abuse of Kevin by engineering the train crash that killed his father and left Kevin in the 'care' of his abusive mother. Mr. Glass feels the full extent of that ire]].
80** [[spoiler:And Dr. Staple objects to the killing of superhumans and would rather they were made to think they were normal, rather than made dead.]]
81** [[spoiler:Dennis draws the line at destroying a skyscraper, not wanting to butcher that many people. He gets shut out of the light for his trouble.]]
82* EvilCripple: Mr. Glass, as already established. While ''Unbreakable'' shows him getting hurt and put into a wheelchair for the rest of the film, this movie shows he has taken to using a wheelchair permanently.
83* EvilGloating: [[spoiler:On a rewatch, it becomes clear that that's what Dr. Staple is doing whenever she takes the time to list the ways that each prisoner's cell is designed to contain them.]]
84* EvilIsHammy: It's as if the Beast was doing a [[Film/SupermanII General Zod]] impression when pronouncing "{{KNEEL|before Zod}}!"
85* FaceHeelTurn: In ''Split'', the Horde consisted of Dennis, Hedwig, and Patricia, who had evil intentions and helped bring out the Beast, but the other personalities were benign and would try to fight against them whenever possible. In this film, none of the personalities like being locked up and are confrontational with Dr. Staple and the orderlies. Notably, [[ValleyGirl Jade]] is shown trying to make a clever escape (flirting with Daryl and positioning him directly in front of the lights to give her a fighting chance). After meeting with Mr. Glass, Patricia says that ten of the personalities are now in agreement, which only makes the Horde more dangerous.
86* FiveSecondForeshadowing: After [[spoiler:Kevin is shot by a sniper]], the camera pans to focus on a clover tattoo on the wrist of the latter. Another policeman with the same tattoo [[spoiler:drowns David in a deep puddle of water]]. Moments later, [[spoiler:it is revealed that this tattoo is the mark of the AncientConspiracy that suppresses the existence of superhumans]].
87* {{Foreshadowing}}:
88** At several points in the story, people question the fact that if superhumans really exist, then why there are only just three of them. [[spoiler:The answer is because there is a powerful AncientConspiracy that makes it its work to kill or neutralize any super that draws the attention of the world.]]
89** Observant viewers will note that [[spoiler:for all of Dr. Staple's talk about how she doesn't believe they're superheroes, she puts multiple safeguards in place, like a steel door and waterpump for the Overseer, to keep them from escaping, despite the fact there'd be ''no reason'' to if they were normal. She also refuses to shake hands with the Overseer... until it's too late]].
90** Similar to the above, [[spoiler:Dr. Staple never takes the easy way out and simply ''asks'' them to demonstrate their powers]].
91** In a DeletedScene taken from ''Film/{{Unbreakable}}'' and used for this movie during Mr. Glass' [[spoiler:self-sabotaged laser surgery]], Mr. Glass tried a carnival ride as a child. Because of his brittle bone disease, he decides to put a big stuffed teddy and lion on each side of his seat, to cushion him. However, as the ride gets faster, the stuffed animals fall off and he is flung onto his left shoulder, breaking that first. More collisions occur afterwards, breaking more of his bones. They actually tell us [[spoiler:how Mr. Glass dies. Firstly, Joseph informs the Beast that Kevin's father died in the same Eastrail 177 train disaster that Mr. Glass orchestrated to find super-powered beings. Like the stuffed lion lost in that carnival ride, Mr. Glass loses the Beast's trust in him in one fell swoop. As retaliation, the Beast crushes Mr. Glass' left shoulder with his hand, referencing the first aforementioned carnival ride injury. And then, to continue his fight with the Overseer, the Beast shoves Mr. Glass back hard, rupturing Mr. Glass' organs. Finally, Mr. Glass tries to get off his wheelchair, but falls and breaks more bones in the process, sealing his fate]].
