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Badassspartan 2554

HE! IS! BADAAASS!!


  • Hey, I hear that cat Shaft is one baad Motha-
    • Shut yo mouth!
  • River Tam turns badass in the Firefly movie Serenity. She also had some badass moments during the series as well, such as taking out three of Niska's men with her eyes closed during Mal's rescue in "War Stories".
    • Mal, Book, and Zoe are pretty badass in that one as well. Ripping a torture device out of your chest shortly after dying and stabbing The Dragon of the villain with it? Badass defined.
    • Simon. A mild-mannered doctor who, against all his prior social conditioning, managed to get into a government facility and break his sister out of it- using nothing but subterfuge, a knockout weapon and eventually, River herself.
    • The Operative fights both Mal and Inara to a standstill in the Companion Training Hall and gives Mal a fight on Mr. Universe's moon in the movie's final showdown.
    • Jayne Cobb, "Shiny! Let's be bad guys!"
  • Marv from Sin City, but then, his picture was on the main page. Still he is so badass he should be mentioned as many times as it takes, plus one.
  • The Man With No Name in the Dollars Trilogy. In The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Angel Eyes and Tuco are also prime examples. Any character played by Clint Eastwood qualifies.
  • Jason Bourne.
  • Tombstone: Doc Holiday! Only a real man can wear that snazzy purple vest and still shoot em up while dying from TB.
  • Pulp Fiction.
    • Jules Winnfield. Samuel L. Jackson has been a badass for most of his career. One good example is Formula51 (a.k.a The 51st State), in which he wears a kilt for most of the movie, hangs out with Robert Carlyle, and beats up skinheads with a golf club.
    • Butch
  • Zartan, from G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, who breaks into the Pit, with Storm Shadow and The Baroness, stabs Cover Girl through the chest and almost does the same to General Hawk, and promptly escapes, posing as a traveling Bedouin—all the while whistling "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow". Oh, and he successfully impersonates the President of the United States
    • Zartan? I think Zartan would be more like a weasel than a badass!!! Ew.
    • Storm Shadow and Snake Eyes. They always get to fight at the top of buildings and bring a sword to a gun fight. And they are so very cool.
      • Snake Eyes deserves mention for several feats. Among them doing handstand pushups, which in itself is impressive, except he was balancing on the tips of his swords, and then we get his ability to dodge projectile cars. Duke was considered a badass by the rest of the team because he was able to knock Snake Eyes down in one of the dozen sparring matches they had.
  • Anton Chigurh, "the ultimate badass", from No Country for Old Men.
  • The titular character of the Terminator movies.
    • And the first movie's protagonist, Kyle Reese.
    • Or Sarah Connor after her level-up.
    • The fourth movie shows us just how badass John Connor, leader of the resistance, can be.
  • Darth Vader, of Star Wars. Badass enough to conduct several invasions in the original trilogy, maintain an... umm, intimidating presence, and kill anyone that he pleases - even those who are more powerful than him. Taken Up to Eleven in the Expanded Universe.
    • The same, unfortunately, cannot be said of his prequel alter-ego Anakin, but try to look on The Dark Side of it.
      • Maybe not so much in the films, but in both Clone Wars animated series he has many badass moments.
      • Even in the films, you gotta admit he had his moments. Deliberately jumping out of a speeder several thousand kilometers in the air and falling a couple hundred meters to get the drop on Zam Wessell, for example, as well as the entire Battle of Coruscant. Also, the duel against Obi-Wan on Mustafar, especially when you consider how he simply refused to die, resulting in his becoming the Darth Vader we all know.
    • Princess Leia. Anyone who could stand inside the Death Star and snark back to Darth Vader and Moff Tarkin is made of Badass.
      • General Grievous started out as this in the Clone Wars micro-series. He was later characterized as a Dirty Coward, but was later given more Badass moments in later episodes of the CGI Clone Wars.
    • The other Sith Lords of the series also qualify, with Darth Sidious, Count Dooku/Darth Tyrannus and in particular Darth Maul each having plenty of Badass moments.
    • On the Jedi side, there's Mace Windu (Sam Jackson again), at least until Anakin takes off his hand. After that ... probably not.
