Depraved Dentist



"You'll be a dentist You have a talent for causing things pain! ''Son, be a dentist, People will pay you to be inhumane!"

- "The Dentist Song", Little Shop of Horrors

Poor dentists. Granted, it's a myth that they're more prone to suicide than other professionals. Nonetheless, the prevalence of dental fear amongst people of all ages and educational levels leads to dentists being unfairly stereotyped in popular culture as sadistic torturers.

Expect the Depraved Dentist to wear a permanent Cheshire Cat Grin, usher a patient into his (it's nearly always "his") examining room filled with rusty, scary-looking instruments, most of which are from the 16th century, and a huge honkin' drill, and wreak havoc on the helpless, screaming individual's mouth (and possibly other body parts).

Sometimes (unrealistically) also practices orthodonture, a similarly un justly-feared profession in Real Life.

Compare Deadly Doctor, Mad Doctor, Morally-Ambiguous Doctorate.

Anime and Manga
"Lum: This looks bad. Everything will have to go!"
 * Dr. Mizunokuchi of Speed Grapher is a monstrous dentist equipped with spider-like limbs that have dental implements on them, as well as the ability to turn body parts, such as his tongue, into drills. He likes to work slowly.
 * Subverted in Kirby: Right Back at Ya!: When both Dedede and Bun/Tuff come down with toothaches, Dedede summons a scary-looking dentist demon-beast that works without anaesthetic... because his skill is such that he can drill out a tooth without causing pain at all. Doesn't stop the big wuss Dedede from sending him into the sky.
 * In one chapter of Urusei Yatsura, Ataru dreams that Lum will "help" him get over a tooth ache with some sort of dentistry torture chair.


 * Summoned in the very first chapter of Lucky Star, where Konata thinks the most awesome Cool Awesome Combination would be a dentist mecha with drills.
 * Miyuki also has a fear of dentists, and her dentist's voice is decidedly sinister-sounding (in the English dub, at least).
 * In Sailor Moon both Usagi and Chibi Usa express fear of the dentist because they describe the only dentist in town as this trope. They are more then happy to run off to the new, fun dentist in town only to have it turn out to be a trap by the Amazon Quartet.
 * And then there's a similar short extra in the manga in which Usagi, Mina, and Chibi Usa decide to visit the hot new dentist for their cavities - who is secretly a minion of a ghost who gains power from cavity pain.
 * In episode 10 of Keroro Gunsou, Keroro gets a cavity, and Kururu checks him out, showing an inordinate fondness for banging on the tooth in question with a dental mirror.
 * It gets worse. It turns out that Keroro's cavity (and cavities in general) is being caused by a powerful race of alien invaders...who are the size of bacteria. So, Tamama, Giroro, Fuyuki, Natsumi, and a psychically controlled robo-clone of Keroro are all shrunk down to microscopic size to wage war against the Karies (the name of the cavity aliens.) The Karies prove much too strong due to sheer numbers and their giant (and sexy) Overmind, so Robo-Keroro makes a Heroic Sacrifice, letting the rest of the team escape, and activates his "secret weapon"...which happens to be a bouquet of flowers and a few fountains sprouting out of his head. Kururu then activates the real secret weapon.  Poor Keroro (the real one) , destroying the Karies base. Luckily, Keronians can regrow teeth at an amazing speed.
 * Soil New Town's council president is a dentist/orthodontist. He's an obsessive neat-freak.

Comic Books
"Archie: Doctor! What are you doing to him? Dentist: I haven't done anything yet. I'm just taking X-rays."
 * Averted in an Archie Comics story. When Jughead gets a toothache, his friends drag him kicking and screaming to the dentist. From the waiting room, they listen to him howling in agony until Archie decides to intervene.


