...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Carrying the Antidote
- 416 statements
- 80 feature instances
- 38 referencing feature instances
Carrying the Antidote | type |
FeatureClass | |
Carrying the Antidote | label |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote | page |
CarryingTheAntidote | |
Carrying the Antidote | comment |
A tendency for villains to carry a vial of the antidote to the poison they just gave the hero under their shirt for absolutely no reason whatsoever. It can go down in several ways. One commonly used method is for the hero to spend the episode trying to scrounge up the ingredients to the cure from scratch, quickening the drug in the process, only to fail and be informed by the villain that they had it all along. Is also regularly executed during a trade off, with the villain receiving what they want but Withholding the Cure. One has to wonder why they felt the need to bring the real deal if they were planning on cheating out the hero anyway. Another more humorous variant is for the villain to reveal the vial and have it snatched from or knocked out of their hand before they can even get the gloating out. A subversion would be for the hero to snatch the supposed antidote only to discover it is a fake. Some writers may try to Hand Wave it by giving the villain a sadistic thought process, demonstrating that they enjoy recounting the agonizing death awaiting the hero only to dangle the one thing that could save the hero's life right in front of their face. Nonetheless, the out-of-universe reason to do it is so that the hero or his companions can steal it and use it Just in Time. It makes a bit more sense when the villain is using the poison as a form of blackmail, fully intending to hand over the antidote as soon as the hero has given him what he wants in exchange. (This assumes, of course, that the villain is a Noble Demon, believes strongly in keeping their promises, or otherwise has a sensible reason for being willing to carry and hand over the actual antidote rather than a fake.) There's also another possible Hand Wave, one that can be a reasonable justification in the right conditions. Accidents happen, and if you're carrying poison around with you accidents can be fatal. Someone might get clever and try a Poisoned Chalice Switcheroo. A case of friendly fire might lead you to inadvertently hitting the wrong person with your poisoned weapon. People who are careless with weapons might even manage to injure themselves with their own poison. In any of those situations, you might really need to have the antidote on hand; the villain might just want to be prepared in case he or she is accidentally poisoned, well aware of the possibility of Death by Irony. However, the true Evil Genius' way to prepare for this eventuality is to build up an Acquired Poison Immunity. In video games, enemies who can inflict Status Effects often have a chance of producing the item that cures said ailment when defeated. This makes it less frustrating if an enemy poisons you while you have no more antidotes left, since it means you don't need to trudge all the way back to the nearest Trauma Inn and item shop, but it doesn't explain why the venomous snake would turn into an anti-venom potion when killed. The concept of an instant antidote is itself a form of Applied Phlebotinum. In real life, even if a toxin does have an effective antidote its action will rarely be as fast as depicted in Hollywood (then again, the same is true for most toxins, so an antidote doesn't usually need to act instantly to be effective). For example, atropine blocks and counteracts the symptoms of nerve agent poisoning, but it does not actually remove the toxin from the body or heal damaged tissue. Even with an antidote, a poisoned patient may require extensive hospital care. Poisons in Hollywood also typically have a time limit during which the victim will feel no symptoms until the time limit expires, at which point they suffer a Critical Existence Failure. See also To the Pain, Contrived Coincidence, Carrying the Weakness, and Fridge Logic. |
|
Carrying the Antidote | fetched |
2024-02-29T09:30:27Z | |
Carrying the Antidote | parsed |
2024-02-29T09:30:27Z | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to Fartillery: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to HilarityEnsues: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to ManipulativeBastard: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to McGuffin: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to PlayerCharacters: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to PoisonAndCureGambit: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to PoisonousPerson: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to TakenForGranite: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | processingComment |
Dropped link to justifiedtrope: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
Carrying the Antidote | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_11b7db91 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_11b7db91 | comment |
In the Adventure Time episode "Jake Vs. Me-Mow," a very small feline assassin named Me-Mow with a syringe of poison and a vial of antidote hides inside Jake's nose and poisons him, saying he'll only give him the antidote if he kills Wildberry Princess since Jake exposed Me-Mow's first attempt at doing so himself. Eventually Me-Mow is knocked out of Jake's nose still carrying the antidote, and Finn tries to get it away from him. Me-Mow smashes the vial when he is held down, but after this Jake realizes he can stretch his liver to a great enough size to render the poison into a non-lethal dose. Me-Mow did mention at one point that he was going to leave Jake to die, leaving open the possibility that the antidote was fake anyway. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_11b7db91 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_11b7db91 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Adventure Time | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_11b7db91 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1218c5a4 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1218c5a4 | comment |
In Killjoys, Dutch and Johnny go undercover at a Qreshi marriage renegotiation party to thwart an assassination attempt. Johnny gets poisoned and Dutch sets out to torture the assassin for the antidote, reasoning that no professional poisoner wouldn't carry it. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1218c5a4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1218c5a4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Killjoys | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1218c5a4 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_136342f1 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_136342f1 | comment |
In Mort the Agatean Grand Vizier comes to regret not doing this when he ends up eating his own poison, and the emperor refuses to allow him to leave the table, go back to his quarters, and retrieve the small black vial in the hidden compartment with "antidote" written on it. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_136342f1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_136342f1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Mort | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_136342f1 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_15bd4cf4 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_15bd4cf4 | comment |
Subverted in The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents Keith and Malica give the two Mooks poison, and then offer the antidote in return for information and being set free. Subverted when it turned out that both poison and antidote are actually laxatives. The lesson here is do not mess with Discworld heroes. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_15bd4cf4 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_15bd4cf4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_15bd4cf4 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1abc4218 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1abc4218 | comment |
Stunt Dawgs: In "The Treasure of Crash's Madre", the Stunt Scabs steal Crash's mother recipe and replace it with one that makes the Stunt Dawgs way overweight. With Velda's help, they give the Scabs a taste of their own medicine and force the Scabs to reveal the antidote. Whiz Vid turns out to be carrying it in one of his pockets. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1abc4218 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1abc4218 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Stunt Dawgs | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1abc4218 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1bb6d4b5 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1bb6d4b5 | comment |