92** When Casey goes to a comic shop to get some comics, the owner of the shop (who's [[CallBack played by the same actor who yelled at Mr. Glass to get out of the comics store in ''Unbreakable'']]), he mentions how superheroes in comics pretty much all started when ComicBook/{{Superman}} picked up a car with his bare hands. [[spoiler:During the climax of the movie, the Beast does the same when dealing with the riot police and with that footage, it leads to the age of supers coming into the public.]]
93** A subtle blink and you'll miss it foreshadow. The shot of the water tank outside of the hospital is framed in a strange way where you see part of the parking lot earlier in the film, including a pot hole with a construction guard marking it. [[spoiler:During the final climax, that pot hole, full of water from the tank being popped open, is used to drown the Overseer.]]
94* {{Gaslighting}}: [[spoiler:Dr. Staple's life work revolves around convincing people with superhuman powers that their abilities aren't real and it is all in their heads. She considers this a more humane alternative to simply killing them.]] The method is so effective that [[spoiler:in a matter of days, the Overseer and the Horde were beginning to doubt their own powers]].
95* GenreSavvy: Almost every named character is or becomes conversant in the tropes of superhero comics, using them to guide their actions or to explain their reality.
96* GoodIsNotSoft: The Overseer tracks down people who have done bad things and finds some way to enact justice. Sometimes it's just beating them up.
97* GoryDiscretionShot: We don't get to see the details when [[spoiler:the Beast pummels Pierce to death]].
98* GrandFinale: The film is intended to be the closing chapter of M. Night Shyamalan's trilogy of movies based on superheroes and supervillains.
99* HeelFaceDoorSlam: [[spoiler:In one of the most brutal examples, just as Casey manages to reach out to Kevin and he finally has the Beast and his other personalities under control, a sniper shoots him, and without the invulnerability of the Beast, he seems to take the shot like a normal human.]]
100* TheHeroDies: [[spoiler:PlayedWith. While the Overseer dies (followed by Mr. Glass and then the Horde), the ending seems to set up Casey, Joseph, and Ms. Price as new protagonists for TheUnmasquedWorld.]]
101* HollywoodLaw:
102** Dr. Staple leads the police to the Overseer and the Horde, has them stunned unconscious and dragged off to an insane asylum under her care with absolutely no trial or lawyers or any due process, and not even the Overseer's son (who, granted, might be worried about being labeled an accomplice) seeks any legal recourse other than going to the doctor and pleading her to let his dad go. [[spoiler:Granted, the existence of the Shamrock conspiracy might help explain this, as any judges or lawyers might be in on it, but given that the Overseer is a well known hero, even being known as a local hero outside of his superheroics, and nobody seems to even think about the plainly criminal lengths Dr. Staple went to capture and detain him, it still fits this trope.]]
103** [[spoiler: Her decision to give Mr. Glass a lobotomy is completely unethical and illegal as well, but again the Shamrock conspiracy would mean that legality wasn't high on her list of priorities; the bigger issue is that nobody else, including the seemingly ignorant staff at the hospital, call her out on this.]]
104* HyperAwareness: Dr. Staple tries convincing the Overseer that his TouchTelepathy is actually more a subconscious analysis of the situation, comparing it to mentalist magicians. The Overseer questions that reasoning, as it assumes a completely different thought process than what actually goes through his head.
105* IdiotBall: With 24 personalities to do the thinking for the Horde, you would have thought that at least one would have come up with the idea of negating the light flash apparatus by ''shutting his eyes really tight, wrapping some clothing around his eyes, and clamping both hands tightly over his eyes'' — any light bright enough to penetrate two hands, clothing, and eyelids would be bright enough to burn, and he clearly wasn't burned by the light. This would have got him past the line and allowed him to destroy the lights, allowing the Beast to break out of the cell proper.
106* IHaveManyNames: News and social media nicknames for the Overseer's superheroic identity are mentioned. For a time they called him the Green Guardian, before landing on the Overseer. One that was proposed but didn't get traction, to his relief, was "[[EmbarrassingNickname the Tip Toe Man]]" (presumably due to how quietly he walks).
