Maniac Monkeys



""Monkeys, apes, they hold stuff with their feet man! We're talking freaks of nature here!""

- Ron Stoppable, Kim Possible

The opposite of Everything's Better with Monkeys. Instead of being inherently cool or exotic, these monkeys are used as signs that something bad is about to go down. Because of their similarities to humans, a superintelligent ape is going to suffer from an inherent sibling rivalry with the human race, and want to either wipe it out or subdue it. Often, in series which feature anthropomorphic animals, apes and monkeys will play the bad guys. Distinct from Killer Space Monkey in that these monkeys are usually intelligent mad scientists who want to Take Over the World or at least make life difficult for humanity. Killer Gorilla is a subtrope, where the primate in question is not just malicious but also big and strong.

Anime

 * The Saiyans from Dragonball Z are like this. They are galactic conquerors who can transform into giant apes during the full moon. Their only simian-like characteristic in their normal form is their monkey tails.
 * The apes in Princess Mononoke, who distrust and hate San.
 * Aozaru from The Twelve Kingdoms.
 * Etemon from Digimon Adventure. And Makuramon from Digimon Tamers.

Comic Books

 * Gorilla Grodd from The DCU is probably the most archetypal example of this trope, because of his utter disdain for humanity and plots to make gorillas the dominant species on Earth. Do NOT call him a monkey, though—unless you really want to make him mad. And he hates bananas.
 * Likewise, Ultra-Humanite sort of fits this trope, as he is a Mad Scientist inside an albino gorilla's body.
 * The folks behind The DCU love this trope; in addition to the two examples above, there's also the late Monsieur Mallah, a superintelligent machine-gun-toting communist revolutionary homosexual French-speaking gorilla (seriously), the muscle (and lover) of the also deceased Brain.
 * In the Saga of the Swamp Thing story arc, a demonic creature resembling a marmoset fed on the terrors of traumatized children.
 * Ape X from Squadron Supreme. Which in Squadron Supreme tradition is a homage to the above comic book supermonkeys.
 * Red Ghost and his Super Apes are enemies of the Fantastic Four.

Film

 * The Simians from Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla are green chimpanzee aliens who attempt to use Mechagodzilla to Take Over the World.
 * The Flying Monkeys from The Wizard of Oz.
 * The apes from Planet of the Apes.
 * Titular primate in Shakma is a genetically altered baboon with a murderous attitude.
 * Ella in Monkey Shines.
 * The Killer Apes of Zinj from Congo.
 * 1986 film Link had killer chimpanzee butler.
 * In The Shadow of Kilimanjaro, thousands of aggressive baboons ransack villages and attack humans because a drought has depleted their natural food sources.
 * The Cymbal-Banging Monkey from Toy Story 3.
 * This will not be an easy mission. Monkeys slow the expedition.
 * Shen's gorillas from Kung Fu Panda 2.
 * The fourth Ice Age movie's main villain is Captain Gutt, an unhinged and ruthless ape pirate.

Literature

 * The Bandar-log (Monkey-folk) from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book capture Mowgli so he can teach them human things and help them become masters of the jungle. It's a subversion because the Bandar-log's attention spans aren't long enough to complete their plan.
 * The talking ape Shift serves as an Antichrist-expy in CS Lewis' The Last Battle.
 * In His Dark Materials, Mrs. Coulter's dæmon is a handsome golden monkey with long, lustrous fur. Considering how your dæmon signifies your true self, that shows that Mrs. Coulter is very intelligent, cunning, and charming; then again he also likes to pull small creatures limb from limb when he's bored. Mrs. Coulter is not good.
 * Ape and Essence by Aldous Huxley uses apes to symbolize the decline and fall of human civilization.

Religion

 * Medieval bestiaries often portrayed them as allegories of the devil, and sometimes illustrated satyrs (another source of Satanic imagery) to look very ape-like. This may be where Lewis got the idea for the above example.