In Get Backers, Himiko Kudo - who isn't really a villain most of the time, just the "opposition" - always carries an Antidote Scent to counteract any effect by her poisons. Perhaps justified in that she sometimes used them on herself and usually wants to stop breathing fire at some point. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1bb6d4b5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1bb6d4b5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Get Backers (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1bb6d4b5 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1cc09117 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1cc09117 | comment |
In the anime Bleach, one of the shinigami captains, Mayuri Kurotsuchi, possesses an ultimate attack which creates all sorts of nasty chemicals, at least one of which is poisonous. Uryu, who had the misfortune of fighting Mayuri, gets poisoned, but after the captain leaves, his subordinate/Opposite-Sex Clone Nemu (who, like Mayuri, is immune to it) gives Uryu the antidote. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1cc09117 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1cc09117 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Bleach (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1cc09117 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1ed98121 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1ed98121 | comment |
At one point in Wild ARMs 5, Pastel, a little girl the group, especially Rebecca, befriended, becomes ill with a commonly incurable disease, so they use an earlier plot point and go back to a Veruni-infested city to ask Persephone, who is a villain to some degree, but the heroes really don't know that yet, for an antidote. She does give them the antidote...for Veruni. Pastel is a human, so taking a Veruni antidote would obviously have fatal side effects for a human, as Carol tells them a little later. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1ed98121 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1ed98121 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Wild ARMs 5 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_1ed98121 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2221ecbd | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2221ecbd | comment |
Played with in CSI: NY. A woman out for revenge fills one capsule with deadly poison and a second with its antidote. She swallows the antidote first, then crushes the poison capsule inside her mouth... immediately before kissing her victim, thus transferring the poison to him. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2221ecbd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2221ecbd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
CSI: NY | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2221ecbd | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_222c2051 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_222c2051 | comment |
One particular villain on Chuck poisons several characters with a truth serum that also eventually kills you. He not only carries the antidote on his person but has more of it stored in his apartment. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_222c2051 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_222c2051 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Chuck | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_222c2051 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_261c8d3f | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_261c8d3f | comment |
Parodied in The Simpsons episode "Guess Who's Coming To Criticize Dinner?" The villain not only has the antidote, but absentmindedly starts adding it to the food along with the poison until he realizes his mistake. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_261c8d3f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Simpsons | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_261c8d3f | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2b00412 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2b00412 | comment |
Also used in an Avengers story, when a flesh-eating bacteria started spreading outwards from Mount Rushmore in a fast-moving red cloud. Cap's archenemy the Red Skull had the bacteria engineered to wipe out "lesser races", which backfired when it turned out that the bacteria ate anybody. The Skull did immunize himself somehow, and the day was saved when the Avengers caught him and had scientists take his blood for a cure. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2b00412 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2b00412 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Avengers (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_2b00412 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3501cc23 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3501cc23 | comment |
Gentleman Bastard series: The Lies of Locke Lamora: The titular hero has been given a slow-acting poison by the mastermind of the secret police, a frail old lady. She shows him the antidote in her hand and informs him that he will only receive it if he cooperates. He immediately punches her out and grabs the antidote, commenting that she thinks she's a lot more powerful than she really is. The villain in Red Seas Under Red Skies is a little smarter, keeping the Alchemist carrying the antidote well guarded at all times and only carrying enough antidote for one person. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_3501cc23 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3501cc23 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gentleman Bastard | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3501cc23 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3de6b856 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3de6b856 | comment |
Happens in Manifest, when Saanvi poisons the Major demanding information on how to remove the Passengers genetic marker to save them and Zeke from their Death Date in exchange for an antidote. However, this goes horribly wrong when the Major tries to grab the antidote, which breaks in the struggle, turning the extortion into murder. Even worse, it turns out that Major was never researching into removing the Callings, just controlling and replicating them, so Saanvi's efforts were All for Nothing. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3de6b856 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3de6b856 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Manifest | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_3de6b856 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_41ecc735 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_41ecc735 | comment |
This drove the plot of an episode of Cyborg 009, as the heroes had to stop an evil syndicate who had stockpiled an antidote to a deadly disease. The bad guys were trying to sell the stuff on the black market. The Team Mom of the group (a girl who happens to have Super-Senses that make it easier for her to find the antidote and the bomb) gets pissed off as she finds out, and it triggers her Moment of Awesome. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_41ecc735 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_41ecc735 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Cyborg 009 (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_41ecc735 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_44715363 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_44715363 | comment |
In the Yu-Gi-Oh! manga, Mokuba challenges Yugi and Jounouchi to a game of food roulette, where they eat what's in front of them. Jounouchi eats a poisoned meal, and Mokuba reveals that he has the antidote to the poison, which Yugi will have to defeat him to get. Yugi wins despite Mokuba's cheating, and gets the antidote for Jounouchi while Mokuba eats the other poisoned meal. He survives, possibly because one of his servants had another antidote. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_44715363 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_44715363 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Yu-Gi-Oh! (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_44715363 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_468bebb0 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_468bebb0 | comment |