    • There is also Kyle Katarn. As displayed in Jedi Academy, Kyle would use grapple attacks on Jaden like putting him in a head lock then throwing, or holding him with one hand and punching him with the other. During a lightsaber duel. To emphasize just how badass he is, "winning" doesn't mean killing or even injuring him. "Winning" in this case means dropping the ceiling on him and running for your damn life before he gets out.
      • One of his Idle Animations is trimming his beard with his lightsaber. You know, the white-hot Laser Sword that can cut through almost anything in the galaxy.
    • Star Wars has too many badasses to list. The most notable of which include Han, Vader, Lando, Luke, Chewbacca, and Boba Fett.
      • Fett only became truly awesome due to the fans. In the movies, he has a pretty ignominious fate.
        • He's badass enough to not be terrified of Vader and to talk to him man-to-man when he has to. Four others tried Obi-Wan (who was killed right after), Lando (though Vader used him as a doormat, implying Boba was badass enough to be worth talking to), Luke (thanks to him being family), and Palpatine (thanks to him being Vader's master).
        • Also, his fate in the movies is modified in the subsequent EU books. He didn't actually die in the Sarlacc.
    • And if you think they're badass in the movies, you must not have seen the old Clone Wars cartoon, where everyone except battle droids is, and those who already were go beyond all reason. Grievous makes his first appearance by stomping a jedi to death and continuing to almost destroy a number of other jedi. Until they are saved by a troop of clone troopers who are themselves badass enough to drive Grievous off as well as performing a number of other such feats in the series. Asajj Ventress battles an arena full of monstrous gladiators without breaking a sweat. Shaak Ti fights several dozens of Magnaguards at once just after it has been established that they're badass, too. Yoda is even more Yoda than elsewhere. The list goes on, but the biggest badass is probably Mace Windu. I'm not even going to try to explain it, you need to see it for yourself.
    • The CG animated Star Wars: The Clone Wars has badass Jedi, Sith, Clones (Captain Rex), Droids (Commando Droids) and Bounty Hunters like Cad Bane, Aurra Sing, Embo.
    • Yoda is pretty damn badass in the prequels as well. He takes on a master Sith, and wins. Despite being several hundred years older than his opponent and being in such bad shape he has to use a cane to walk around. Also, he is about 1.5 meters shorter than said opponent, and possibly suffering from mild dementia.
      • Yoda's biggest moment of badass is when he lifts that motherfucking X-Wing out of the swamp.
    • Obi-Wan Kenobi is made of badass.
      • Especially through that entire sequence on Utapau.
    • R2-D2. The only non-evil character to live through all six movies and remember it. The moment in ROTS when he makes super battle droids slip in oil and then lights it on fire and strolls away is his best, but that's just me.
  • Riddick, of The Chronicles of Riddick and Pitch Black.
    • Riddick is so Badass he can actually physically transform a fragile tin teacup into a weapon able to penetrate a human sternum, and follows that up with a small pin-tab, which becomes so intimidating resting on the ground beside him that no one else takes up the offer to tango.
    • Indeed. Off-hand quips. Kill set-ups. Various gambits. Outracing the incinerating rays of a too-close star on a blasted planet. He's one big personified study of Badassery incarnate.
  • Xander Cage, of XXX. In fact, every action movie role played by The Rock or Vin Diesel.
  • Beatrix Kiddo, a.k.a. Black Mamba, a.k.a. The Bride in Kill Bill.
  • The odious Captain Vidal from Pan's Labyrinth. Despite being a total and unrelenting bastard, he leads from the front, never even flinches as his men are mowed down around him, beats at least one man to death with a wine bottle, fights off the effects of heavy sedatives, and, in one particularly painful-looking scene, stitches up his own face with a needle and thread.
      • Mercedes; the sheer courage taken to stand in Vidal's presence knowing what he would do to her if he were to ever find out that she was a rebel proves she has more balls than a christmas tree. And her Crowning Moment of Face Slashing Awesome where she uses a knife she had very wisely kept about her person at all times to escape imminent torture and then stabs Vidal more than a few times with it . . . though not quite enough, unfortunately.