107* JuxtaposedReflectionPoster: The teaser poster shows the three main characters of the trilogy: The Overseer, Mr. Glass, and The Horde, seated on chairs from the neck down, in their civilian identities. Their reflections show their "true selves", the Overseer, Glass, and the Beast, standing up and looking intimidating.
108* KansasCityShuffle: [[spoiler:The crux of Mr. Glass' plan to outwit the AncientConspiracy. He spends most of the film acting like his ultimate endgame is to have the Overseer and the Beast fight in public at the Osaka Tower, allowing Dr. Staple to intercept and kill them all before they even make it off the sanitarium grounds. By the time Dr. Staple realizes she's been had and the real plan was to upload a video of the final fight to the internet using the sanitarium's own security cameras, it's far too late.]]
109* KarmaHoudini: SubvertedTrope. [[spoiler:While Dr. Staple and her partners seem to get away with full-blown murder (especially in the Overseer’s case), Mr. Glass managed to outsmart Dr. Staple and her organization, leaking the battle between the Beast and the Overseer, both toppling their whole conspiracy and presumably leading to a thorough investigation into their cover-ups and the murders that they have been committing.]]
110* KilledToUpholdTheMasquerade: [[spoiler:The Overseer, the Beast, and Mr. Glass are all killed by the AncientConspiracy in order to cover up the fact that superhumans exist. [[MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning Mr. Glass makes sure that it fails.]]]]
111* KneelBeforeZod: It's mentioned twice that the "unbroken" are expected to kneel before the Beast.
112* KryptoniteFactor: As established in ''Unbreakable'', the Overseer still needs air to breathe and sinks like a rock in water. With the Horde, bright flashes of light can trigger a random alter to take control, preventing the Beast from keeping the light for long or otherwise allowing the alters to coordinate an escape (which only works at night or in indoor conditions, as existing outdoor light nullifies the effect).
113* LateArrivalSpoiler: ''Split'' is a sequel to ''Unbreakable'', and this is the third film of the trilogy. At the time it was released, ''Split'' was a StealthSequel.
114* LegacyLaunch: During the climax, Ms. Price observes how the story is deviating from the formula established by "[[CrisisCrossover limited editions]]", and Mr. Glass can only smile and respond "Oh, Mama... this is not a limited edition. This was an origin story the whole time." [[spoiler:We are later shown that what he means is effectively a in-universe LegacyLaunch: The Overseer, The Horde, and Mr. Glass all die, but their deaths act as a cataclysm/origin story for the rise of several other supers carrying their legacy.]]
115* LetsYouAndHimFight: Mr. Glass's goal is to force the Overseer to fight the Beast in front of the world, showing people the truth about superheroes. [[spoiler:He succeeds.]]
116* ALighterShadeOfBlack: [[spoiler:Mr. Glass vs the AncientConspiracy. Both of them are {{Well Intentioned Extremist}}s and mass murderers, but whereas Glass has killed people in major incidents to expose the existence of people with super abilities, hoping to create superheroes for the greater good of humankind, the Conspiracy has been doing this to suppress the superheroes for ''10,000 years''. Ultimately, Mr. Glass succeeds in tearing down their entire operation in a single swoop thanks to a video of the Overseer vs the Beast.]]
117* TheLostLenore: Audrey Dunn died five years prior due to cancer. The Overseer imagines still seeing her sometimes; we see a glimpse of him seeming about to tell her about his superheroics, but don't know if this is a {{Flashback}}, or an ImagineSpot, or even something about his vision powers.
118* MagneticPlotDevice: Mr. Glass is implied to be this, as he has somehow masterminded things, resulting in the whole world seeing, for the first time, a superhero fighting a similarly super-powered supervillain.
