Removable Shell



In Real Life, a turtle's shell is fused to its spine - it is, after all, a modified rib cage - but in fiction, it is often treated as a removable article of clothing. Removing a shell in real life will kill the turtle in seconds, but in fiction a Removable Shell slips off like a glove - expect the de-shelled turtle to be wearing little more than Goofy Print Underwear.

Alternately, the shell may be large enough to not only accommodate the resident turtle, but also allow somebody else to hide inside it at the same time. In some cases, the Removable Shell may also be portrayed as having a furnished apartment (and often Bigger on the Inside). Another variant will often involve the turtle withdrawing all of its limbs and its head into the shell, them popping back out after a 180-degree turn without moving from the spot.

A variant can apply to other shelled animals like snails, although snails with removable shells are less common.

Sub-Trope of Art Major Biology, Appropriate Animal Attire, and Funny Animal Anatomy.

Compare Fur Is Clothing (the mammalian equivalent). Contrast Eggshell Clothing (a shell that is supposed to come off does not).

Advertising

 * For the longest time in the Twin Cities area, there were commercials for a casino whose mascot was a shell-less turtle dancing in polka dot heart boxers.

Anime and Manga

 * The obscure Japanese series Oraa Guzura Dado had one turtle character, for whom this trope was a running gag. (The series is animated, but doesn't look like anime at all.)
 * Dragonball has Muten Roshi, the Turtle Hermit, who wears a fully-detachable heavy shell on his back for training purposes.

Comic Books

 * The Terrific Whatzit, a DC Comics Golden Age Funny Animal superhero, is a turtle who possessed a costume similar to that of the Golden Age Flash, and powers similar to those of Golden Age speedster Johnny Quick. When in costume, he removed his shell; his superhero name stemmed from the difficulty of telling what species he was without it.

Film

 * Verne in Over the Hedge often loses his shell. After this happens several times, R.J. asks Verne, "What is the point of this thing again?"
 * In Cats Don't Dance, T.W. Turtle never actually gets out of his shell, but he did duck into it on one occasion and re-emerge with a scrub brush and soap, as though he'd been cleaning the inside.
 * A chipmunk falls inside a turtle's shell in Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs.
 * One scene in Robin Hood had Toby Tortoise pull his head into his shell and peek out from one of his armholes.

Literature

 * Clothahump the turtle wizard in Alan Dean Foster's Spellsinger series doesn't have a removable shell, but he has enchanted his plastron to install transdimensional cabinet drawers in his chest.
 * A board book by Sandra Boynton featured a turtle inside its shell looking at another turtle that's outside its shell.
 * A picture book by Eric Carle was actually about a turtle who took off his shell.

Live-Action TV

 * Mystery Science Theater 3000: During one of the Gamera movies, the bots decided to make a model of Gamera to show what's inside his shell. As they imagined it, he has a fully furnished apartment, complete with a gym, inside there. As well as another door which should never be opened, because that's where Gamera keeps all his internal organs.
 * Subverted in Red Dwarf: Lister recounted how, when he was a kid, he once opened a turtle's shell with a can opener. said he, in his defence: "Well, I didn't know!"

Newspaper Comics

 * Some Thoughts by Eric Johnson, an '80s newspaper cartoon that ran in the UGA college newspaper The Red and Black, featured a series of strips about a turtle jumping out of his carapace (wearing the requisite wife-beater and boxers), later snuggling inside the carapace with a turtle-honey, and finally about some Georgia Tech students who indignantly wrote in to the cartoonist to complain that they had opened up a real turtle and not found a little animal in boxer shorts.

Video Games

 * Dub from Die Anstalt: Treating his neuroses required you to literally get him out of his shell, and it's later revealed that his problems stem from having it on inside out.
 * Well, it's reversible. Having it on inside out isn't so much the source of the problem as a hint to what the root of the problem really is (the racing stripe indicating his need to always be faster).
 * Super Mario franchise:
 * Flipped Shellcreepers in Mario Bros. eventually hop out of their shell to kick it upright and resume moving - they also change color and move slightly faster than before. It's not unheard of for players coming to this game from later entries such as the ones listed below to lose a life trying to stomp on them - this is likely one reason that the remake of Mario Bros. included in the Advance releases uses Spinies instead.
 * Super Mario World is the first game to feature Koopa Troopas with removable shells that Mario and Luigi can interact with; the shells can be picked up and kicked upwards and/or at other enemies. The hunched and de-shelled "Beach" Koopas only wear shirts, and will simply walk back and forth like standard enemies, entering any empty shells they find - blue Beach Koopas will instead kick any shells and other objects they encounters, while yellow ones that find a shell will become "invincible" and spin around pursuing the player.
 * The Super Mario World ROM Hack ''SMW YEAHHH' adds Blue Elite Koopas, who actually take off and fling their shells at Mario like missiles, even while flying. See here.
 * The ending of the MS-DOS version of Mario is Missing! has Luigi remove Bowser's shell somehow.
 * Koopas with detachable shells also appear in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, where they walk upright and wear shorts instead of shirts. This also applies for Yoshi's Island DS and, unusually, Super Princess Peach.
 * In Super Mario 64 (and its Updated Rerelease, Super Mario 64 DS), stomping Koopas would force them out of their shells, after which Mario could ride on them - a Koopa separated from its shell will attempt to frantically dive back in, even if Mario is about to ride it over them.
 * In Paper Mario, Koopa Village is overrun by Fuzzies that steal the inhabitants' shells.
 * In Super Mario Sunshine, Blue Electrokoopas can throw their shell at Mario, and he can defeat them by stomping or spraying them while they're vulnerable.
 * In Super Mario 3D World and its Nintendo Switch port, Beach Koopas will chase players holding their shells, and if kept away long enough, they will become disappointed and briefly stop the chase.
 * Super Mario Maker and Super Mario Maker 2 feature Koopas with removable shells in the SMW and SM3DW styles.
 * In Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam, countering a Koopa Troopa with the hammer briefly knocks them out of their shell.
 * In American McGee's Alice, Mock Turtle's shell gets stolen by the Duchess, and Alice gets to become a honorary reptile by helping recover it.
 * Carapacion-type enemies in Final Fantasy XIII might qualify - when "Broken", their carapace vanishes, which removes their Nigh Invulnerability until they restore it. It's also not a "true" shell, more closely resembling a pangolin or man-made scale/plate mail.
 * The Polish puzzle game Zagadki Lwa Leona features a puzzle where you have to help a turtle whose shell apparently was stolen and inexplicably got stranded on a branch.
 * Pokémon: Shelmet is a rare gastropod example. According to its Pokedex entry, the snail-like Pokemon's helmet-like shell is often removed from its body by an insect-like Pokemon called Karrablast so it can evolve into Escavalier, which resembles an armored insect who has spears for arms and said armor being made from said shell. Fortunately, Shelmet then evolves into Accelgor, a ninja snail.
 * One of the playable characters in Battle Beast is a turtle who can step out of his shell, which then gains a handle as it turns into a large hammer to pummel his opponents with.
 * Mega Man X2 has Crystal Snail. If you hit him with the Magnet Mine, his shell flies off, causing him to lose his only method of defense. Snail then focuses on trying to reclaim it over attacking you... which you can prolong indefinitely by knocking the shell around. Justified because he's a robot.
 * In Aquaria, Naija can remove the shells of small turtles with her Bind song, which would otherwise damage her.

Western Animation

 * Happens regularly to Cecil Turtle in Looney Tunes cartoons since his debut in 1941.
 * Happens to a turtle in 1932's Freddie the Freshman.
 * Filbert the turtle in Rocko's Modern Life.
 * Gary the snail in SpongeBob SquarePants, depending on the episode. Sometimes the shell lifts up to show something hidden inside; sometimes the shell is Bigger on the Inside and SpongeBob is able to crawl into it; and sometimes cracking the shell exposes Gary's veiny, throbbing innards.
 * Franklin and all of his family members have shells that are removable. Played with in a fire safety story, in which Mr. Turtle found that he could not evacuate his house by the window unless he first removed his shell.
 * Shelby Turtle from House of Mouse.
 * B'rer Turtle from B'rer Hare fame.
 * Happens in the very first episode of Dink the Little Dinosaur. Crusty takes off his shell to take a bath. When the resident badguy, Trannor shows up, one of the characters hides in the shell and he carries both the shell and the character off.
 * Averted in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
 * Averted in The Get Along Gang.

Real Life

 * The hermit crab. It's quite an oddball in that it's the only arthropod that uses a calcified shell for protection. Except it doesn't produce its own, it simply looks for an abandoned gastropod shell. As it grows, it needs to look for bigger and bigger shells to accommodate. Quite hilariously, they also use manmade rubbish - like plastic bottlecaps, for instance.
 * The Turtle's shell is the last part of the reptile's body to deteriorate.
 * Sadly, this trope is responsible for an awful lot of badly-injured turtles turning up at vet clinics and wildlife rehab centers, after ignorant people's attempts to "take off" their shells to see what they look like without them. Answer: They're dead without them.