Discworld: Subverted in The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents Keith and Malica give the two Mooks poison, and then offer the antidote in return for information and being set free. Subverted when it turned out that both poison and antidote are actually laxatives. The lesson here is do not mess with Discworld heroes. In Mort the Agatean Grand Vizier comes to regret not doing this when he ends up eating his own poison, and the emperor refuses to allow him to leave the table, go back to his quarters, and retrieve the small black vial in the hidden compartment with "antidote" written on it. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_468bebb0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Discworld | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_468bebb0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4bcaa9d6 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4bcaa9d6 | comment |
Triptych Continuum: The red-tinge drug (which amplifies magic and causes it to go out of control) is the pollen of a certain flower, but the root of that same flower is the antidote. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4bcaa9d6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4bcaa9d6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Triptych Continuum / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4bcaa9d6 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4ddcf970 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4ddcf970 | comment |
In Flame of Recca, Mikoto of the Uraha wields detachable claws that poison the enemy and claims not to be carrying the antidote. In response to this, Fuuko steals one of the claws and stabs her with it. Naturally, Mikoto produces the antidote almost instantly, which Fuuko also steals. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4ddcf970 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4ddcf970 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Flame of Recca (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_4ddcf970 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5178149f | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5178149f | comment |
In Batman: The Brave and the Bold, it turns out that Gorilla Grodd's planetwide evolution device had a single switch that reverses it (so it cured everyone already evolved). It was essentially a big "THWART PLAN" button | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5178149f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5178149f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman: The Brave and the Bold | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5178149f | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_527a5949 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_527a5949 | comment |
In Science Ninja Team Gatchaman, the team fights Galactor who is polluting the oceans and conventional attacks simply accelerate their aims. However, they managed to stop the operation and in the process, inadvertently make Galactor spill their countermeasure they happen to be carrying on board. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_527a5949 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_527a5949 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_527a5949 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5755b96a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5755b96a | comment |
The Order of the Stick: Played straight in this one where Nale petrifies Celia, and so happens to have a Scroll of Break Enchantment on hand, which Thog spills the beans about. Justified as the scroll is a handy thing to have around just in general. Defied (in a fashion worthy of Ozymandias himself) in this strip. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_5755b96a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5755b96a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Order of the Stick (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5755b96a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_591aa39f | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_591aa39f | comment |
Downplayed and justified in the Metal Slug series with the zombies. Only the scientist zombies will drop a medkit that will turn a zombified player character back to human. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_591aa39f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_591aa39f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Metal Slug (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_591aa39f | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5e91c7d | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5e91c7d | comment |
In Resident Evil 4, Saddler conveniently keeps a fully functioning and barely protected Las Plagas removal device in his headquarters which Leon and Ashley find just in time. In-game files suggest the reason he had it was he was using it to research a way to make the parasites immune to the device. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5e91c7d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5e91c7d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Resident Evil 4 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_5e91c7d | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_61330cd9 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_61330cd9 | comment |
Lupin III: Island of Assassins has the taunting-the-hero version. Doc has the antidote to the island gas on him during the final confrontation. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_61330cd9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_61330cd9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Lupin III: Island of Assassins | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_61330cd9 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_654ebc56 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_654ebc56 | comment |
Justified in Jojos Bizarre Adventure. For the sake of a challenge, Wamuu and Esidisi poison Joseph to impose a time limit on him, and to survive he'll have to defeat them and claim the antidote they're carrying. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_654ebc56 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_654ebc56 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_654ebc56 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_65aabcf0 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_65aabcf0 | comment |
At first subverted, then played straight in Buso Renkin. When Tokiko gets implanted with the homunculus core early in the series, Koushaku Chouno told Kazuki he had the antidote in pill form, only to be a fake. Later, in the first showdown between Chouno (now Papillon) and Kazuki, Papillon swallows the key to the box containing the actual antidote, telling Kazuki he must kill Chouno if he wants to save Tokiko. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_65aabcf0 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_65aabcf0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Buso Renkin (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_65aabcf0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_667953be | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_667953be | comment |
The villain in Red Seas Under Red Skies is a little smarter, keeping the Alchemist carrying the antidote well guarded at all times and only carrying enough antidote for one person. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_667953be | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_667953be | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Red Seas Under Red Skies | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_667953be | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_674f5997 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_674f5997 | comment |
On Human Target it's discussed: A poisoned character (who was poisoned to death) is said to have believed another character had the antidote. Winston thinks this would be ridiculous, and Guerrero says it's common practice: carrying something so dangerous, you'd want an antidote on you. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_674f5997 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_674f5997 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Human Target | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_674f5997 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6a8aff51 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6a8aff51 | comment |