119* MassSuperEmpoweringEvent:
120** The ending shows Casey, Joseph, and Ms Price sat on a bench, watching crowds of normal people, [[spoiler: while news reports show on large public screens, discussing the leaked video of The Overseer, confirming it was real, and observing that there has been a mass break-out of inmates from Raven Hill, as supers awakened by witnessing the battle between the Overseer and the Horde, both in person at the asylum and by observing the footage being shown]].
121* MissionControl: In the time since we last saw him, the Overseer started up a business selling and advising on security systems with his son Joseph. Joseph has a computer station in the back where he looks up and tracks potential targets for the Overseer to look into, and the Overseer's poncho has a microphone letting him communicate with Joseph in real time.
122* MookHorrorShow: In his BatmanColdOpen, the Overseer tracks down some violent guys and they are alerted to someone entering from the back door. One goes to investigate and all we hear is a scuffle and see them thrown into the wall. As he emerges from around the corner the other guy is terrified and the Overseer slams off the light switch.
123* MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning: [[spoiler:Mr. Glass]] pulls one of hell of a [[XanatosGambit Xanatos]]/ThanatosGambit at the end of the film wherein [[spoiler: his plan to stage a very public fight at the Osaka Tower would expose the world to supermen and women and inspire more heroes in the end (achieving his goal), but thanks to all of the security cameras he has set up, stopping that plan completely tanks the AncientConspiracy that has been trying to hide them all these years, achieving his goal]].
124* NewEraSpeech: [[spoiler:In Mr. Glass' emails sent to Joseph, Casey, and Ms. Price, not only are there recordings of the Beast and the Overseer, there is a message from Mr. Glass.]]
125-->''"[[spoiler:There are unknown forces that don't want us to realise what we are truly capable of. They don't want us to know the things we suspect are extraordinary about ourselves are real. I believe that if everyone sees what just a few people become when they wholly embrace their gifts, others will awaken. Belief in oneself is contagious. We give each other permission to be superheroes. We will never awaken otherwise. Whoever these people are who don't want us to know the truth, today, they lose.]]"''
126* NightmareOfNormality: The crux of the trio's stay in the psychiatric hospital, being compelled into believing that they are ordinary human beings with mental illnesses.
127* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: [[spoiler:The poor Overseer gets smacked with this throughout the movie. In going after the Horde and saving the girls he had abducted, he ends up getting taken to a psychiatric hospital. Then, when he breaks out to stop Mr. Glass and the Horde from destroying Osaka Tower, he ends up being cold-bloodedly murdered by the secret society]].
128* NoSell: In their first encounter, the Beast tries to crush the Overseer the same way he did Dr. Fletcher, to no effect. In fact, almost none of his attacks hurt the Overseer at all, who can catch a table without even flinching and throw it back (causing the Beast to need to take a step back to catch it in turn) and seemingly casually walk the Beast over to a window to throw them both out of it into the street below, all demonstrating how the Overseer is ''significantly'' stronger than the Beast in raw power.
129* NotAllowedToGrowUp: Dr. Staple brings this to Hedwig's attention, almost something of a HannibalLecture. He is supposed to be nine years old but has been as long as he has existed. She affirms that his stated age doesn't align with his life experiences. Played with later when Mr. Glass calls always being able to see the world through the eyes of a child a power in its own right.
130* ObfuscatingInsanity: [[spoiler:Mr. Glass pretends to be virtually catatonic. In reality, he's anything but, and has been playing the asylum staff for years.]]
131* OhCrap:
132** Joseph and Mr. Glass both have this expression when they find out that [[spoiler:Kevin's dad died in the same train accident that the Overseer was in]], at separate occasions. For the latter, he even drops the documents that he was reading.
133** Mr. Glass has another one when [[spoiler:the Beast turns towards him in utter rage, angry that the former unintentionally killed the latter's father and caused Kevin to suffer his mother's abuse]].
