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General Troper[]

  • Abusive Dad: His father, Rip, was a racist, bigoted, sadistic and all-around repulsive prolasped asshole of a human being who only married B.J.'s mother, a Jewish woman, for her business connections. Rip's introduction during a flashback in the New Colossus sees him getting downright furious at a young B.J. for being friends with an African-American girl, knocking his wife out cold for trying to protect their son from his wrath, choking his son almost to unconsciousness, before forcing him to shoot the family dog, Bessie, to teach him to be "strong". When the two reunite years-on, Rip reveals that he sent his wife to an extermination camp. Long story short: the Blazkowicz family tree had a rotten branch that needed hacking.
  • Amazon Chaser: What does the sight of Anya, his lover and soon-to-be mother of his children, topless, drenched in blood, and screaming fury as she mows down Nazi soldiers whilst straddling him elicit? An amazed and rather evidently turned on "Wow."
  • Ambiguously Jewish: Averted as of The New Colossus - B.J.'s Jewishness was speculated at times, but it was finally confirmed after all these years (ethnically Ashkenazi at least. His mother was Jewish, which makes him too by the laws of Judaism. His religious beliefs, if any, remain up in the air, but in The Old Blood he knows what Purim is when Anette talks about it).
  • And I Must Scream: H was pretty conscious while catatonic. His narration notes it wasn't like this the entire time, however, noting things such as seasons passing in what seemed to be the blink of an eye.
  • Animal Motif: Wolves. He patiently stalks his prey like a wolf chasing its target and waits for the opportunity to strike Nazis when they are at their most vulnerable. Also, while he gives his "The Reason You Suck" Speech to Frau Engel as he brutally kills her with a hatchet, he tells the dying Nazi that she is "among wolves now."
  • Arch-Enemy: Adolf Hitler was this in the classic era of Wolfenstein 3D/Spear of Destiny. He was fought and killed at the end of episode 3 of 3D, and even though there were three more episodes and a full game released afterward, those were all prequels and set before the first three episodes of 3D, leaving Hitler as the chronological Final Boss. Starting with Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Wilhelm "Deathshead" Strasse stepped into the role until The New Order, which was his most prominent role as Big Bad. Frau Engel becomes this in The New Colossus, especially after executing Caroline, and since B.J. killed her lover Bubi, the feeling's mutual. Even if Engel's reign as B.J.'s arch-enemy was fairly short-lived, with him killing her at the end of the game, she certainly made a lasting impression.
  • Ax-Crazy:
    • Downplayed but present, he's quite intelligent on the whole, but he is rather... temperamental to the point of stupidity in some of what he does, like interrogating someone with a chainsaw or deciding to use his knife on Deathshead because shooting would be too good a death for him. True to form, Deathshead takes advantage of the latter one to (almost) disastrous effect.
  • Babies Ever After:
  • Badass Normal: Somewhat at least.
  • Badass Family:
    • It's been confirmed that William Joseph Blazkowicz II, a.k.a. "Billy Blaze" is his grandson, and Doomguy is his great-grandson (at least in the classic games).
    • In the 2010s reboot series, he ends up with a more immediate version of this trope; his lover, Anya, proves she can be just as badass as B.J. in The New Colossus, whilst their twin daughters go on to be the protagonists of Youngblood.
  • Badass in Distress:
    • During The New Colossus, B.J. ends up captured by the Nazis and put on trial, then sentenced to execution.
    • The basic plot of Youngblood, as revealed in its demo trailer, is that B.J's daughters need to rescue him after he goes missing on a mission in Nazi-occupied Paris. Averted in that he's just hiding.
  • Badass Normal: No amount of Nazi cyborgs, undead or occult magic can take this guy down. Even the loss of his head ends up being a minor inconvenience in the long run.
  • Bad "Bad Acting": At multiple points when he has to pose as a Nazi or collaborator to infiltrate something or other, even taken in other uniforms like a Combine Overwatch or imperial Stormtrooper and he's always really bad at it. He can speak German but his accent is apparently terrible, he's not really familiar with a given cover story and may make some kind of weird joke when cornered, and he refuses to heil. Generally he gets away with it anyway because of Nazi arrogance but he does get caught once in Old Blood.
    • To infiltrate a Venus base, he disguises himself as an actor, auditioning for the role of himself in a propaganda flick. He can't remember a single line, reads what he jotted down in a neutral monotone, those lines are really badly smudged (in his defense, it was pretty poorly written to begin with, and his acting as an actor is pretty good).
    • Alison seeing ho bad he was posing as an enemy soldier questioned how he never learned to improve over the cneutires. He only respond that it was a war and had no time to learn as his only defence.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: He's a perfectly civil, polite and all-round Nice Guy. Who wages a one-man war against the entirety of the Nazi Regime and is winning.
  • Berserk Button: Nazis, and bigotry in general, natch. Also hates any insinuation that he or his government was little better than the Nazis in The New Order, but he's more reasonable about that... somewhat.
  • The Big Guy: Bordering on Heroic Build in The Old Blood. The unlockable model for Blazkowicz in Nazi uniform notes that they had to get his uniform custom made by a tailor before they could send him off as an infiltrator.
  • Bond One-Liner: After killing Hitler. B.J.: Sieg heil, huh... Sieg Hell.
    • He occasionally spouts one in the prison level, you can stab a sleeping guard from under his bunk, and B.J. quips: B.J.: Wake up, you're dead!
  • Born Unlucky: Raised in an abusive household, using the military as an escape, only for World War 2 to begin, traumatizing him and forcing him into a lifetime of hellish warfare.
  • Brain Transplant:
  • Break the Cycle of Bad Parenting:
  • Byronic Hero: Blazkowicz has shades of these. Though charismatic, handsome, and eloquent, he's clearly damaged goods by all of the sufferings he's endured throughout the war, whether it'd be all of the horrors committed by the Nazis or the deaths of those under his command. He even fears that once his fight with the Nazis will be over, he may never be fit to live a normal life ever again. The New Colossus makes things worse for him but eventually gives him a new purpose: Anya is pregnant with his twins, and B.J. is gonna make damn sure he'll kill every last Nazi so that his kids won't be born into a living hellhole run by goose-stepping, jackass fascists and spineless greedy Quislings. He also promised himself to be a far better father than his own piss-poor, waste-of-space, sorry-ass excuse of a sperm donor Rip ever was; when confronting his dad, B.J. notes he expects to be dead soon, and he'd still be a better father than Rip was. Unfortunately, despite killing Dethshead, Engel, and Hitler, and liberating America, he and Anya had to raise their daughters with the knowledge that they'd need to fight when needed. While those Nazi jackasses are very much a Vestigial Empire, they still control parts of Europe in the 1980s, and Hitler secretly started a climate-destroying doomsday machine before his death as a Taking You with Me act on the world. Only a literal Reset Button will make things right for B.J. and his family.
  • Character Development: He goes from a blank slat to a cocky badass to a shell-shocked fatalist with a great reserve of kindness before finding a new will to live and fight after becoming a father-to-be and getting a new Super-Soldier bodyand becoming a wisecracking Determinator.
  • Charles Atlas Superpower: He is incredibly strong, implied to be because of his youth on an American farm, to the point he can carry around the MG46 (a heavy machine gun normally used by the Nazi Super Soldiers — or mounted on turrets) as a personal weapon and dual-wield automatic double-barreled shotguns and assault rifles.
  • Children Are Innocent:
    • As a child, B.J. was a good-hearted, accepting child who - despite the prejudices of the time - saw nothing wrong with playing with an African-American girl. Thankfully, this hasn't changed in his adulthood, going by his friendships with Grace, J, and Bombate.
    • He did, however, have one instance of Troubling Unchildlike Behavior when he was gleefully watching a rat drown, thinking that it deserved it. It took Billie, the aforementioned girl, breaking down into tears pleading with him to help for him to knock the bucket over.
  • Clothes Make the Superman: In The New Colossus, B.J. can acquire three wearable contraptions that he can use to reach areas he otherwise couldn't: The Ram Shackles (allowing him to charge through certain grates and doors, as well as enemies), the Constrictor Harness (allowing him to crawl through really tight spaces), and the Battle Walker (allowing him to basically walk on stilts and reach high places). At a certain point around halfway through, you are allowed to choose one of the three, but can still acquire the two you didn't pick through side-missions. Interestingly, B.J. sort of does become a superman since he's given a new Super Soldier body, but he's not really that much tougher than he was pre-injury, and thus needs to wear the contraptions to step his game up.
  • The Comically Serious: Much of the humor comes from B.J.'s growling whispers in response to utterly bizarre circumstances, and delivering the strangest lines in the same deadpan tone: B.J.: Okay... okay. You put a Nazi on the moon. Fuck you, moon.
  • Cyborg: In the Pol Alpha universe, William doesn't get his head chopped off and put in a metal body, however he does at times have temporarily replacements such as a hand or organs until medical science helped replaced better ones that are cloned or improved his physyque.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: As mentioned before, he had a massively abusive and racist father who treated him and his Jewish mother horribly, and was helpless to resist the abuse for much of his childhood. That's to say nothing of the horrors he witnessed through the entire Second World War before the events at Deathshead's Compound. The many evils he has witnessed has made BJ hellbent on making sure that nobody else has to suffer for monsters like Deathshead, the Nazi regime, or his own father.
  • Death Seeker: Becomes this as he is forced to face the horrors of the Nazi's impending victory. Culminates in the climax, where he is heavily wounded in Deathshead's compound and gives the order to launch a nuke on his own position. This continues through The New Colossus, as B.J.'s body is slowly failing him from the massive trauma he took at the end of the last game At least until he gets a new super-soldier body to save him from a decapitation.
  • Deep South: Sports a thick Texas accent in the New Order timeline. His father Rip has one, too.
  • Dented Iron:
    • A major part of his characterization starting in The New Order, as he delivers this line as Fergus gives him CPR. B.J.: Death at the gates again. Howling my name. Can't greet you today. I have a war to win.
    • This comes back in the beginning of The New Colossus, when he's bleeding out heavily from his wounds and believes his work is done. After he wakes up and learns that Engel has risen to power, he wheels into the fight with a wheelchair, a catheter, and two busted kidneys, determined not to give up the fight.

B.J.: Death at the gates again. Howling my name. Come on in, old buddy. Sorry I made you wait.

  • Determinator: It seems that any attempt the Nazis make at throwing everything they have at him only make him moredetermined to wipe them all out. In The New Colossus, he forces his crippled self out of bed and continues fighting in a wheelchair. Hell, not even the loss of his own head stops him for long, thanks to his allies.
  • Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?: A Number of occasions
    • He destroys a demonic creature known as the Angel of Death in Spear of Destiny, and does the same thing to the Devil Incarnate in the Mission Packs...twice.
    • He kills the Eldritch Abomination beneath Wulfburg by literally shooting it in the face repeatedly.
  • The Dreaded: Nazi soldiers will occasionally shout "Oh no, here he comes!" in German when they spot him. In The New Colossus the Nazis call him Terror Billy, and he's the most wanted (and feared) individual in the whole Reich. Early on, one conversation between Nazi troops has one of them stating that he had to clean up after one of B.J.'s fights and had nightmares about it afterwards.
  • Dual Wielding: BJ puts his massive size and strength to good use by carrying two versions of most of his guns — the only ones he doesn't dual-wield are his Kampfpistole, Bombenschusse, knife (though he's shown using two of them at once in some Takedown animations). Also technically his pipe, which alternates between unscrewed format (where he uses it like a club/dagger combination) and screwed format (where he uses it as a shortstaff).
  • Dude, Where's My Respect?: Caroline Becker, the leader of the Kreisau Circle, "doesn't completely trust [him] yet" even after completing a number of dangerous missions for them, all of which involve the killing of dozens if not hundreds of Nazis. Dr. Leonid Alexandrov is also dismissive of his accomplishments, though it's justified in his case because he was a mole all along. Averted in The New Order onwards, as he becomes the Kreisau Circle's best agent so much so that they save him from decapitation via Brain Transplant and impresses two other resistance groups enough that they join forces.
  • Eagleland: Even putting aside his Nazi killing, he's an all-American soldier who, in his own words, fights for "freedom, justice, and the American Way" and despises "goddamn Bolshevik traitors." Like Captain Americawith guns and vulgarity. Though it gets deconstructed with his speaking; BJ rarely speaks German. Not because he can't speak it, but because his American accent is so thick that it would give him away instantly. The one time he gets away with it, it's because he pretends to be a German soldier mocking an American.
  • Empowered Badass Normal: After the Kreisau Circle successfully sneaks out his decapitated head and turns him into a reverse-engineered Ubersoldat. That said, his Super-Soldier body isn't all that different from his old one in terms of abilities, which should speak volumes to how badass he normally is.