Justified in The Stormlight Archive. The poisoner's plan was to invite the target and a bystander to a snack of bread and jam; since the target doesn't like jam, the bread is poisoned and the jam contains the antidote. The poisoner eats the poisoned bread to alleviate suspicion and takes the antidote with it. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6a8aff51 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6a8aff51 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Stormlight Archive | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6a8aff51 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6e1d5f36 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6e1d5f36 | comment |
A greedy doctor purposely infects the crew of Moya on Farscape so he can charge them a huge fee for the cure. Which only he knows how to make. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6e1d5f36 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6e1d5f36 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Farscape | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6e1d5f36 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6eb4ca5c | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6eb4ca5c | comment |
Averted in Jackie Chan Adventures. In "The Rock", Valmont infects Jackie with a poison that will turn him to stone, but a) He points out that he isn't stupid enough to be carrying the antidote b) In the final showdown, his goons use a drop of the antidote on a fly to prove they have it, and seem willing to give it (until they notice the ransom isn't complete). | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6eb4ca5c | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6eb4ca5c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Jackie Chan Adventures | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_6eb4ca5c | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_7369fa6 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_7369fa6 | comment |
Subverted in the War of the Spider Queen series, where not only does Quenthel have no antidote to the poison she administers to a traitorous student, it is not even a poison per se, but rather an alarming-but-non-life-threatening overdose of alertness potion. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_7369fa6 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_7369fa6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
War of the Spider Queen | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_7369fa6 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_739d3822 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_739d3822 | comment |
In The Gentlemen, Mickey has Lord George's tea poisoned, then leaves him with the antidote: the point having been to demonstrate that he could get to Lord George anywhere. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_739d3822 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_739d3822 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Gentlemen | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_739d3822 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_74c5b2f3 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_74c5b2f3 | comment |
Nintendo Wars: Subverted in Advance Wars: Days of Ruin. Caulder/Stolos brokers a deal with the egoistic mayor, exchanging the mayor's cooperation for the antidote to a bioweapon he's infected the entire cast with, which he just so conveniently happens to be carrying on his person... | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_74c5b2f3 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_74c5b2f3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Nintendo Wars (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_74c5b2f3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_81692f99 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_81692f99 | comment |
Once again, Star Trek has done this one (in The Next Generation episode "The Most Toys") where a planet had been poisoned by a substance that had a rare antidote. It turned out the person they bought the antidote off was the villain who had poisoned the planet in the first place, using the rarity of the antidote as a way of gaining access to the Enterprise, kidnapping Data and tricking the rest of the crew into thinking he was destroyed in an explosion. The crew only cottoned on when they arrived at the planet and learned for the first time that the poisoning was so specific in quantity that the trader had mysteriously managed to give them the perfect quantity for curing it, something he couldn't have done without knowing in advance the exact level of poisoning they needed to cure. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_81692f99 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_81692f99 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_81692f99 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_83d41855 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_83d41855 | comment |
Subverted in Gargoyles. Demona shoots Elisa with a poisoned dart, blackmailing Goliath's clan into aiding her in exchange for the antidote. Unbeknown to Demona, by a stroke of luck, Elisa was not actually poisoned by the dart. At the end of the episode, Demona reveals that there was no antidote in the first place and leaves proudly claiming that at least she managed to kill Eliza. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_83d41855 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_83d41855 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gargoyles | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_83d41855 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8645d677 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8645d677 | comment |
In one of the Spellsinger novels, Jon-tom and his friends go on a perilous Fetch Quest to find a cure for Clothahump's terrible illness. It later turns out that Jon has had that very medication with him all long, having brought it with him from our world. Even worse, it's only aspirin, as Clothahump was faking to force Jon-tom and the others to undertake a journey he knew they'd surely refuse otherwise. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8645d677 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8645d677 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Spellsinger | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8645d677 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_86c3beca | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_86c3beca | comment |
In Girl Genius Smoke Knights carry antidotes and test kits for a number of Smoke Knight poisons. Justified in that Smoke Knights work for more than one faction and they end up working against each other fairly often. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_86c3beca | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_86c3beca | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Girl Genius (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_86c3beca | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_87c2b177 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_87c2b177 | comment |
An interesting case in The Invisible Man. An episode has Bobby accidentally injected with a serum that turns him into a genius. However, as evidenced by serum's test subjects, the "enhancement" eventually burns out the brain. When faced with this, Bobby reveals that he has figured out the antidote with his new intelligence, but he's not going to use it even at the cost of his own life, as this would mean going back to his average old self. Darien forces his hand by injecting himself with the serum, knowing that the presence of the quicksilver gland in his head will make the serum fatal to him. Thus, Bobby is forced to choose between his intelligence and the life of his friend. Naturally, he chooses the latter. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_87c2b177 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_87c2b177 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Invisible Man | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_87c2b177 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_89f61c67 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_89f61c67 | comment |