  • Doug Gordon, Captain of the Gotengo, from Godzilla: Final Wars: "Listen, kid, there are two things you don't know about Earth. One is me; the other is Godzilla." This, to an alien who's just destroyed human civilization. Then he comes up against two heavily-armed aliens with just a katana...and puts down the katana by sticking it into a stone pillar. He's also got a Badass Longcoat and Badass Mustache to boot.
    • Even his SMILE is badass—it scared me when he tried to smile at a pretty lady, and probably made more than one little kid wet his pants.
    • And when passing his fellows, who have just been tied up by a really long firefight, acknowledges them in passing by muttering, "I thought I told you to get to the ship?"
    • Godzilla himself.
    • A few of Godzilla's enemies. King Ghidorah, Gigan and Destoroyah definitely qualify.
    • You forgot Mothra. She not only has the best record of any recurrent monster against Godzilla, her first movie was all about Mothra devastating Japan and defeating the Self Defense Force by simply CRAWLING/FLYING AROUND
  • Vasquez, in Aliens.
    • For that matter, most of the marines in the same film. ( With the notable exception of Lieutenant Gorman, the guy in charge.) Although he does redeem himself.
  • Lieutenant Ellen Ripley throughout the entire Alien series, but especially in the climactic fight in Aliens: "Get away from her, you bitch."
  • Indiana Jones. He's not afraid to fight dirty, causes so much havoc for the Nazis that Hitler himself orders the Nazi army to pursue him, and, even in old age, can still throw punches like it's nobody's business.
  • Captain Barbossa in Pirates of the Caribbean.
    • Agreed. He was a true badass, whereas Jack was more of a lucky trickster. Elizabeth turned into a budding little badass too.
  • As of Evil Dead 2, and more so in Army of Darkness, Bruce Campbell's character Ashley Williams is equal parts Badass and Jerkass. At one point, he replaces his left hand with a chainsaw. These movies lead to an apparent Law of Story: If you replace the lead of a horror movie with a Badass, it becomes an action movie.
    • "Groovy!"
  • Sean Connery. Always. Exhibit A: James Bond. Exhibit B: The Rock. Exhibit C: The Untouchables. Exhibit D: The Wind and the Lion.
    • Exception: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
      • Professor Henry Jones: "I suddenly remembered my Charlemagne. Let my armies be the rocks and the trees and the birds in the sky." EXCEPTION DENIED.
      • That's not an exception, the guy brings down an airplane with an UMBRELLA!
      • Word of God even said, they wanted Sean Connery for Indy's father because they needed someone who had already done it bigger, better, and with more beautiful women, so who else could they use? Sean Connery is only in the film because his is more Badass than Indiana Jones!
    • Zardoz, bitches.
  • Everybody in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
  • James Bond, whatever the actor.
  • Chow Yun-Fat in any movie made by John Woo.
  • Every single one of the Spartans in 300 fitted this, but in particular King Leonidas. Considering The Spartan Way was the real life training method used in Sparta of Ancient Greece, anybody who survived would have to have been a Badass.
  • Chev Chelios from Crank. The entire movie revolves around the fact that if he stops doing absolute feats of badassery for more than a few minutes, he will keel over dead from poison. Really, just Jason Statham in all his roles.
  • Any character portrayed by, or based on, Bruce Lee (who was truly a badass in Real Life).
  • Clint Eastwood in almost every movie he was in including and before Unforgiven.
    • He was still a badass in Gran Torino, despite it not being the "typical" Clint Eastwood film.
  • Planet Terror (Robert Rodriguez's half of the Grindhouse double feature) takes the insane stunts aspect of Badass to the limit, especially in the characters of El Wray (especially when he fights his way through an army of The Infected with a pair of butterfly knives) and, later, Cherry Darling, who loses her leg to a zombie and has it replaced with various weapons, including an M-16 assault rifle with attached grenade launcher, and a minigun!
    • The 3 women in Death Proof! Especially the driver. They managed to turn the initial psychopathic badass into a snivelling grease stain on the highway. Hooray, ladies!
  • Nearly everyone in Dog Soldiers, Spoon and Sarge especially. Spoon, for example, fistfights a werewolf—and almost wins. And then his last words, "I hope I give you the shits you fucking wimp!"