134** Dr. Staple also has one when [[spoiler:she overheard some comic book nerds saying that the mastermind ''always'' has a secondary plan. She realizes that Mr. Glass has been playing her by having her install more cameras to keep an eye on him, allowing him to send the recording of the Overseer and the Beast's battle to the internet for the world to see]].
135* OlderHeroVsYoungerVillain: The Overseer is much older than the Horde. (On the other hand, Bruce Willis is also six years younger than Samuel L. Jackson.)
136** [[spoiler:The Overseer has a good 20 years on Dr. Staple, the true villain of the story.]]
137* OmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: [[spoiler:The [[AncientConspiracy Shamrock conspiracy]] has meetings by taking over a restaurant, waiting for non-affiliated patrons leave, and then beginning proceedings. One wonders about the restaurant ''staff'', but we're shown them doing this twice (once in a flashback), so it seems to be S.O.P.]]
138* OnceMoreWithClarity: Twice.
139** [[spoiler:After Dr. Staple finds out about Mr. Glass' visit to the Horde and immediately orders laser surgery on the former's brain, it appears that the surgical laser was malfunctioning. When his surgery is therefore delayed, a still-sane Mr. Glass [[SlashedThroat slices a mental health worker in the neck with a shard of glass]], and it is revealed that he ''wanted'' to be seen in the surveillance cameras, and had already removed a major component in the laser machine beforehand to avoid losing his mind]].
140** In the denouement, [[spoiler: Dr. Staple visits a comic book shop and overhears some geeks talking about how the master criminal [[XanatosGambit always has a secondary plan]]. This makes her revisit the hospital, only to learn that setting up cameras all over the campus to keep an eye on Mr. Glass was exactly what he was hoping she would do. He rigged the system to stream all CCTV footage into a private server, and eventually send it to Joseph, Casey, and his mother so they can leak the entire superhero battle to the public (which they do)]].
141* OneManArmy:
142** The Overseer is shown shoving an entire line of riot-gear police into a cargo container by himself, demonstrating the level of SuperStrength he possesses.
143** The Beast is shown ripping a SWAT team apart with his bare hands with ease.
144* OnlyICanKillHim: The Overseer states he's the only one that can stop the Beast and Mr. Glass. And it's quite evident he's right, as the riot police who try to stop the Beast are effortlessly slaughtered by him.
145* OutGambitted: [[spoiler:Glass uses Dr. Staple's own security and precautions to not only beat her, but completely destroy the so-called balance she was helping to maintain.]]
146* PlausibleDeniability: One key facet of the plot is that the actual superpowers of the Overseer, Mr. Glass, and the Horde, can be explained away as CharlesAtlasSuperpower, HyperAwareness, or otherwise some form of mundane answer. Dr. Staple is able to make both the Horde briefly doubt themselves, while Mr. Glass later asserts that you can always just "explain away" their gifts, but that doesn't mean it isn't true. [[spoiler:Dr. Staple turns out to belong to an AncientConspiracy whose goal is to eliminate the truth of superhumans from the public, as them having super-powers is "not fair on the rest of us."]]
147* PlotTwist: [[spoiler:An AncientConspiracy that kills supers exists and Dr. Staple is part of it, who kill the Overseer and the Horde.]]
148* PoliceBrutality: Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:the Overseer and the Horde]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
149* PrecursorHero / PredecessorVillain: The ending of the film shows that [[spoiler:the Overseer and the Horde (and possibly Mr. Glass) will end up as the precursor hero and predecessor villain to a new generation of supers that will rise in their wake]].
150* {{Reconstruction}}: ''Unbreakable'' was a deconstruction of the comic book genre, holding it to a real world setting and with real world consequences. Before becoming the Overseer, "David Dunn" was strong but didn't know how strong because [[StrongAsTheyNeedToBe he never pushed beyond what regular humans do]], and his TouchTelepathy was dismissed for just good intuition. ''Split'' approached the premise from a different angle (that of a {{Supervillain}}), but this film revisits the end of Unbreakable, really embracing comic book trappings the way that ending had done, while still holding to realism. Mr. Glass more fully embraces being a DiabolicalMastermind, deceiving and misdirecting the people around him while using his immense intellect to cause havoc.