Turned inside-out in the otherwise trope-tastic Mission: Impossible II. A scientist creates the ultimate flu vaccine — also producing the ultimate superflu in the process. Things are the right way around once the villain gets his hands on the suitcase. The villain also had an interesting way of selling the vaccine, as surprisingly, he did not ask for a ransom. He had to create the ultimate flu virus to create the ultimate flu vaccine. Which, while being a horrible violation of the Geneva Convention, is actually pretty consistent with the production of some types of vaccine -minus the part about creating a supervirus, anyway. Dead or dying samples of the virus are prime examples of a vaccine. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_89f61c67 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_89f61c67 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Mission: Impossible II | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_89f61c67 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8adae002 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8adae002 | comment |
A good reason for this trope is given in BBC miniseries I, Claudius. Two notorious poisoners meet. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8adae002 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8adae002 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
I, Claudius | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8adae002 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8ba4613a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8ba4613a | comment |
Done interestingly in the third Death Note movie L: change the WorLd where a group trying to wipe out humanity for the sake of the environment develop an incredibly spreadable and fatal disease. They are rendered unable to use it near the beginning when the antidote is destroyed and therefore if they released it they too would die. Though in the end, the leader releases it anyway because (unbeknown to their henchmen) they are willing to die for their cause | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8ba4613a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8ba4613a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Death Note (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8ba4613a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8d32e966 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8d32e966 | comment |
In one Squadron Supreme story, the time-traveling villain the Scarlet Centurion torments Tom Thumb with the cure for cancer, withholding it when Tom Thumb refuses to poison fellow team-mate Hyperion. Ultimately deconstructed when it is revealed that the "cure" is common Aspirin, which is good enough to knock cancer out of the heavily-engineered people of the Centurion's future, but useless to Tom after his Faustian bargain. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8d32e966 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8d32e966 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Squadron Supreme (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_8d32e966 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_90b916ba | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_90b916ba | comment |
Batman: The Animated Series: Poison Ivy slips up in her debut episode by revealing she has the antidote for her deadly lipstick on hand to a seemingly near unconscious Batman just after she'd insistently locked lips with him. Getting a little bit too close... | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_90b916ba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_90b916ba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_90b916ba | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_97c38790 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_97c38790 | comment |
Dungeon magazine Issue #24 adventure "In the Dread of Night". In one room of Dentiata's tower, there is a spider with a poisonous bite protecting a wooden box. In a secret compartment nearby is a vial holding an antidote to the spider's venom. Issue #76 adventure "Fruit of the Vine". An olive creeper is a form of plant that can infect another creature by touch and turn it into an olive creeper. A victim of the olive creeper can be cured by casting a Cure Disease spell on them. One of the rooms in the abandoned house where the creeper lives has a Cure Disease spell scroll. If the Player Characters can find the scroll, they can cast Cure Disease on one of the olive creeper's victims and bring them back to normal. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_97c38790 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_97c38790 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon (Magazine) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_97c38790 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_981543d2 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_981543d2 | comment |
In Zorro (1990), a government official poisons Zorro. Zorro manages to get a sample of the poison, but quickly realizes that he'd die long before he could figure out what the antidote was, so he arranges for the official to be stuck with a dart marked with his trademark Z. Thinking that Zorro had just given him the same poison (the dart was actually harmless), the official fled to the nearest source of the antidote, allowing Zorro to follow him and take it for himself. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_981543d2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_981543d2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Zorro (1990) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_981543d2 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_99ce73bb | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_99ce73bb | comment |
Limmy's Show: Parodied, as two spies drink by the fireplace. One of them laughs, then pulls out the antidote to "the poison you just drank". The other spy does the same. They awkwardly exchange antidotes, but it turns out those were poisoned as well. Once again, they both pull out antidotes, then they drink them theirselves. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_99ce73bb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_99ce73bb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Limmy's Show | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_99ce73bb | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9cef0c3b | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9cef0c3b | comment |
Powerless2017: Wayne Securities sells EpiPen-style autoinjectors filled with the antidote for Joker gas just in case someone can't get it from the villain in time. It's their best seller. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9cef0c3b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9cef0c3b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Powerless (2017) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9cef0c3b | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9d34190a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9d34190a | comment |
The Elder Scrolls has an in-game book titled A Game at Dinner which Subverts this on a Batman Gambit scale. A Dunmer (dark elf) spy is writing a letter of resignation from espionage, and explains why. He was invited (along with several other Dunmer and at least one human) to dinner by Hlaalu Helseth, the head of the House the narrator is spying on. The narrator describes having seen a renowned alchemist (who makes exceptionally unpleasant poisons) visit the host. The narrator attends the dinner, and fakes eating and drinking. After everyone has eaten, Helseth announces that the disloyal have been given a fast-acting poison, the faithful have been spared, and the antidote is in a broth he had just had brought out (there was enough food available at the feast that nobody would have any other reason to drink any). The narrator wonders how this was possible, as all ate from the same plates and drank wine from the same chalice. Helseth announces that the utensils were actually poisoned, so even feigning eating would poison you. Due to this, not only would you die, but you would have "sadly, missed an excellent roast." Eventually, one of the human guests jumps up and drinks a large quantity of the broth, and then confesses his espionage. Helseth smiles when he finishes, and explains that the "antidote" was actually the poison, and that he does NOT, in fact, have an antidote to it. The narrator finishes his letter of resignation by informing his superiors that he sincerely does not want to describe the agony in which the poor man died, and that the paymaster to whom the letter is addressed does not want to know. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9d34190a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9d34190a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Elder Scrolls (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_9d34190a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a040500a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a040500a | comment |