 * An early issue of Sonic the Hedgehog has a short story in which Dr. Robotnik orders to have a dentist badnik destroyed, because even he thinks it's too scary.
 * In a Don Martin Mad Magazine book, Fester Bestertester goes to see a dentist who's rather enthusiastic about the prospect of having to drill. Although the preparation causes poor Fester a great deal of pain, when the drilling itself starts he remarks that he doesn't feel a thing. "Of course not," says the dentist, "but heaven help you if it were to slow down for even a second." Fester then reveals that he hasn't come for a check-up after all, but to deliver a note which says that at 2:30 P.M. the dentist's electricity will temporarily be turned off. Guess what time it is...
 * Also from Mad is a Dave Berg "Lighter Side" strip in which a patient asks how much it'll cost to have a tooth pulled. When the dentist tells him, the patient protests that that's way too much for only twenty seconds of work. "We can make some sort of agreement," says the dentist with an evil grin. "I'll pull it slower!"
 * From the Mad's parody of the remake of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," one of characters suspects a dentist is a pod person because, during a root canal, he drilled into a live nerve and didn't even smile.
 * In a Judge Dredd origin story, it is revealed that the father of the man who later became Judge Death was an extremely depraved dentist. Not only did he enjoy paralysing his patients instead of anesthesizing them, then tearing out every tooth they had, but he'd also murder them mercilessly to cure them of "brain worms". A healthy role model for the good Judge, no?
 * In one Far Side strip, a boy is waiting with his mother in a dentist's waiting room. Through a glass panel in the door, he sees that the dentist is actually a monster whose human face is only a rubber mask.
 * Doctor Doom. Bob Doom.
 * Invoked at the very beginning of Batman: Mad Love. It begins with Commissioner Gordon going for a dental check-up. He is literally sitting in the chair when he realizes something is... off about his dentist. Then iron rings clamp around him, and the very next panel is of The Joker turning around to reveal himself, holding an over-sized drill that he probably intends to do very, VERY bad things with...
 * Subverted hilariously in Blue Beetle: when the evil entity Eclipso tries to manifest the darkest side of the the young hero's personality, thinking he will turn into a super menace, he transforms into... a dentist!
 * One of Edika's short comics tells the story of a kindly well-meaning dentist who's not the least bit worried by his constant massive nervous spasms, and the horrors he inflicts with his drill.

Fan Works

 * In Chiisai Shoppu, the "anime adaptation" of Little Shop of Horrors, there was Dr. Haru, who is based off of Dr. Farb from the original 1960 movie, who eventually retired to become a surgeon. A biker named Samekiba Orin, based more or less on Orin Scrivello, becomes the new dentist shortly after.
 * Hermione's parents torturing Death Eaters with their knowledge of dentistry is fairly widespread in Harry Potter fanfic. Larceny, Lechery, and Luna Lovegood is a standout example of the trope.