151* RedHerringTwist: [[spoiler:The opening of the Osaka Tower that features prominently in the background of many scenes and which Mr. Glass claims will be the target of his master plan. The Tower is never visited and it turns out to be a red herring in-universe as well.]]
152* RememberTheNewGuy: [[spoiler:The AncientConspiracy has existed for 10,000 years and is introduced at the end of this film. Despite this, nothing in the previous two films suggested their existence at all.]]
153* {{Revenge}}: [[spoiler:It's hinted that part of Joseph's motive for sending out the footage he had received from Mr. Glass was to make the AncientConspiracy pay for [[YouKilledMyFather murdering his father]].]]
154* RevisedEnding: According to Samuel L. Jackson, the film originally had a very different ending that needed to be changed due to RealLifeWritesThePlot. Whether or not this ending will ever be made available is unknown.
155* RuleOfThree: Noticeably in the dynamic of the three hero/villain characters — the Overseer, Mr. Glass, the Horde - and in the three supporting loved ones/allies — Joseph, Ms. Price, Casey. [[spoiler:It is also symbolized by the three-leaf clover mark of the AncientConspiracy, reflecting the common clover representing people trying to stop superhumans from ever going public.]]
156* SerialEscalation: ''Split'' had the Horde display 7 personalities, despite being said to have 24. This film increases the number of personalities [=McAvoy=] has to portray (said to be upwards of 12, although may change in the editing), even though the original 7 are more prevalent.
157* SerialKiller: The Horde targets "unbroken" girls as literal sacrifices to the Beast, with the same pattern established in ''Split''. It's implied they've done it a couple of times since those events.
158* ShoutOut: "Active Comics" is an obvious nod to "ComicBook/ActionComics".
159* ShownTheirWork: Mr. Glass has numerous surgical scars on his legs and arms; having your bones break so easily and often requires intensive repair work.
160* SickeningCrunch: ''Very''. Happens to Mr. Glass since his bones easily break. [[spoiler:The Beast crushed his shoulder and hit him in the guts before attacking the Overseer. He then tries to get up from the wheelchair, but fails, and every part of his body that touches the ground breaks.]] One could imagine how's that going to sound.
161* SignatureMove: The Overseer is fond of throwing people into walls and cars. The Beast uses a FinishingMove with a DeadlyHug from behind.
162* SplitPersonality: The Horde has 24 different personalities, as established in ''Split''.
163* StealthSequel: Averted. This movie makes it clear that it's a sequel to both ''Unbreakable'' and ''Split'', which is amusing considering that the second TwistEnding to ''Split'' is TheReveal that it takes place in the same universe as ''Unbreakable''. (After the reveal of the super-powered alter-ego "the Beast".)
164* SuperheroPrevalenceStages: Over the course of the two previous films, we saw the very early stage of a superhero universe, with the rise of a superhero and two supervillains and the whole thing still being very recent and covered in shadows, where we're still dealing with very much our world but with a handful of minor breakaways. This film deals with the development of that world as the superheroes and supervillains collide. [[spoiler:More specifically, ''Glass'' shows that there is an enforced {{masquerade}} going on, and the final battle between the Overseer and the Horde (the world's first true public bonafide supervillain vs superhero showdown) act as a cataclysm that leads to the changing of the world, to that masquerade being broken, and to a MassSuperempoweringEvent, leading to the implication that the world is now heading into the Middle Stage of an abundance of superheroes and villains that are public knowledge.]]
165* SuperStrength: Both the Overseer and the Beast possess this.
166* SuperToughness: Both the Overseer and the Beast have this, with the Overseer having previously survived a train wreck unharmed while the Beast can shrug off point-blank shotgun blasts with only minor wounds.