Played straight and subverted in Best Served Cold by Joe Abercrombie: The poisoner Morveer regularly carries antidotes to poisons that he lacks immunity for on his person. He uses this to his advantage when his assistant, Day, attempts to kill him. He retaliates by cutting her with a poisoned knife and dangling the antidote in front of her. It turns out that the knife was unpoisoned, and the "antidote" was the real poison, which Day gratefully swallows. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a040500a | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a040500a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Best Served Cold | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a040500a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a33d74a4 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a33d74a4 | comment |
Naked Empire, the eighth book of the Sword of Truth series averts the trope. The moment the villain obtains the only antidote for a poison the main hero ingested, he dumps it in the ground without any ceremony or even letting the hero get within ten kilometers of it. Unfortunately for him, a Deus ex Machina saves our valiant hero in the last moment. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a33d74a4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a33d74a4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sword of Truth | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a33d74a4 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a535581a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a535581a | comment |
In The Emperor's New Groove, Kuzco spends most of the movie trying to get back to his palace so he can force Yzma to turn him human again; Yzma has potions to transform anyone to practically any shape. When he finally gets there, he has no idea which one is the "human" potion, and steals them all, which results in a transformation fight with Yzma similar to the Toadstool from The Sword In The Stone. At the end Yzma is turned into a kitten, so they're both really fighting over the same "antidote". | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a535581a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a535581a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Emperor's New Groove | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a535581a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6181362 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6181362 | comment |
In The Pearl, the local doctor finds out that Kino's son has just been stung by a scorpion and that Kino has acquired a large pearl which is expected to sell for a lot of money. The doctor promptly starts implying that even though the baby appears healthy, he could suffer side effects from the sting later and Kino had better let him give the baby a shot. Cue some time later, when the baby is clearly sick and the doctor shows up and gives him another shot that fixes it. While it's not stated if it's the case, it's heavily implied and Kino certainly believes that the doctor made the baby sick and cured him just for money. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6181362 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6181362 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Pearl | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6181362 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6327b20 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6327b20 | comment |
The Radix: an example by a hero. John Brynstone injects the Big Bad with poison and interrogates him by promising the antidote. At the end he confesses that he was bluffing: "poison" was actually saline solution. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6327b20 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6327b20 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Radix | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a6327b20 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a87a2e5e | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a87a2e5e | comment |
In Deeper of the Tunnels series, during the climactic confrontation, the Big Bad casually informs the hero that she is carrying both the world-destroying super plague and its cure on her person; what's more, hers are the only samples in existence, so losing either of them would completely ruin her evil plan. Must've been carrying the Villain Ball as well... | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a87a2e5e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a87a2e5e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tunnels | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_a87a2e5e | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ab42c63a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ab42c63a | comment |
Played with in Get Smart. When Smart is given a 24 hour poison, he ultimately gets the antidote by poisoning his poisoner with a concentrated sample, forcing him to run to his lab to administer the antidote, while Max follows. The two fight over the antidote but both fall unconscious before they can drink it. Fortunately for Max, the antidote they were manufacturing at CONTROL is completed in time. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ab42c63a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ab42c63a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Get Smart | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ab42c63a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_afb7052 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_afb7052 | comment |
Batman & Robin: Mr. Freeze has a partial cure for the disease his wife is suffering from in his suit. Batman needs it for Alfred, who suffers from the same disease. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_afb7052 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_afb7052 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman & Robin | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_afb7052 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b0f886e7 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b0f886e7 | comment |
Dungeons & Dragons Judges Guild Adventure Dark Tower. In one room is a medusa (a monster that can change opponents into stone). If the medusa is defeated, the PCs will find a spell scroll with Stone to Flesh spells. Anyone who the medusa changed to stone can be changed back to flesh by the spells. Supplement The Book of Ruins, adventure "Temple of Tarsham". In one room are a group of cockatrices with Taken for Granite (petrifaction) powers. Right next door, there's a room with a spell scroll holding a Stone to Flesh spell, which will turn a petrified victim back to normal. Adventure The Tower of Indomitable Circumstance. In one room is a roll-top desk with a trapped top. After it's opened, the top can slam down and cut off one of the opener's hands. In the desk is a clerical scroll of Repair Body which can be used to re-attach a severed hand. The Unknown Gods. The deity Ihlwynd can inflict a rotting disease by touch and an unhealable wound with his magical spear. However, if his spear is taken from him, it can heal any disease or wound the deity has caused. Fourth edition. Almost every monster that can afflict you with something nasty (such as petrification) has the means to undo that effect when the monster is slain, e.g. because some body part is the antidote. The weirdest example is the Rust Monster, that destroys your equipment (not technically poison, but certainly a nasty lasting effect), but when killed will drop precisely enough money to buy a new copy of whatever was destroyed. The cave fisher monster fires an adhesive filament that wraps up opponents and is dissolved by alcohol. The cave fisher's blood has a high alcohol content, so after it's killed, its blood can be used to remove the filaments it created. Module S4 The Lost Caverns of Tsojcanth When a roper's tentacles hit a person, the victim loses half of their strength for 1-3 hours. One cure for the loss is the magical substance Keoghtom's Ointment. One room in the Caverns contains two ropers, and another nearby cavern has two jars of Keoghtom's Ointment. One of the caves has two cockatrice monsters that can turn any creature they touch to stone. In the cockatrices' treasure is a spell scroll with the magic-user spell Stone to Flesh on it. With that spell, a magic-user can change one of the cockatrices' victims back to life. Imagine magazine #3 adventure "A Box for the Margrave". The Player Character party will be attacked by a half-orc assassin with poisoned darts. In his belt pouch, the assassin has four vials holding an antidote to the poison on the darts. Dungeon magazine Issue #24 adventure "In the Dread of Night". In one room of Dentiata's tower, there is a spider with a poisonous bite protecting a wooden box. In a secret compartment nearby is a vial holding an antidote to the spider's venom. Issue #76 adventure "Fruit of the Vine". An olive creeper is a form of plant that can infect another creature by touch and turn it into an olive creeper. A victim of the olive creeper can be cured by casting a Cure Disease spell on them. One of the rooms in the abandoned house where the creeper lives has a Cure Disease spell scroll. If the Player Characters can find the scroll, they can cast Cure Disease on one of the olive creeper's victims and bring them back to normal. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_b0f886e7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b0f886e7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b0f886e7 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b3a8ec57 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b3a8ec57 | comment |