  • The Descent—almost everybody is one. If one considers that the cast is female, this becomes a wonderful thing—there really aren't enough women on this list. The story is: six extreme sportswomen go into a cave, and find themselves trapped when Juno reveals she lead them deliberately into an unexplored cave (read: Death Trap.) They soon realise that They Are Not Alone. It's fortunate then, that Juno is a raging, mother-frikking badass, who breaks all sorts of tropes by overpowering the people-eating humanoid cave monster that attacks her and killing it with an ice pick. She then goes on a rampage of destruction that leaves you feeling sorry for the cannibals. She is matched only by Sarah, who after finding out her dead husband cheated on her and granting her best friend's request for I Cannot Self-Terminate, primally kills the cave people in such charming manners as shoving her thumbs in through their eyes and biting out their throats. LEGENDARY.
    • Right after the I Cannot Self-Terminate, when a crawler is on top of Sarah without knowing she's there and her face remains completely emotionless, it's actually a little freaky in it's badassery. Normal people don't behave like that! She is crazy.
    • Besides the obvious two, there's also Sam, who didn't do much in the way of Badass for most of the film, but went out hanging from the ceiling, climbing onto a fighting crawler's back in midair and stabbing its ass off the cave roof, all with her fucking throat slashed.
  • Because Neil Marshall doesn't just like his badasses, he loves them, Doomsday. Bloody Doomsday. The movie itself and damn near everyone in it. Have you SEEN this car chase? It's insane.
  • Mel Gibson usually plays one variety or another of badass.
  • Sonny Chiba. He probably can't shop for groceries without killing thirty people and a bull.
  • Toshiro Mifune in most of his films, especially when he plays Ronin characters. Subverted in Rashomon.
    • Even the shoe company executive he plays in Tengoku to jigoku (a.k.a. High and Low) is a badass. When colleagues try to persuade him that they should make cheap, fashionable shoes, he responds by tearing up their shoddy sample with his bare hands.
  • The masterful and quiet Kyuuzo, from the movie Seven Samurai. In his first scene he coolly cuts down an arrogant challenger with a single sword stroke. He also, at one point, volunteers to steal a gun from the bandits during the night, and comes back the next morning unharmed and successful, although a little tired. As his starry-eyed admirer Katsushiro said, "It was like he had just gone on a picnic!"
  • John McClane, from the Die Hard movies. In fact, most of Bruce Willis's roles qualify. John McClane has in fact gotten more and more badass with each film, going from "Everyman in extreme situations triumphs against improbable odds" to "middle-aged-man power fantasy.".
  • In the movie Shoot 'Em Up, in which Clive Owen's character, Mr. Smith, kills hundreds of people while skydiving, having sex, and delivering a woman's baby (although not all at the same time). Oh, and eating carrots, too.
    • And he also kills people with carrots.
  • Most of Jean Reno roles in films. He is usually portrayed as a high profile mercenary with just over-the-top competence.
    • In his French-language movies he's most often a cop; still utterly Badass, though.
  • The character of Zatoichi, played by Shintaro Katsu in 26 films and 100 television episodes, certainly qualifies. Not only is he a fantastically skilled swordsman, he's also blind. About once a movie they have some spectacular set-piece in order to show just how very badass he is. For example, from the very first film of the series: Zatoichi, kneeling on the floor, reaches up and takes a lit candle from a stand. He balances it in his hand for a moment, tosses it up in the air, then whips out his sword and resheathes it in an instant. The candle falls to the floor. It's been cut in half lengthwise. The wick in both halves is still burning.
    • The newer iteration, played by Takeshi Kitano, is also nine kinds of awesome.
  • Aragorn and Boromir from The Lord of the Rings: The latter was so tough he actually managed to get hit by 4-6 Annoying Arrows by the end of the first movie and still had enough strength to single-handedly take out a division of Uruk-Hai, while the former managed to hold off wave after wave of Uruk-Hai near the end of the second film.
    • Annoying arrows? From Boromir's expression, the very first hit alone was lethal.He just decided not to die yet.
    • Sam, who saved Frodo's life about six times.
    • Legolas takes down a giant elephant and the 20 or so people riding on it. Even with the girly tights, that's pretty Badass.
