Not-Sew-Wicked Stepmom, Vol. 1

£7.995
FREE Shipping

Not-Sew-Wicked Stepmom, Vol. 1

Not-Sew-Wicked Stepmom, Vol. 1

RRP: £15.99
Price: £7.995
£7.995 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

In The Candy Snatchers, Candy's stepfather married her mother solely for her fortune and has spent the last ten years hoping for Candy to die so he can inherit the fortune instead of her. Persona 4 plays with this trope. The protagonist's Temperance Social Link centers around a stepmother named Eri Minami, who is having trouble with her young stepson, Yuuta, a kid that The Protagonist watches over in the daycare where he works. Yuuta is convinced that his stepmother hates him, while in turn, Eri is convinced that Yuuta hates her. Both of them do care for each other, but it takes some help from the protagonist to get them to express it. Viscerally portrayed in Assamese horror film Kothanodi ( The River of Fables) where crazy stepmother Senehi tortures and brutally murders her stepdaughter Tejimola. Gioacchino Rossini subverts it in La Cenerentola, a retelling of "Cinderella" casting a stepfather, Don Magnifico, as the villain. His motives are economic as with so many fairy tale stepmothers; if the heroine does not marry, he can afford larger dowries for his own daughters. The Gender Flip lets him fill the standard comic opera role of "the pompous bass-voiced buffoon who stands in the way of the young lovers' happiness but gets his comeuppance in the end" (a la Bartolo in The Barber of Seville).

Cinderella has one, of course, but we never see her. The spin-off hints that the stepmother wasn't much better to her own daughters either. Hinako's rapist in Bitter Virgin is her stepdad. She was impregnated twice by him, the first being a miscarriage early on and the second resulting in a baby boy whom she gave up for adoption to Give Him a Normal Life. Inverted in Castlevania 64 with Carrie and Actrise. Actrise proudly brags that, amongst the 100 children she slew to obtain immortality, the very first was her own biological daughter. Carrie calls her out as pathetic for this, after remembering how her step-mother loved her dearly and even gave her life to save Carrie's.Zig-zagged with Patricia, Dimitri's stepmother. He recalls her with fondness and laments her death at The Tragedy of Duscur, but late in the Azure Moon route Cornelia reveals with her dying words that Patricia was complicit in the plot and never actually loved Dimitri, instead arranging the death of the King so she could be with her biological daughter Edelgard. Where it gets ambiguous is that the one saying this definitely had an agenda and while certain aspects seem to be true and were confirmed by an outside party, the real truth is likely somewhat between the two. In The Orbiting Human Circus (of the Air), protagonist Julian the Janitor tells his personal Interactive Narrator of times when his stepfather would discover him hiding in the basement and pretending to record a radio show on a tape machine rather than cleaning, and lift him by the hair, or box his ear until it bled and rang. It's strongly implied that Julian was otherwise expected to spend all his time cleaning house. Hera is an aversion, but only because she can be just as awful to her own kids. She drove Hercules insane so that he killed his wife and kids, but she also threw her own son, Hephaestus, off Mount Olympus for being ugly. In one episode of Bones, the Villain of the Week was the victim's stepmother, who killed him so her own son would get the whole inheritance. Since she sacrificed her medication to be able to poison him, she died in no more than five days after being discovered. (she didn't care about dying as long as her son got the money). Because her son wasn't guilty of any crime regarding the inheritance, he did get it all but isn't comfortable with the means. It's ultimately a Pyrrhic Victory for the stepmother, who got what she wanted but at the cost of not only her life but her son's respect. In the Portuguese fairy tale " The Hearth Cat ", a woman persuades the girl to tell her father to marry her... and becomes an evil stepmother.

In " The Ridere of Riddles ", the stepmother tries to poison her stepson. Her son, however, loves his brother, warns him, and then flees with him. Used in Winx Club's season 3 arc about Stella's dad planning to marry an evil countess, who was evil even before she made the deal with Valtor. In " Geirlaug the King's Daughter ", the stepmother is a witch who poisons three of her husband's guards. In " Morozko", the old woman hates her stepdaughter, mistreats her every day, and outright attempts to get her killed. Needless to say, her biological daughter is a pampered, spoiled brat. Talma Gordon": Captain Gordon's second wife Mary treats Jeannette and Talma, the daughters of his first wife, with contempt and speaks badly of their mother. It's said that she envies the inheritance that the first Mrs. Gordon left her daughters.

In SPY×FAMILY, one of Anya's biggest fears is that Fiona Frost becomes this to her. Not just because she's already fond of her Good Stepmother Yor (who despite her flaws genuinely loves her), but because as a telepath she's been able to read exactly what Fiona would do to her if she became Loid's wife, which includes whipping her as a form of discipline. In Juno, this is subverted. Juno's relationship with her stepmother is pretty good and improves greatly throughout the film. Her stepmother is a caring parental figure for Juno and even defends her against an ultrasound technician who says Juno would've been a bad mother. Juno's biological mother is estranged. Gyokumen. Big time towards Kougaiji. Made even worse when it's revealed she doesn't even like her own daughter. Japanese just-so stories often explain the mole was once a beautiful woman who was turned into such an ugly creature as punishment for abusing her stepchildren. In one variant, this was a karmic punishment for burying her stepdaughter alive (though she ended up rescued).

Gail in A Cinderella Story: Once Upon a Song forces her stepdaughter, Katie, to do all the housework, treats her like dirt, and even forces her to lip-sync her daughter, while constantly thwarting her own attempts at music stardom. She also threatens to use Loophole Abuse to steal her inheritance and even threatens to throw her in foster care if she doesn't obey her. Madame Heloise de Villefort in The Count of Monte Cristo is the young wife of middle-aged prosecutor Villefort, with a spoiled eight-year-old son. She despises Valentine, Villefort's daughter by his previous marriage, because all of the property of her grandparents will revert to her rather than her stepbrother. She eventually goes on a killing spree, poisoning Valentine's maternal grandparents and attempting to poison her husband's paralytic father (his servant is killed instead). The titular Count fakes Valentine's death to get her to safety ( though he did provide the poison in the first place, in his revenge against Villefort). Madame de Villefort's murders are finally discovered by her husband. To escape justice, she poisons herself, and just to spite her husband, kills her son as well. Anne Boleyn is presented as this in the young adult novel Mary Bloody Mary, which is about the youth of the future Mary I. After marrying Henry VIII, Anne treats Mary horribly, forcing her to act as a personal servant to her newborn half-sister Elizabeth. Some Truth in Television is involved, as the real Mary did have to take a subservient role to Elizabeth until Anne's execution reduced both royal daughters to the same status. The book ends with Henry newly married to Jane Seymour, who was historically a Good Stepmother to both Mary and Elizabeth.

Discussions

A Gender-Inverted example with Dean from Kingsman: The Secret Service. He has no problem threatening Eggsy, making good on said threats, or saying lewd things about Eggsy's mother to his face. In "Tourbillon" by Charlotte-Rose de Caumont La Force, the evil fairy Uliciane marries the father of the protagonist Prétintin and persecutes her. In Dragon Age: Origins, Isolde Guerrin was one to Alistair, her husband's ward, in his childhood. According to him, it's because she thought that there was some truth to the rumors that he was her husband's bastard. There was not. Eamon had guardianship of Alistair at the request of Alistair's actual father, but he was sworn to keep the boy's parentage a complete secret from everyone except his brother Teagan and Duncan, the Warden-Commander of the Grey Wardens, who already knew.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop