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7[[quoteright:350:[[Film/{{Skyfall}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/297036bc0a2a844b8ab7ef436f432874.jpg]]]]
8[[caption-width-right:350:Prisoners in glass boxes shouldn't throw shade.]]
9
10->''"So they put Silva in a glass cage which is what you do when you catch a villain halfway through the movie."''
11-->-- '''Screenwriter Guy''', WebVideo/RyanGeorge's pitch meeting for ''Film/{{Skyfall}}''
12
13So a character has been busted, caught, kidnapped, jailed ... whatever. They now have to be contained somewhere, and what better choice than a transparent cell with zero privacy?
14
15Being imprisoned in such a manner, functionally [[PeopleZoo on exhibit]] for the captors, may be a demeaning moment, or an opportunity to show how self-assured the character is. Possibly a result of the character falling victim to TheCollector. A PoisonousCaptive might take advantage of the transparency to communicate with their captors. Overlaps with HumanPopsicle if the character is rendered immobile. That said, having one or more walls be see-through does have practical advantages for a jailer - if the guards can casually look into the room at any time, then it becomes a lot harder for the prisoner to do things like make shivs, attempt to saw through the window bars or dig an escape tunnel without getting caught.
16
17This trope comes into action when a character is deliberately placed within a transparent cage to hold them. This transparent material can be glass, another material, or SomeKindOfForceField. If only one wall is transparent, then it's a ForceFieldDoor or a material version thereof. Often comes with a side-order of NobodyPoops.
18Compare CardboardPrison and CrystalPrison.
19----
20!!Examples
21
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
25* ''Manga/BakiTheGrappler'': Ryukou Yanagi is first shown imprisoned in a tempered glass box, the walls of which are perfectly transparent and able to withstand a missile strike. He breaks out of it with minimal effort.
26* Snow of ''Manga/{{MAR}}'' interestingly averts this trope; though she encases herself in ice when she first appears, it's made quite clear that she can only stay in her ice prison for a couple of hours before she freezes to death.
27* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'': The Water Prison Technique traps the target in a liquid version of this, leaving them unable to move due to the sheer heaviness of the water.
28* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesBlackAndWhite'':
29** Team Rocket's boss, Giovanni, puts Meloetta, Ash, and Pikachu in two of these as part of his plan in "Meloetta and the Undersea Temple!".
30** Team Rocket puts Pikachu in one of these in "The Name's N!".
31* ''Manga/TsubasaReservoirChronicle'': R! Sakura and R! Syaoran voluntarily enter one of these, where they are separated from each other for a long period of time as the price for one of Yuuko's wishes.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Comic Books]]
35* Mega-City One's incarceration cubes, in ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'', have sometimes been portrayed this way.
36* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'':
37** DependingOnTheWriter, [[BedlamHouse Arkham Asylum]]'s cells are sometimes portrayed as this (see the Western Animation section below). Other creators portray them with quasi-Victorian or even medieval-style iron-doors with only a food- and eye-slot.
38** In ''ComicBook/BatmanEternal'', after capturing Hush, Batman keeps him imprisoned in a transparent cell in the Batcave.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Fan Works]]
42* ''Fanfic/{{Eleutherophobia}}'': In ''The Day the Earth Stood Still'', the military places Tom in a plexiglass cell so that they can observe him for three days.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
46* ''WesternAnimation/Incredibles2'': When taken prisoner by the villain, Helen wakes up bound to a chair in a chamber with glass walls. To keep her from using her RubberMan powers to escape, the temperature is lowered to below freezing.
47* The blue canine-like alien Stitch, of ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch'', is introduced to the audience in a holding cell of this variety, trying vainly to break out.
48* ''WesternAnimation/TitanAE'' features Cale Tucker being held in the brig of the Drej mothership. The entire cell is [[ForceFieldDoor made of translucent energy]]. Cale is able to escape when he figures out how to manipulate the energy to open a temporary hole through it.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
52* In ''Film/AustinPowers in Goldmember'', Dr. Evil is imprisoned in a transparent prison where everyone can see his every move, including the unsanitary ones.
53* In ''Film/{{Clockstoppers}}'', the corporation responsible for creating the hypertime watch keeps an accomplice who attempted to escape earlier in a prison cell made of glass in the center of the lab floor. He was in hyper-time, meaning that the onlookers couldn't see him, but he wrote disdainful messages on the walls of his cell that could be seen after spending a week in hypertime and aging prematurely.
54* In ''Film/EscapePlan'', the Tomb has elevated cells with glass walls to minimize the ability of prisoners to hide contraband and generally make them easier to monitor.
55* ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'':
56** In ''Film/TheAvengers2012'', the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier contains one designed as a TailorMadePrison for the Hulk that can be dropped 30,000-odd feet out of the bottom of the ship at the push of a button. They use it to contain Loki.
57** In ''Film/ThorTheDarkWorld'', Loki also ends up in a cell with a transparent ForceFieldDoor.
58* ''Film/TheSilenceOfTheLambs'': Hannibal Lecter's cell at the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane has a glass wall facing the hallway, as he's by far the most dangerous inmate there.
59* In ''Film/{{Skyfall}}'', Raoul Silva is captured by Bond and incarcerated in a glass cell in [=MI6=] headquarters before being interrogated by M.
60* ''Film/{{Species}}'': The young Sil is held inside a confinement area with glass walls. When the project director decides to kill her with poison gas, she [[SoftGlass breaks through the glass]] and [[EscapedFromTheLab escapes the laboratory]].
61* ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'':
62** ''Film/XMen1'': Magneto is imprisoned within a plastic, transparent prison at the end. Also doubles as a TailorMadePrison, as Magneto would be able to use [[ExtraOreDinary his powers]] to escape from a cell that used metal in its construction.
63** ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'': Large panes of glass form the ceiling of Magneto's cell underneath the Pentagon.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Literature]]
67* In ''Literature/TheButterflyGarden'', the Garden consists of corridors of glass-walled cells. Heavy walls lower when the gardening staff arrives to hide the kidnapped girls. Then there are the display cases along the hallways; [[YourDaysAreNumbered when a Butterfly turns twenty-one]], the Gardener murders her and preserves her body in a glass cell filled with resin, the butterfly tattooed on her back facing out.
68* ''Literature/{{Gor}}'': In ''Kur of Gor'', Tarl Cabot is imprisoned in what the narrator calls a "glassine" tube. The narrator means "glass-like", but that's not what glassine means.
69* ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'': [[spoiler:The Authority]] is shown to have been imprisoned in a glass box by his henchman, [[spoiler:Metatron]].
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
73* ''Series/{{Alias}}'': Irina Dereveko is held in one of these by the CIA.
74* In ''Series/TheBlacklist'', this is done to Raymond Reddington after he turns himself in to the FBI. Interestingly exploited in one episode when a gang of killers infiltrate the FBI compound and Reddington locks himself in the bulletproof, airtight cage, effectively turning his prison into a bunker so that he can wait for rescue.
75* ''Series/Dracula2020'': [[spoiler:Count Dracula gets stuck in one after reaching England after his regenerative coma. He is quickly let out of it with the help of a lawyer, though.]]
76* ''Series/GetSmart'': In "Pheasant Under Glass", a KidnappedScientist is being held by KAOS in a cell made of "[[SpaceX nuclearized]] glass", so CONTROL gets an opera singer to [[GlassShatteringSound break the glass with her voice]]. [[spoiler:When the note fails to shatter the glass, she just smashes it with her BrawnHilde body.]]
77-->'''99:''' Hey, Max, look... Professor Pheasant!\
78'''Max:''' Well, what's he doing in a telephone booth, reading a book?\
79'''99:''' That's not a telephone booth, Max -- that's a glass cell.\
80'''Max:''' Of course... they've got [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pheasant_under_glass Pheasant under glass]]! ''[99 [[LamePunReaction rolls her eyes]]]''
81* In ''Series/GoodEats'', Cocoa Carl is being kept in one of these (in a ShoutOut to ''Film/TheSilenceOfTheLambs''), as Alton comes to [[ConsultingAConvictedKiller question him]] about the [[UnfortunateIngredients ingredients]] in a protein bar manufactured by his company that was [[NeverNeedsSharpening being marketed as "health food"]].
82* ''Series/Jake20'' features one of these, a glass-walled holding cell (with [[NobodyPoops no facilities]]) in the middle of an empty room with constant surveillance. Its use in the series emphasizes that the characters held there (various terrorists) are dangerous not because of any special Jake-style abilities but because of the threat they pose to national security. (Ironically, Jake's nemesis [=DuMont=], who ''could'' have used special looking after, ends up in a regular prison, which he easily worms his way out of.)
83* ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'':
84** The US military lock Carl Creel in one in the ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'' episode "[[Recap/AgentsOfSHIELDS2E1Shadows Shadows]]".
85** ''Series/SheHulkAttorneyAtLaw'' reveals that Emil Blonsky a.k.a. Abomination is being held in a glass-walled cell inside a larger prison facility to contain him if he transforms into his monstrous alter-ego. The cell resembles the Hulk containment cell from ''Film/TheAvengers2012'' and fills a similar function. Amusingly, when Blonsky willingly transforms to make a point, he [[ForgotToMindTheirHead bangs his head on the cell's ceiling]].
86* ''Series/{{Nikita}}'': After being overthrown by his DragonAscendant Amanda at the end of season 1, [[BigBad Percy]] ends up in one of these. Naturally, he eventually escapes.
87* ''Series/TheSandman2022'': After the occultist Roderick Burgess captures Dream of the Endless, the Corinthian warns him that his binding circle won't be enough in the long term and advises him to construct a sphere of thick glass to keep Dream in, under 24/7 observation by guards who are given pep pills so that they won't fall asleep in his presence.
88* ''Series/TheSecretWorldOfAlexMack'' has Alex and her family trapped in one of these.
89* The ''Series/{{Sherlock}}'' episode "[[Recap/SherlockS04E03TheFinalProblem The Final Problem]]" reveals that [[spoiler:Sherlock]] has a sister who is housed in a maximum-security psychiatric facility, inside a glass chamber. Cue a WindowLove scene between the two siblings. [[spoiler:She actually uses this trope to her advantage, setting the scene to ''look'' like it's in play, when actually the glass pane isn't there at all, giving her the chance to surprise Sherlock when he thinks he's physically safe from her.]]
90* An improvised version occurs in ''Series/Titans2018'' when Dr. Adamson is kept handcuffed to a rail in a glass-walled shower room in one of Bruce Wayne's (many) luxury apartments.
91* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'': In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S2E25TheSilence The Silence]]", Jamie Tennyson lives in a glass cell in the basement of his club for a year to prove that he is fulfilling his part of the bargain and remaining silent.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Video Games]]
95* In ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamAsylum'', Clayface is in one, and in ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamCity'', Calendar Man is in another.
96* At the end of ''VideoGame/InjusticeGodsAmongUs'', [[spoiler:Regime Superman]] is imprisoned in one of these, [[spoiler:with [[PowerNullifier red sun lamps bathing the entire cell in red light]], hence the clear walls]]. One of the stages in ''VideoGame/Injustice2'' takes place in front of it, with [[spoiler:Regime Superman]] pacing back and forth and watching the fight.
97* In ''VideoGame/Portal2'', when the protagonist Chell is [[spoiler:tricked into [=GLaDOS=]'s trap]], she is contained in a glass cell, similar to the cell at the start of ''VideoGame/Portal1''.
98* ''VideoGame/Splatoon1'' and ''VideoGame/Splatoon2'' feature a variation on this, as DJ Octavio is repeatedly captured and imprisoned in an oversized snow globe after being defeated. And we do mean repeatedly: redoing the FinalBoss stage is a case of him [[CardboardPrison simply breaking out of the snow globe]], either by himself when no one was looking or one of the characters letting him go themselves.
99* ''VideoGame/SpyroSeasonOfIce'' has all the faeries encased in ice by an evil sorcerer named Grendor.
100* Constructing one of these is an early objective in ''VideoGame/XCOMEnemyUnknown'', and you are treated to a brief cutscene of the captive alien inside it whenever your team brings in a sample of a new species alive.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Western Animation]]
104* The cells in Arkham Asylum in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' have one wall that is made out of glass.
105* The Archons of "The Sleeping Planet" believe that ''WesternAnimation/JosieAndThePussycats in Outer Space'' have stolen their Robotron, and imprison them in a huge transparent bubble.
106* ''WesternAnimation/LoonaticsUnleashed'': The most secure cells in the below-ground Acmetropolis Prison are an isolated circular platform with a transparent dome. The Sagittarius Stomper was put in one, alongside his mother. Likewise for Mallory Mastermind, and for four of the six Loonatics.
107* [[spoiler:Professor Pericles]] in ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooMysteryIncorporated'' is imprisoned in a see-through cage.
108* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'' has a MadScientist called the Raven imprisoned in a glass cube. Nonetheless, the Raven is able to construct a lifelike robot duplicate of himself and escape.
109* In the ''WesternAnimation/TotallySpies'' episode "Future Shock", the Spies' adult counterparts have a version of this that can be carried like a suitcase (by two people) and can still fit a prisoner inside, useful for both arrest ''and'' holding of prisoners. (Mandy is apprehended this way, but unfortunately, it does nothing to quiet her.)
110[[/folder]]
111

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