    • There's also Gothmog, the chief orc from Return of the King. When a piece of wall is catapulted in his general direction, the other orcs around him panic and run, but he just stares at it, only moving at the last second, and then just a step to the side, completely evading it. Oh, and then he spits on it.
  • El Mariachi from the titular film, Desperado and Once Upon a Time In Mexico is one of the best examples of such.
    • Another example is Agent Sands from the third movie, who develops a Disability Superpower after getting his eyes gouged out by Dr. Guevara, proceeding to take out no fewer than five people, including his ex Ajedrez.
  • Charles Bronson was a badass even in old age. In his later movies (Death Wish 4 for example) even though Bronson was in his 60s or 70s, he still manages to defeat bad guys half his age. In Real Life, he was mining coal at the age of ten.
  • Snake Plissken from Escape from New York & LA.
  • Ricky from The Story of Ricky (aka Riki-Oh, aka Lik Wong), takes this to ludicrous levels for live action. There are really too many things to mention, but how about the time he is being tortured by the bad guys? They fill his mouth with razorblades, tape up his mouth and then beat him round the head. Then, when they take the tape off, he says nothing, merely spits the razorblades into his questioners face. He is also, strangely for the trope, a genuine, kind-hearted hero.
    • Some bad guys are pretty Badass too, even though they get their asses handed to them by Ricky; Oscar, who, after realizing just how outclassed he is, slashes open his gut, grabs his intestines and tries to strangle Ricky with them.
  • Bill "The Butcher" Cutting from Gangs of New York may very well be this trope incarnate. The reason he has a glass eye is because in a brutal battle against his rival and fellow Badass Priest Vallon, he couldn't look him in the eye while the Priest gave what Bill called "the finest beating he ever took". In order to compensate, he cut out the eye that looked away and sent it to Vallon in wrapping paper. What's more at one point he gets shot in a theater, then proceeds to torture the man who did it (and takes his vest as a souvenir).
  • Every character with a name in the film Hero ... Until the end. Lame.
  • Sam Gerard in U.S. Marshals. Say what you will, a man bold enough to wear chicken suit in public is badass.
  • Rambo is a classical example of a one man army getting more badass with every movie of the series.
    • One of his most notable traits, the ability to go in with only a steel knife and showing what an underdog is capable of.
  • Quite a bit of the main cast from Twenty Eight Days Later. Selena in particular is better off here than among Badass Normal characters, as the only ones who are anything other than normal are psychotically infected pseudo-zombies. Major West is just a big, angry male Mama Bear.
  • Buddy from Six String Samurai.
  • Burt Gummer from the various Tremors movies.
  • Tony "You fuck with me, YOU FUCKIN' WITH THE BEST!" Montana.
  • Though Tony Stark needs a suit of Badass to do his feats of physical Badass-ness, the fact that he's able to construct a suit powered by a miniaturized reactor that thirty years of research hasn't been able to shrink down, using science and engineering that a fully equipped team of engineers in a state of the art laboratory all agree does not exist yet in a CAVE, with a box of SCRAPS, defines how much of a complete Badass he is.
  • Hannibal Lecter. Supergenius Wicked Cultured Affably Evil Magnifient and Manipulative Bastard Heroic Sociopath . . . the list just never ends!
  • Everyone in Wanted, but definitely the best examples belong to the most unassuming of the cast—Wesley Gibson, played by James McAvoy ("What the fuck have you done lately?"), and Sloan, played by Morgan Freeman.
  • Yulaw, from The One. He travels through dimensions killing alternate versions of himself in order to become more powerful.
  • Scott the cameraman from Quarantine killed one of the Infected (who had already taken down a cop and a firemen without trouble) that jumped out unexpectedly near him—using the camera. Apart from this, he was solid as a rock all through the movie, handling the situation in general far calmer than anyone else in the building. Also Angela, for realizing what the government was doing "quarantining," the residents and continuously heading towards the danger in order to get footage as evidence of what was really happening.
    • Angela from REC can kick Quarantine Angela's ass in three seconds flat.
  • The title character of Ip Man. Bruce Lee's master, mind.
