The Nutty Professor (1963 film)

The Nutty Professor is a 1963 comedy, starring Jerry Lewis as an Absent-Minded Professor who, after being bullied and taunted, invents a serum that turns him into an incredibly handsome, strong and popular man named Buddy Love, his new personality gives him the confidence to pursue one of his students, Stellar Name Purdy. Was remade in 1996 starring Eddie Murphy, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Eddie Murphy, and co-starring Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, and Eddie Murphy. The success of the remake led to a sequel, with Janet Jackson amid the various Eddie Murphys.

Tropes featured in these films include:
"Buddy Love: I'm THIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!!!!!!!!!!"
 * Abhorrent Admirer: Grandma Klump to Buddy.
 * Also, the hamster to Dean Richmond.
 * Absent-Minded Professor
 * Acting for Two: In the original, Jerry Lewis plays the lead, which is sort of two separate characters who happen to share a body that changes a little between the two of them.
 * In the 1996 film, Eddie Murphy plays the lead. He also plays the alternate persona. And a celebrity fitness instructor... And his entire family (barring one child and one of the two grandparents).
 * The sequel was actually called The Klumps, making Eddie Murphy's scenes with one actress and several of his own characters into the core of the film.
 * Amazingly Embarrassing Parents: The Klumps when Sherman brings Carla over. They talk openly about sex, bodily functions, marriage, and other embarrassing topics, so much so that Sherman tries to slit his wrists with a butter knife.
 * Attractive Bent Species: During the Attack Of The 50 Foot Hamster in the second film, the dean tries to hide under a fur coat, making him resemble a giant hamster himself. This works out for him just as you'd expect.
 * Battle Cry: After his first transformation in the remake. He proudly stands up on top of the college he works in shouting this.

"Buddy: I've heard of dreadlocks, but shitlocks?"
 * Butt Monkey: Dean Richmond whenever there's a hamster around.
 * Casanova: Buddy Love.
 * Darker and Edgier: The Klumps had a few moments of that range from dark humor to horror. Buddy Love in the second movie is more evil than he ever was in the first nor its predecessor. Going from trying to take Sherman's place to downright trying to stalk and destroy Sherman and anyone else that got in the way. Even before his DNA was separated from Sherman's he even found many ways attacking him on the inside. From giving him a terrible nightmare to alienating him from his father and love interest. That aside there were Tear Jerker moments too, from relationship problems between Sherman's parents mirroring Sherman's relationship with Denise, as well as breaking off the marriage under the belief that he can't be a good husband after his intellect is deteriorating, especially due to an incident where Buddy Love sabotaged the fountain of youth formula and stole the actual sample, causing a test gone awry. The audience was also almost fooled with a
 * Fan Disservice: Grandma Klump leaping through a field of daisies in a see-through nightgown in the second film.
 * Fantastic Drug
 * Heavy Voice: Inverted; Buddy Love has a lighter voice than Sherman Klump.
 * Hilarious Outtakes: In the 1996 version.
 * It's Not You, It's Me:
 * Jekyll and Hyde
 * Hyde Plays Jekyll
 * Jerkass: The insult comic Reggie Warrington.
 * Buddy Love. He started out as a Jerk with a Heart of Gold before becoming an utter Jerkass.
 * Large Ham: Buddy and most of the Klumps.
 * Mean Boss / Dean Bitterman: Richmond, the dean of the university that Sherman Klump works at, frequently insults Sherman Klump's obesity and makes no secret of his contempt of Klump.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Despite this, he did ally with Sherman Klump to stop Buddy Love from stealing the patent for the fountain of youth formula in the climax of The Klumps.
 * Meaningful Echo: Buddy to Dean Richmond: "Who you think you talkin' to, Sherman Klump? Man, if you ever talk to me like that again, I'll kill you. And I don't mean it as euphemism, I'm gonna literally kill you. I'm gonna strangle you and cut off your air supply until you pass away."
 * Meaningful Name: The fact that the last name of the universally overweight Klumps sounds like plump is obvious. More so is that the slender love interest in the 2nd film is named 'Gains', especially when we're shown that Mrs. Klump's old wedding dress fits her.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: In the 1990s film, Lance Perkins is a clear Expy of Richard Simmons.
 * No Indoor Voice: Buddy.
 * Oh Crap: Sherman in the first film when he wakes up next to three hookers after a night of partying (as Buddy).
 * Pay Evil Unto Evil: Buddy's putdown of Reggie Warrington.

"Buddy Love: "You can't beat me!"
 * Punctuated for Emphasis: The climactic scene where Sherman Klump and Buddy Love battle for control of the same body.

Sherman Klump: "YES. I. CAN!""

"Buddy Love: SHERMAN IS DEAD!! HE'S GONE!"
 * Refuge in Vulgarity: In the 1990s film, there was the infamous dinner scene that properly introduces the rest of his family.
 * Sexier Alter Ego - In both versions, the titular professor invents a way to change him from a nerdy looking fellow in the original film (and a rather overweight guy in the remake) into a smooth ladies man.
 * Sexual Karma: The Jerkass dean gets more than his share of this, courtesy of "Jumbo the Horny Hamster".
 * Squirrels in My Pants: Variation: During a demonstration test on the fountain of youth serum on a hamster, it initially works, but thanks to Buddy Love sabotaging the serum earlier, the hamster ends up basically turning Godzilla on them, forcing the audience to evacuate and the guards to fire on "hamsterzilla" before it dispatched them with turds. It then sees Dean Richmond (wearing a fur rug over himself in a failed attempt to hide) and, mistaking Richmond for a potential mate, gets very interested in him and is also strongly implied to have raped him. As the cameras were still rolling, this was also shown on TV across the state, if not the nation or the world, as the scene in the Klumps' living room revealed.
 * Synchronized Swarming: In the 1990s film, the professor proposes to his girlfriend by attracting fireflies into the words "Marry me?" using a synthesized firefly pheromone.
 * That Came Out Wrong: "Pardon me ladies and gentlemen, but I cannot go on living unless I have this man inside me right now!"
 * That Man Is Dead


 * This Ain't Rocket Surgery: In the 1990s film, Sherman, whose mind is decaying rapidly and is just about to meet Denise's parents, assures himself that he won't make a fool of himself because Denise's parents are probably not rocket scientists. Turns out that's exactly what they are.
 * Toilet Humor: The 1990s movie has a lot of fart jokes, as well as implied soiled pants.
 * Villain Protagonist: Buddy at first, until it becomes clear that he's a completely separate persona and plans to take over Sherman's life.