167* {{Supervillain}}: Continuing from ''Split'', this is once more deconstructed. In this case, how utterly outmatched normal people are against a superpowered killing machine.
168* TalkingTheMonsterToDeath: Casey does this to the Beast, using her sympathy and compassion to give him a CooldownHug which causes Kevin to resurface. [[spoiler:Dr. Staple takes advantage of this by having a sniper shoot Kevin while he is no longer ImmuneToBullets.]]
169* TailorMadePrison: The Overseer and the Horde are placed in rooms designed to counter their abilities. The Overseer's room is outfitted with high-pressure water hoses designed to subdue him. The Horde's room is outfitted with bright lights that can trigger a different personality, preventing them from using the Beast's strength to escape.
170* TheyCallMeMisterTibbs: "First name: Mister. Last name: Glass."
171* ThisIsReality: Twisted around. Mr. Glass points out that real life isn't a cartoon, "...and yet some of us still don't die with bullets. Some of us can still bend steel."
172* TimeSkip: Takes places three weeks after the events of ''Split''.
173* TrailersAlwaysSpoil: The trailers feature a line from [[spoiler:Dr. Staple saying ''"We are not meant to have this much power"''.]] Observant viewers will notice that this line gives away the fact that [[spoiler:Dr. Staple ''does'' know that her patients' powers are real, spoiling the TwistEnding]].
174* TruthInTelevision: Some violent kids are shown recording themselves attacking random pedestrians. There was a trend several years prior of teenagers playing a game called "Knock out" where they hit an unsuspecting passerby and try to knock them out.
175* TwoPartTrilogy: Downplayed example, but consider that only two years will have passed since the release of ''Split'', the SequelGap between ''Unbreakable'' and ''Split'' was '''seventeen''' years.
176* TheUnmasquedWorld: Mr. Glass's ultimate goal is to bring super people into the light for the world to see.
177-->'''Mr. Glass:''' [[ThisIsReality This is not a cartoon, this is the real world.]] And yet, some of us still. [[SuperToughness Don't die. With bullets.]] Some of us can still [[SuperStrength bend steel]]. I have been waiting for the world to see that we exist.
178* VigilanteMan: The Overseer has become this in the 19 years since ''Unbreakable'', sticking mostly to low-level criminals.
179* VillainTeamUp: Mr. Glass and the Horde have ultimately joined forces, and as per usual, the former heavily lampshades it.
180-->'''Mr. Glass:''' May I meet the Beast?\
181'''Patricia:''' I hope, for your sake, that he likes you.\
182'''Mr. Glass:''' That sounds like the bad guys teaming up.
183* VillainousBreakdown: [[spoiler:Ellie gets a short but satisfying one when she realizes that Mr. Glass had played her that would ensure that the world knows of the superhumans and the conspiracy that she is a part of. She walks into an empty hallway, pauses, then starts screaming.]]
184* WalkingShirtlessScene: The different alters of the Horde try to change clothing appropriate to their personality; the Beast typically removes his shirt.
185* WhamLine:
186** Joseph tells the Beast one '''very''' crucial fact about Kevin's father, who was mentioned in ''Film/{{Split}}'' as having left on a train when Kevin was young.
187-->''"[[spoiler:[[Film/{{Unbreakable}} He took the train my dad was on. The one that everyone died, except my dad.]]]]"''
188** Dr. Staple decides to check on the [[spoiler:Raven Hill Memorial security cameras, after having wiped the footage of the AncientConspiracy killing the Beast and the Overseer]]. This is followed by her piecing together Mr. Glass' [[spoiler:[[XanatosGambit real plan]]]]:
189-->'''Raven Hill Memorial computerman:''' [[spoiler:Someone was streaming the live security feed to a private site.]]\
190'''Dr. Staple:''' [[spoiler:Mr. Glass went through the basement tunnels to be seen by as many cameras as possible. That's why he didn't go out the side entrance. He was never planning on going to that building. This was a suicide mission.]]