  • Enfante Terrible: He was a nice enough kid, but the fascination he shows over the drowning rat is a disturbing predictor of the brutality he shows the Nazis as an adult.
  • Feeling Oppressed by Their Existence: Not only is B.J's very existence infuriating to the Nazis, it's supposed to be outright impossible. B.J. and his background fly in the face of the Nazi creed of Aryan superiority — he's an American, born from two Polish immigrants, and is half-Jewish because of his mother. And yet, B.J. is a brick wall of a man, a One-Man Army who can mow down his enemies with little effort, is tall, blond-haired, blue-eyed, and white. He is, in essence, a superior Jew. So the fact he's even alive and walking is antithetical to the garbage the Nazis say about other races, which is one more reason why they hate him and want him dead. It's also a subtle clue that the Nazi ideology is complete crap when General Engel sits directly across from B.J. at a table during a mission in The New Order. Engel says that she can "just tell" who's an Aryan and who isn't with a Secret Test of Character. If there were any credence to this test, Engel would have picked up on B.J. immediately. But not only does B.J. pass the test, Engel compliments his "Aryan features" before he gets up from the table.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: In his backtorys, B.J. goes from abused farm boy in Texas who couldn't even fight back to becoming a one man army that leaves Nazis, stormtroopers or imperial soldiers soiling themselves in fear. After acquiring a new super soldier body, he becomes even more feared than before that even hulking Nazi super soldiers became afraid of him.
    • Yet to some such as the Combine would see him as a threat among others, even Klingons and warrior races would be interested to challenge him for a fight to test their worth.
  • Female Gaze:
  • Genius Bruiser: The "bruiser" part is self-evident, but B.J. is also well-read and is at least conversational in multiple languages.
    • That said, he's not always the best with long-term strategy and suggest his Death Seeker tendencies are getting the better of him. After giving Wyatt/Fergus a Mercy Kill and defeating Deathshead's mech, the general retreats from the roof into a factory. Instead of hitching a ride on the helicopter that's rescuing the prisoners on the ground and letting a nuclear bomb just eradicate the entire fortress as planned, he opts to finish Deathshead personally with his knife. Deathshead anticipates this and nearly pulls off a Taking You with Me with a primed grenade he's holding in his hand. The decisions he made during his inflitration of the moon base are also very dumb. He enters the base with a Nazi disguise and a cover identity, but the first thing he does is to ditch the disguise and shoot anything that moves; he eventually leaves the base by hijacking a shuttle while the pilot was already putting in a distress call.
  • Good Is Not Soft: He's definitely The Hero, but his methods are extremely visceral. He'll maim people with axes, slit throats, shoot at point-blank range, and just generally mess up his enemies to hell and back if he wants them dead. If he thinks that he can talk someone down first, B.J. will at least give it a shot. But should they reject the chance, all bets are off.
  • Handicapped Badass:
    • Having a piece of shrapnel lodged in his head may put him out of commission, but not for long (sort of). The damage from the shrapnel even allows him to shake off a poison Bubi injects him with!
    • B.J. was crippled, and was unable to walk on his own, using a wheelchair for the time being until he got better once he gets Caroline's Power Armor after her decapitation. He eventually gets to a point where he can move around without it following his own decapitation.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Somewhat of a subversion. While Blazkowicz is a mildly unhinged mass-murdering Nazi hunter, he shows a lot of compassion and care for Anya as well as other members of the resistance, and is quite gentle with mental patients and an alleyway drunk.
  • Heartbroken Badass: Played platonically for all its worth during the hallucination/dream of his mother in The New Colossus. After enduring so much and spending so many years fighting a seemingly insurmountable foe, seeing B.J. break down and confess to his mother that he just wants to stop is a surprising moment of humanity and humility from this One-Man Army. It doesn't help the he'd been told only a few days before that his Abusive Dad sold his Jewish mother out to the Nazis and she died in a concentration camp.
  • He's Back!:
    • After spending fourteen years in a loony bin, all it took to bring B.J. back was the kind care of Anya and a Nazi pointing a gun in his face.
  • Heroic BSoD: He aws depressed over how broken his body is and Caroline's death and noticeably more glum. Wyatt even lampshades that B.J. is basically on cruise control waiting to hit a wall. He gets better after having a new body.