  • Preston, the main character of Equilibrium, fits this in spades. His entire fighting style is designed around the premise that if you pull off cool enough poses while pulling the triggers of two pistols, you can clear rooms full of opponents armed with assault rifles without even suffering a scratch. His badass level is such that, in one scene, he uses this style (the famed Gun Kata) to kill a dozen men in the defense of a puppy dog he rescued earlier.
  • Tran from Tropic Thunder. He is only a child, and yet he runs a large drug compound, has a cool tatoo all over his chest, can take Jack Black tackling him head on, and can expertly wield an RPG (not that kind) that is a third taller than him.
    • Kirk Lazarus would like to remind you what kind of farmer he is.
  • Marshal Rooster Cogburn from True Grit is known as the meanest guy around, shooting bad guys just like that. "Most people around here have heard of Rooster Cogburn, and some people live to regret it". Bonus points: Eyepatch of Power.
  • Frank Martin of The Transporter series.
  • "Popeye" Doyle in The French Connection. The man chases an el train in a car.
  • Bud White, played by Russell Crowe, in L.A. Confidential. At one point, he's confronted with a snarky lawyer who refuses to give him the information he wants. "Don't pull that 'good cop, bad cop' crap; I practically invented it", quips the lawyer. Bud's response? Throw him out the window.
  • Sulu from the new Star Trek: The man has a retractable Katanas Are Just Better, knows martial arts as well as fencing and can use them in tandem, oh, and he can quite competently fly a starship.
    • No mention of Kirk? Sure, he may have gotten beaten around for a while throughout the movie, but at the end when Ayel, Nero's second-in-command, is strangling Kirk and mocking him for not being able to talk, Kirk simply says four words.
Cquote1

   "I got your gun".

Cquote2
  • Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song. The word Badass is in the title!
  • Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1 in Kamen Rider: The First, a reimagining of the original Kamen Rider TV series. He was especially badass from the getgo during the time when he was still the Hopper during his first infiltration mission. He did a lot of sneaking but when the jig was up, he beat up the guards without so much as breaking a sweat as breaking out of his stride. He just stood there and then proceeded to disable three guards while looking the other way. Then he kicks one of them into the glass pane to "open" it and proceeds to rip an iron bar out of the door to get in. Then he punches THROUGH the ground and destroys his target before jumping off the building and landing harmlessly below with glass shattering around him like dust. And then he walks calmly away. Badass.
  • If he weren't crippled by the stupidity of his movie, Zap Rowsdower from The Final Sacrifice would be a real badass, as cool as any drifter hero in pulp fiction. He makes Molotov cocktails and breaks necks!
  • The Predator. He's even featured on the Badass of the Week list.
    • The protagonists count as well, Billy and Blain are the ones that stand out the most.
  • John Mallory, from A Fistful of Dynamite is a man who really likes to blow shit up. An awful lot.
  • You should all be ashamed that it's taken this long for his name to be added to the list: TALLAHASSEE!!!!
  • Colonel Miles Quaritch from Avatar. The air on Pandora may be unbreathable to humans, but he kicks open (a heavy steel) door without any breathing aid and goes right out to pursue the fleeing protagonists, because screw breathing. Only after the protagonists have fled and he's done shooting do his lackeys come up in oxygen masks and hands him one as well.
    • Also, later in the film, he has to escape an exploding ship. He jumps into his mech while on fire. He proceeds to strap himself in before putting out the fire. Because fuck fire. The following sequence involving him escaping the exploding ship further shows his manliness. Explosions and whatnot.
    • A little while later, he takes not one, but two giant Na'vi arrows (which are like giant spears to a human) to the chest before finally deciding to die. And this is after refusing to die after getting the mech punctured (he doesn't need to breathe, as demonstrated above), and stabbed right next to his face. And he pulled out that knife that was stabbed next to his face and used it as a weapon himself.
  • From the Tollywood film Alluda Majaka, we have this fellow, known only as Mr. Toyota.[1]
  • Everyone in Streets of Fire except Rick Moranis's character, Billy Fish. But give him some points for trying near the end at the beginning of the final showdown between hero Tom Cody and Big Bad Raven. Billy at least tried to get Raven to leave with a warning, but despite getting brutally decked (and for the second time in the movie overall), that took guts.
  • Plunkett And Macleane's Will Plunkett cements his Badass status surviving pistols at dawn and having a glorious Big Damn Hero moment.
  • No mention of RoboCop? He was a badass cop to start with, but then after suffering one of the most gruesome deaths in movie history is brought back as walking tank to single-handedly decimate Old Detroit's criminal element. After being crippled and disarmed by "Directive 4", he still manages to damage and escape the vastly more powerful ED-209, survives attack by a S.W.A.T. team, and subsequent onslaught by Boddicker and his men armed with anti-tank rifles, steals one to destroy the ED-209 and then confront the Big Bad again. In the sequel he is torn apart, rebuilt, and then fries himself to fix his programming, and then takes on a cyborg bigger, faster, and more powerful in every way, and wins. And that's not even getting into the comics, where he takes on not only The Terminator, but survives complete destruction as a sentient computer program that hijacks Skynet's factories to create a freakin' army of Robo Cops to fight the whole of Skynet in the future. Even more impressively, it's been shown the reason the RoboCop program wasn't expanded is because the pain and trauma is so great no normal human could ever endure it. Alex Murphy survived because of an epic sense of duty, and being made of pure badass.
  • In The Chronicles of Narnia the main cast is all Badass, although each movie switches between them.
    • Peter throughout The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as well as the White Witch, and Edmund at the end.
    • Susan and Edmund throughout Prince Caspian. In fact these two characters are the best examples of character growth in the whole series. Lucy gets a Badass moment at the end when she stares down the entire Telmarine Army.
    • Caspian, Edmund, Reepicheep and Lucy all count as Badass in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. Even Eustace gets a Badass moment when he attacks the Sea Serpent.
  • Most of the human characters in The Matrix movie series, but especially The Chosen One, Neo, who can take on the nastiest foes that the Machines can deliver (in and outside the Matrix) and survive it. He only loses a level in Badass when he must face the villain he created. He still wins the battle, in Messianic fashion.
  • Bryan Mills from the movie Taken. In order to rescue his daughter, who has been kidnapped by a ring of human traffickers, he starts a campaign to increase the public awareness of... ah, well, actually, he just travels to France the same day, tracks the man responsible for this down, kills them all with his nut-cracking CIA martial arts skills and wrecks their whole operation. For Bryan Mills, gentlemanly warfare means smashing your head against a wall until you stop moving, wine bottles are stabby things and a pair of rusty nails and a reliable power source are torture implements. After seeing this movie, you will never look at fire extinguishers the same way again.
  • Oh Dae-su from Oldboy shows what you get when you lock a man in a room for fifteen years - the first meal he has as a free man is alive.
  • Surprisingly, Charles Xavier is quite the Badass in X-Men: First Class. He essentially stops the Third World War on his own with some quick thinking and telepathy, blowing up the ship carrying the Russian nukes through one of the Russian generals. And then, once the real battle begins, he holds a teleathic link in order to immobilise the bad guy while Magneto pushes a coin through the same bad guy's skull. Charles feels everything.
    • The rest of the cast gets their own moments of badassery as well. Erik (Magneto) spends the whole first act hunting down and wiping out former Nazis, Beast is just plain cool and all the other team members fulfill their badass quotient in various awesome ways.
    • Even the bad guy and his goons are badass in this film. Azazel takes out virtually every guard in a secret CIA complex on his own in various awesome ways and Sebastian Shaw is virtually immortal and likes to show this off. Needless to say, this makes him badass in the extreme.
  • Eric from Mystery Team. Made more impressive seeing as how he is seven years old.
  • Sheriff Buford Pusser from the 1973 movie, Walking Tall. From the outset, he was made out to be one, a champion wrestler and an ex-Marine. However, this gets turned Up to Eleven when he takes out the people who were cheating his friend at a craps table, people who had previously beat the tar out of him, slashed his body, and left him to die in a roadside ditch. And he does it all...with a big fucking stick.
  • Christopher Nolan's Batman. Sure, Batman is already in the comics section, but Nolan's Batman features a badass batsuit and batmobile. Combined with Nolan's talent for directing, complete badass.
  • All of the Wolverines from Red Dawn. It takes freakin' Spetsnaz to stop them at last, and then, they do a lot of damage. And two of them escape in the end.
  1. or Sitaramudu