In Ikemen Sengoku, Mitsuhide's Dramatic route has Yoshiaki shoot the main character with an arrow coated with a strong poison. When Mitsuhide corners Yoshiaki to demand the antidote, Yoshiaki initially claims that he doesn't have the antidote on him and gave it to someone he trusted for safekeeping. However, when Mitsuhide wounds him with the same arrowhead that poisoned the main character, he panics and whips out the antidote from his robes to take it, revealing that he did have it with him all along. Mitsuhide snatches away the antidote, tells Yoshiaki that he knew a greedy and power-hungry man like him would never willingly give up possession of such a powerful tool to anyone else, and then tops it off by revealing that the arrowhead he wounded him with wasn't actually poisoned and that the antidote to such a strong poison is likely strong enough by itself to ravage a completely healthy body... | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b3a8ec57 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b3a8ec57 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ikemen Sengoku (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b3a8ec57 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b6d11153 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b6d11153 | comment |
Justified in the first episode of Pumpkin Scissors: a) since the poison was airborne, having some antidote on hand for accidental exposure was a good idea, and b) the antidote was originally stashed in their base where it would be hard to get at. Why the villain brought it with him for the final showdown remains unexplained, though. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b6d11153 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b6d11153 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pumpkin Scissors (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_b6d11153 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c2463c55 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c2463c55 | comment |
While monsters in Final Fantasy X don't carry actual antidotes, they carry items that cause a status effect (bees carry poison-inducing items, etc.). Strangely, both crafting a piece of armor resistant to this status change and crafting a weapon that causes the effect requires large quantities of the antidote, and the item itself for the more powerful version. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c2463c55 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c2463c55 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy X (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c2463c55 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c81bb075 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c81bb075 | comment |
In Van Helsing, Dracula has a cure for lycanthropy, though for a very good reason. He's weak to werewolves, so it acts as an insurance policy. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c81bb075 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c81bb075 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Van Helsing | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_c81bb075 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cae652c | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cae652c | comment |
In Hunter × Hunter, Gon risks his life to search a villain's corpse for an antidote to the snake venom that is killing his friend, getting himself bitten in the process. When another companion asks how he knew it would be there, Gon replies that it's only common sense that anyone who uses venomous snakes as the basis for his attacks would carry the antidote: not only because of the chance of being bitten himself but to act as a bargaining chip against enemies who have been poisoned. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cae652c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cae652c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hunter × Hunter (Manga) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cae652c | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cf69b21e | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cf69b21e | comment |
Beast Wars: Downplayed in "The Low Road". Tarantulas made an antidote to the virus he infected Rhinox with, but wasn't dumb enough to carry it with him into battle. It was back in his lab. Megatron gets his hands on it first, and uses it to force the Maximals to stand down. Then, he's defeated by an effect of the very virus he infected Rhinox with, combined with some hard-to-digest vine vegetables. It's not pretty. In "Gorilla Warfare", Scorponok plants a bug on Optimus that is supposed to make him cowardly. There is an antidote, which Megatron keeps and wants to use as a bargaining chip, expecting the now-pacifist Optimus to concede. The tides turn, however, when the bug malfunctions and Optimus becomes a raging war machine. Hilarity Ensues. |
|
Carrying the Antidote / int_cf69b21e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cf69b21e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Beast Wars | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_cf69b21e | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d461f757 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d461f757 | comment |
Battlestar Galactica (2003): Gaius Baltar injects Chief with a fast-acting poison, then injects him with the antidote after Chief's girlfriend Boomer tells how many Cylons have infiltrated the fleet. Justified, since Baltar's aim was to get information from Boomer, not to kill Chief. Subverted, because Baltar was working for the good guys. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d461f757 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d461f757 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Battlestar Galactica (2003) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d461f757 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d4ce066b | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d4ce066b | comment |
Subverted in the Ninja Scroll movie, where Tokugawa spy Dakuan forces Jubei into his service by hitting him with a poisoned shuriken (ironically saving his life from a hypnotist in the process). When Jubei tries to poison Dakuan with the same shuriken in return, Dakuan replies that he already got rid of it. The antidote is surprisingly to be poisoned by Jubei and Dakuan's poison-laden ninja ally Kagero through some type of sexual contact. Since Dakuan is technically a good guy he willingly gives up the antidote near the end of their mission. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d4ce066b | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d4ce066b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ninja Scroll | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d4ce066b | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d8d79afa | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d8d79afa | comment |
In both Escape from movies, poor Snake Plisskin has something injected into his body that will kill him if he doesn't accomplish his mission and get back in time to have it deactivated/cured. Subverted in Escape From L.A. when Plisskin is told the "lethal virus" is really nothing more than a rather strong case of the flu. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d8d79afa | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d8d79afa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Escape from L.A. | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_d8d79afa | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_defedb34 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_defedb34 | comment |