  • Heroic Build: Growing up as a farm boy made this guy seriously ripped. Notably, around halfway through The New Colossus, his freshly-decapitated head is rescued and grafted onto a bio-engineered Super-Soldierbody - and if it weren't for giveaways on the body itself and the neck collar, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference. This ordinary guy was so ripped that his physique was identical to that of a Super Soldier.
  • Hero with Bad Publicity:
    • Up to the point that the Biopic the Nazis are making in the wake of his 'death' is Based on a Great Big Lie, portraying B.J. as a sociopath, his mother as an enabling Jew, and his father as a put-upon man doing his best but unable to help.
    • A later scene where B.J. auditions for said biopic himself on Venus elaborates further with this line. Cue Card: Your bravery is no match for a neanderthal like myself. Besides, I only know how to fight in a dirty manner. Now to kill the innocent children. Germany's future. [Diabolical laugh]
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Who'd have thought he can play guitar? He also has some rather poignant streams of consciousness about his own existence and his place as a soldier surrounded by death, marking him as something of a Warrior Poet.
    • He also seems to understand Tekla's rapid-fire monologue on the nature of consciousness seconds after being woken up in the middle of the night, and briefly debates her a few minutes later on the subject of free will.
    • He can understand German, of course, even if his accent is terrible, but one cutscene with Bombate toward the end of the Fergus timeline indicates he can understand at least one African language.
    • B.J. repeatedly jury-rigs various electrical and electronic systems.
    • B.J.'s a lot more reserved and down to earth rather than high-strung about killing Nazis, and readily accepts Sigrun's aid rather than hold bad blood over her being a former Nazi (likely thanks to Klaus and his own childhood abuse). He also is surprisingly tolerant and accepting of all nationalities and races when it comes to the resistance, only angered by individuals he feels let the nation down by draft dodging and anti-nationalist viewpoints - and even then he's over such things as soon as it becomes evident that these individuals will give it their all now.
  • Hope Bringer: By The New Colossus he's become one to the pockets of resistance still holding off against the Third Reich.
  • Horrifying the Horror: Any Nazis who make the mistake of taunting him or getting in his way end up dying horribly. Even despite all of the torture, mutilation and pain that the Nazis put their victims through, once Terror-Billy shows up, the Nazis become scared out of their minds.
    • A Nazi officer acts rather smug towards B.J, up until B.J. pulls out a chainsaw and moves it closer to the Nazi's neck. Suddenly, the officer is a lot more cooperative.
    • B.J. cleaves off Frau Engel's arm and buries his axe in her face. As he descends from the rafters onto the TV studio stage where she is, Engel has a Villainous Breakdown where she screams "You're dead! I severed your head from your shoulders! I killed you!" at him. To be fair, the one she thought she severed B.J's head from his shoulders during a public execution was in fact a fake to trick them, so she probably expected he was gone. But he wasn't. And that just made him even more scary.
  • I Am Not My Father: His Berserk Button to place J in Choke Holds up against the wall after the latter insinuate that he or his government was little better than the Nazis in The New Order is seen in a new personal light where it's shown he had to live under his abusive racist father's thumb during his childhood.
  • Icy Blue Eyes: Especially used to highlight his Thousand-Yard Stare in The New Order.
  • Implacable Man: He is an absolute killing machine, able to go One-Man Army on entire armies of Nazis and just never stops from there. The man got his head cut off with a sword during a public execution, and he STILL comes back thanks to a Super-Soldier body, the mad science of Set, and the sheer determination of Anya to save her man.
  • Inexplicably Awesome:
    • Easy to think how can such a gigantic man fit himself into such small spaces? Why's he a One-Man Army? Why's he (almost) Immune to Bullets and Made of Iron? Who knows?
    • He defeated the Angel of Death and was deemed worthy of wielding the titular spear. Maybe that has something to do with it?
  • Irony: B.J. looks for all the world like the Nazi idea of an Aryan... Except he's Jewish on his mother's side and Polish on his father's. It's hilariously ironic.
  • Just a Stupid Accent: Excused with the fact that he knows German fluently, but can't work out accents. Averted after demonstrating that his use of verbal German is absolutely terrible. Friendly and unfriendly NPCs alike even berate him for it.