Tabletop Games

 * Among the factions of Feng Shui are the Jammers, intelligent apes working in concert with the few humans immune to the influence of Chi. They're a faction of Mad Bombers who do not care one whit about who they blow up, so long as they get to blow up Feng Shui sites and bring about Battlechimp Potemkin's dream of a world without chi.
 * Pathfinder features a city of evil sentient apes called Usaro. Their ruler, Ruthazek the Gorilla King, is one of the setting's major villains.

Video Games

 * Star Fox
 * Andross is an evil genius primate who leads an army of Maniac Monkeys and has two of them as his proteges.
 * His nephew, Andrew Oikonny, is a highly incompetent Maniac Monkey, a character trait which is Played for Laughs.
 * His grandson Dash Bowman appears to be a subversion of this trope, as he joins the Star Fox team to clear his family name and right Andross's wrongs, but two of the possible endings of Star Fox: Command have him follow in his grandfather's footsteps to become another galactic overlord.
 * I'm pretty darn sure that Dash genuinely admired the Star Fox team. Of course, he had to stay on Venom to rebuild the place... Oi.
 * So far, there hasn't been a single ape or monkey in Star Fox who hasn't turned out to be evil.
 * The Monkeys from Time Splitters.
 * The monkeys, but especially Specter, from Ape Escape.
 * System Shock 2 has screeching monkeys with cryokenitic and pyrokinetic powers, who still have their heads cut open and their brains exposed from experimentation.
 * In RuneScape the monkeys and apes of Ape Atoll form a terrifying militaristic faction bent on world domination. And during the Do No Evil quest, where
 * The demon monkeys chasing you in Temple Run.
 * Gohma Howlers from Asura's Wrath, which don't hesitate to kill humans in packs.
 * The monkeys in Alundra are bloodthirsty, violent and murderous little bastards.

Western Animation
"The letter M: Dib's screaming like a Maniac....Monkey."
 * Mojo Jojo from The Powerpuff Girls.
 * During the first The Fairly OddParents TV movie, AJ's monkey takes a bite out of a magic muffin that grants its eater any wish, regardless of Da Rules. The monkey's wish is—you guessed it—to make apes Take Over the World. Or it could have been a banana. Cosmo always mixes those two up.
 * Monkeyfist and his army of monkey ninjas from Kim Possible.
 * Baboon and his army of minkey ninjas from Skunk Fu!.
 * Dr. Wasabi's ninja chimps from Chop Socky Chooks.
 * Simian from the Dexters Laboratory spin-off, Dial M For Monkey.
 * The Monkey King from Jackie Chan Adventures.
 * Batman the Brave And The Bold has all DC Gorillas team up to form G.A.S.P., Gorillas and Apes Seizing Power.
 * Young Justice has had robotic monkeys, Cobra venom mutated monkeys, Monsieur Mallah, The Ultra-Humanite, and Joker monkeys in the tie-in comic. You can understand Conner's hatred of these buggers.
 * Literal example from Invader Zim


 * One episode of Back at the Barnyard dealt with a space test monkey who pretended to be friendly for awhile before revealing his true colors by somehow intending to take over the entire farm in front of the horrified animals due to his opposable thumbs (which is sort of Fridge Logic as Otis and his friends never had problems with manipulating objects before despite not having opposable thumbs), although it could all be down to playing the entire scenario for comedy.

Truth in Television

 * Nonhuman primates in general are extremely dangerous animals. Chimpanzees take the cake, having killed quite a few people, even in the wild. We would rather no go into too much detail there.
 * Baboons can also be extremely dangerous, either when defending territory or raiding human settlements to steal food. The fact that some species travel in groups of over a hundred helps.
 * Human primates are demonstrably the most dangerous animals in all of known universe. As a species, we're a Real Life Badass.
 * Averted with gorillas, who are generally docile and peaceful, being more menacing in their appearance.
 * Former wildlife TV show presenter Jeff Corwin would frequently handle venomous snakes and other reptiles, but disliked and feared monkeys; everywhere he went, monkeys caused him problems.