191* WhamShot:
192** In conjunction with the WhamLine example above, [[spoiler:after we see Kevin's father sitting on the left of a train, a [[TheOner oner]] shifts the focus to one particular passenger sitting rows ahead on the right: [[Film/{{Unbreakable}} the Overseer, 19 years ago]]. [[ArcWelding This reveals that both the Overseer and Kevin's father were on Eastrail 177, which derailed and killed everyone but the Overseer]]]].
193** Two of them. Casey is able to [[spoiler:get Kevin back to the light, and the two are sharing a CooldownHug... and then a dot of red light appears to the right of Casey's hair. She and Kevin notice this, the dot moves down, and the shooter, a police sniper, fires. Kevin can only look at the wound in his stomach, now leaking blood]].
194* WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds: Both Mr. Glass and the Beast have done horrible things, but the movie underlines a sincere tragedy to the trauma they've endured. At one point, even the Beast looks about ready to cry after fighting the Overseer and realizing they aren't the strongest and toughest, as their entire purpose was to protect Kevin and all the alters.
195* WorfHadTheFlu: [[spoiler:After being thrown in the water tank, the Overseer manages to punch his way out while fighting the Beast, but is winded and gasping for air. One of Dr. Staple's henchmen then grabs him and proceeds to drown him in one of the shallow pits that were created. If he were at full strength it would have been easy to resist.]]
196* WorthyOpponent: After their first encounter, both the Overseer and the Beast recognize each other as particularly strong opponents. One of the reason Mr. Glass sends the Beast after the Overseer is to give the Overseer a fight worthy of a superhero [[SuperStrength of his]] [[SuperToughness caliber]] [[spoiler:so that he can release the video evidence of their existence to the world, proving his life-long convictions to humanity]].
197-->'''Mr. Glass:''' I have found someone who will require your full potential.
198* WrestlerInAllOfUs: Both the Overseer and the Beast primarily use grapple moves, taking advantage of their invulnerability and strength. The Overseer leans more towards arm locks and throwing people into walls, while the Beast prefers latching on and trying to crush his opponent.
199* WrongGenreSavvy: Late in the movie, Mr. Glass corrects his mother that what we are witnessing is not an [[CrisisCrossover epic limited edition story]], but is still just a SuperHeroOrigin. The full context implies a degree of LeaningOnTheFourthWall as well, aimed at the audience, as M. Night Shyamalan has always claimed that ''Unbreakable'' was not a true origin, but just the first third.
200* XanatosGambit: [[spoiler:Mr. Glass's stated plan was to use the opening ceremony of a high rise, the Osaka Tower, to attract attention and let the public see the Overseer and the Horde fighting out in the open. He seemingly didn't account for her adding extra cameras around the hospital to catch the breakout. He, the Horde, and the Overseer aren't able to make it past the front lawn and are killed by Dr. Staple's henchmen to make sure no one learns the truth of what they are able to do, with her erasing all camera footage of the event. She then realizes that Mr. Glass set her up to '''think''' that she foiled his plans, and realizes he never needed to reach the tower, and instead the footage from ''her own'' extra security cameras was secretly streamed to a private server, which is then leaked to the press by Joseph, Casey, and Ms. Price.]]
201* YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre: Mr. Glass to the Overseer, [[HeroicBSOD when he was doubting his powers and his sanity]], convinces him of this in his own twisted way to get him moving and his self-confidence back. [[spoiler:At the end, he also gives humanity at large this by showing them their potential for superpowers, which was his motivation and goal all along.]]
202* YouMonster: [[spoiler:While his dialogue is silenced during the scene, it's clear that Joseph is yelling this at the conspirators who murdered his father.]]
203* YourMindMakesItReal: A bit of a unique example. [[spoiler:The primary reason Supers aren't known all over the world is because people believe it's impossible. It's that mindset that the AncientConspiracy has been keeping intact over the years. Of course, that's not enough to keep ''everyone'' in line...]]
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