  • Just One Man: Some Nazis think that just because they're up against one man, they'll be able to take him out. They usually don't last long. This even earns him the nickname "Terror Billy" by the Nazis, and his reputation as an Implacable Man makes him The Dreaded among the Third Reich, as throwing the best they have at BJ doesn't seem to slow him down. Even getting his head cut off with a sword in a public execution still doesn't stop him!
  • Knight in Sour Armor: Under the tough, masculine exterior is a broken, traumatized, incredibly tired man who just wants to be able to stop fighting. At times, he's even a Death Seeker because of how much it's all beginning to weigh on him.
  • Like Father, Like Son: He'd hate to admit it, but he's very much like his father. Not only do they look alike, B.J has the same predilection for violence, and his hot temper. B.J just had the influence of his mother, and his father as an example of what not to be to shape him into a good person. Oh, and a war where he could exercise those violent urges.
    • However, over the centuries, he's mellowed out of this trait with years of gaining wisdom and become a better person.
  • Lantern Jaw of Justice: A truly massive one. Just look at the pictures! If he ever runs out of weapons, he could probably just beat Nazis to death with his chin.
  • Lightning Bruiser: in the Pol verse, B.J. proves to be extremely agile and flexible, despite his considerable physique. He can make some impressively long jumps, fit through tight vents, slide under tiny gaps and generally outmaneuver his opponents and the environment. He also duel-wields everything (including assault rifles and automatic shotguns), and can tank several dozen enemy bullets before dying on Normal difficulty. In fact, with fully upgraded health and max armor he can survive about as many bullets as the prototype supersoldiers.
  • Living on Borrowed Time: He outright name-drops this because of the huge number of close calls he's had and because it's literally true, courtesy of Deathshead's Suicide Attack pureeing his insides. Then he gets a literal full-body transplant, and he's back to normal.
  • Made of Iron: This is lampshaded a few times, especially to the relief of allies and pure, absolute shock by enemies. As a testament to this there's a sequence where a Nazi ambushes B.J. as he's opening a door, grabbing him and stabbing him repeatedly. By that point in the level even without full health and armor B.J. can survive getting stabbed over two dozen times, while the Nazi goes down in just two stabs to the chest from Terror Billy. It seems that his muscles are so dense that they pull double-duty as natural body armor.
    • It says a lot that on many occasions, B.J.'s preferred method of defeating a Cutscene Boss is to let them stab him until they tire themselves out, then swiftly kill them. Ultimately, it takes a point-blank grenade blast (powerful enough to reduce the other guy in the blast radius to a headless torso) to do any lasting harm to him.
  • Manchild: Despite being a veteran Nazi killer and borderline superman in his 40s, he still has immature moments. During a mission to clear out a checkpoint, B.J. can find a half-disassembled car; he can sit in it, pretend to drive it (complete with his own engine and horn sound effects) and pretend-hit on a girl. Later on, he gets genuinely jealous of Max's toy blocks, robot, and truck, huffing out "All I had was a pinecone and a box of matches".
  • Manly Man: Particularly, B.J. is a One-Man Army of Nazi-crushing force with the broad shoulders, chiseled jawline, Icy Blue Eyes, and tree trunk-like arms to match. it's no reason why he's one of the Allied military's top soldiers.
  • Miles to Go Before I Sleep: Part of his Dented Iron characterization is that he feels like he's just too broken down and tired to keep fighting the Nazis, since the whole damn thing just seems hopeless at times. A few moments of his narration even imply that he wouldn't mind going out now; in fact, he'd welcome it. This doesn't last too long, as the horrors and atrocities of what the Nazis are doing spurs him back into the fray. B.J. figures that if he's going to die, he might as well try and take the Nazi brass with him.
  • Momma's Boy: In the most understandable and heartbreaking way, he is devoted to the memory of his mothe when she was one of the few bright spots in his childhood and he remembers her and her teachings in tense moments. He even imagines finding her again and putting his head in her lap for comfort just before his (temporary) execution. And the reveal that his father Rip sold his mother out to the Nazis has BJ snap and just kill Rip right then and there.
    • Even named one of his daughters after her in memory of her.
  • Mr. Fanservice:
    • A tall, square-jawed soldier with a build that could rival an 80's action hero. Even Allison had to admit he has such a great build for several hundred year old man. Especially for working out to stay in excellent shape.