In Shadow Hearts: Covenant, after Yuri is infected by the Mistletoe Curse by Sapientes Gladio, the heroes travel halfway around the world tracking down the leader so they can demand a cure. When they finally corner him, they learn that there is no cure. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_defedb34 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_defedb34 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Shadow Hearts: Covenant (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_defedb34 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e290dce3 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e290dce3 | comment |
Defied (in a fashion worthy of Ozymandias himself) in this strip. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e290dce3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e290dce3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Watchmen (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e290dce3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e293455a | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e293455a | comment |
Given a twist in the final episodes of Season 3 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer in which Faith shoots Angel with a poisoned arrow. Turns out, she is carrying the antidote: her blood. Angel can only recover by draining the blood of a Slayer. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e293455a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e293455a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e293455a | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e2b86487 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e2b86487 | comment |
Subverted in the Riftwar book Servant of the Empire: an assassin takes the antidote before drinking poisoned tea along with his victim, but it turns out to not be the antidote. The subversion kicks in when it's pointed out by the victim's spymaster searching for a cure that the antidote bottle was convincing enough to be genuine, so all they have to do is find the apothecary who made it, as he can clearly make the antidote or he wouldn't have an officially-stamped bottle for it in the first place. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e2b86487 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e2b86487 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Riftwar Cycle | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e2b86487 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e70b6f9d | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e70b6f9d | comment |
The Legend of Snow White: When the evil queen comes to poison Snow White, she isn't carrying the antidote to the apple, but she is carrying the way to lift the petrification curse she cast on the whole forest. Of course, as she keeps her eyes on Snow White, there's no way she could grab it... Snow White bites the poisoned apple to get her to lower her guard, and uses the last of her strength to lift the curse. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e70b6f9d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e70b6f9d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Legend of Snow White | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_e70b6f9d | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f15f622e | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f15f622e | comment |
In one episode of MacGyver (1985), the villain tries to get out some information from Mac by injecting a poison in him that kills him in 24 hours. Mac tries to steal back the antidote instead. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f15f622e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f15f622e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
MacGyver (1985) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f15f622e | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3c3ca42 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3c3ca42 | comment |
The Tick was accidentally sprayed with a plant vitalizer that makes plants come alive and attack people. The villain — a plant-man with plans for world domination — indeed has an antidote, for reasons unknown to everyone. It's possible that he was keeping it as a fallback in case the plants decided to rebel against him too. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3c3ca42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3c3ca42 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Tick | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3c3ca42 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3ef0f86 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3ef0f86 | comment |
Artemis Fowl uses the blackmail version on a decrepit alcoholic sprite in the first book, "poisoning" her with holy water to force her to let him look at her Book (which contains the secrets of the fairy people) in exchange for an antidote - which he faithfully administers once he has what he wants. And since the fey had been addicted to alcohol for ages, he also slipped in the ultimate hangover cure, with an added amnesiac/knockout drug. As to why he didn't just kill her, the Book has to be freely given, so that wouldn't work. Butler does question why Artemis didn't finish her off afterward, but this hints that Artemis isn't actually as cold hearted as he likes people to think he is. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3ef0f86 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3ef0f86 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Artemis Fowl | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f3ef0f86 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f891a20d | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f891a20d | comment |
A lot of monsters in Terraria inflict various nasty status conditions. However, they have a small chance of dropping an item that gives you immunity to their respective debuffs. Even better, you can combine several of them into one item for maximum immunity. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f891a20d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f891a20d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Terraria (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_f891a20d | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fb873b86 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fb873b86 | comment |
Saw: The Jigsaw Killer tends to carry or leave an antidote for the poison he frequently uses on his victims. For example, according to Zep's tape from the first film: "There's a slow-acting poison coursing through your bloodstream, which only I have the antidote for..." | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fb873b86 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fb873b86 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Saw (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fb873b86 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fe8ef766 | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fe8ef766 | comment |
Inverted in an old issue of Marvel's Captain America, where the supervillain Cobra appears to pull just this ploy to get his (likewise villainous) nemesis Mr. Hyde off his back. In fact, Cobra was bluffing about the poison all along...but the supposed "antidote" turned out to be powerful knockout drug. | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fe8ef766 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fe8ef766 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Captain America (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_fe8ef766 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ffbcb90e | type |
Carrying the Antidote | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ffbcb90e | comment |
In the opening of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Dr. Jones trades the remains of Nurhaci to gangster Lao Che for a large diamond, when Indy is poisoned by Lao Che and offered the antidote to intimidate him into giving back the diamond. Naturally there's a fight and Lao Che drops the antidote, allowing Indy to drink it and save himself (but he loses the diamond in the fight). | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ffbcb90e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ffbcb90e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom | hasFeature |
Carrying the Antidote / int_ffbcb90e |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
Copyright of DBTropes.org wrapper 2009-2013 DFKI Knowledge Management. Imprint. - Thanks to Bakken&Baeck for hosting. Contact.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.