What if the villain of the last show you watched actually took this advice?
>>149195375 (OP)Canโt speak for The Lich but i think he wouldnโt mind getting rid of Finn in that way
>>149195375 (OP)I like it when villains monologue and give the hero a chance to escape. It displays the villains arrogance, leading to their own defeat because of their absolute confidence in their own victory.
People only complain about it because they hear other people complaining. They just want to think they're smart, so they undermine a tried and tested storytelling convention.
Ironically, in "Mad Love," both the comic story and the episode, Joker DOES take her advice, or tries to. After he's knocked Harley out the window, and Batman is chained up on the table in front of him, Joker thinks about it, then pulls out his pistol, ready to blow Bruce's brains out.
All this, after he berates Harley for the idea and says he'd never do it. "Mad Love" beats you over the head with the idea that Joker is a liar and a hypocrite. It's great.
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>>149195375 (OP)well the time he did it he succedeed