Film

 * In the comedy The Dentist (1932), W.C. Fields wrestles with a recalcitrant patient and drags her around the room with her tooth in his pliers.
 * One patient is so anxious she starts screaming as he tries to use the mirror tool and isn't even close to her mouth - screaming enough to send a patient in the waiting room out of there.
 * In the 1976 spy movie Marathon Man, former Nazi concentration camp dentist Szell (Laurence Olivier) tortures an American secret agent's brother with "oral surgery" in order to find the location of some precious gems, while repeatedly asking him "Is it safe?"
 * This film/line is parodied in Hot Shots and Gremlins 2.
 * Although Dustin Hoffman, anyone who didn't find themselves a little nervous at the idea of a visit to the dentist's office before seeing this movie definitely will be by it's end (unless they're seriously screwed up to begin with).
 * In the 1996 horror film The Dentist, Dr. Alan Feinstone loses his mind after learning of his wife's infidelity and, hallucinating filthy, rotten mouths, takes it out on his staff and patients before finally being committed. He escapes to wreak further molar mayhem in The Dentist II: Brace Yourself. Loosely based on the Real Life serial killer dentist Glennon Engleman.
 * Willy Wonka, in the 2005 film adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, reveals that his wacky obsession with sweets is a rebellion against his father (played by Christopher Lee), an obsessive dentist who forbade all candy and made Willy wear horrible braces and headgear.
 * Though their eventual reconciliation shows that he was just an Overprotective Dad, rather than genuinely demented individual. Also, young Willy apparently did have some real problem with his teeth, since old Wilbur actually recognises his son from his unique dental condition decades later.
 * The short film On Edge starring Doug Bradley of Hellraiser fame. A patient gets er, impatient and wanders into the office ahead of his appointment to find a dentist all too willing to see him. As subsequent conversation reveals some issues in this dentist's past the patient is made painfully aware he should have waited his turn.
 * Subverted in Finding Nemo, where the dentist is an affable, inoffensive sort and it's his niece who's a serial fish-killer.
 * He's still pretty incompetent, though. His patients are clearly in enormous pain when he operates on them because he's so cheerfully casual about rather complicated operations.
 * Kalgan's infamous "ancient dentistry" torture scene from Space Mutiny.
 * In the 1934 version of The Man Who Knew Too Much, Bob Lawrence and a friend visit such a dentist office in search of his missing daughter. The friend's visit behind the door of the examining room is played for laughs. He comes out nursing his jaw after having a perfectly healthy tooth pulled. Lawrence's visit is much more sinister. He struggles with the doctor, who tries to kill him, and then puts him to sleep with his own gas.
 * Sam Waterston's dentist in Serial Mom revels in his patients' pain, although it's supposed to be educational. Of course he's not the Ax Crazy of the movie.
 * In The Phantom of the Paradise, all of the inmates at the prison Winslow Leach is sent to have their teeth removed and replaced with metal ones, because of an experimental health procedure funded by the Big Bad.
 * Dr. Farb in Roger Corman's The Little Shop of Horrors. Unlike his counterpart from the musical, Orin Schrivello, Farb is not quite as sadistic and has a slightly smaller role, but still finds enjoyment in brutalizing patients.
 * The page quote, incidentally, comes from Orin's Villain Song from the musical and 1986 film spin-off.
 * Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets has Arthur Weasley saying "I understand other Muggles are afraid of you," to Hermione's parents who are both dentists.
 * The dentist in My Mom's a Werewolf is a little too excited to try to file down Leslie's teeth.
 * Julia in Horrible Bosses is depraved in a different way than usual—her job affords her daily access to handsome men she can drug unconscious, and she takes advantage of this at least twice.

Literature

 * Dr. Jane Payne, from the children's book series Wayside School, likes to pull patients' teeth whether necessary or not, in order to charge them more.
 * Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandemar, the Old Firm, from Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere. "Obstacles obliterated, nuisances eradicated, bothersome limbs removed, and tutelary dentistry ''.
 * In the James Herriot book All Things Wise And Wonderful, the RAF has a good dentist and a bad dentist. James is sent to the bad one who proceeds to extact one of James's teeth with a hammer and chisel.
 * In one of the pieces in Margaret Atwood's The Tent, young boys who shoot animals for fun are described as tending to become either warlord henchmen or dentists.
 * One poem by Shel Silverstein has a dentist going to town on a crocodile, even pulling out a tooth that didn't need to be taken out. He says "What's one crocodile's tooth, more or less?" By the end of the poem, he is eaten in a single bite by the crocodile, and the poem ends asking "What's one dentist, more or less?"
 * The General sequel The Chosen has a bit early on where Center shows John Hosten possible negative consequences of his joining forces with Center and Raj. One of these is torture by a Secret Police technician who comments, "Shame, Hosten, shame. You have neglected your teeth. Still, I think this nerve is still sensitive." 

Music
""Have a seat", he says pleasantly As he shakes my hand and practically laughs at me "Open up nice and wide", he says peering in And with a smirk he says, "Don't have a fit This'll just pinch a bit", as he tries not to grin"
 * Referenced in one verse of the Owl City song "Dental Care".

Eastern Animation

 * There is a Russian cartoon called Captain Pronin where the hero is captured by his enemies, and the high ranking one explains that his job is making drugs, and his hobby is inhumane experiments in stomatology. Very few managed to survive more than two fillings...

Professional Wrestling

 * Years ago, there was a hulking brute of a man whose gimmick was that of being a depraved dentist called Isaac Yankem, DDS (ironically, Isaac's own teeth looked horrible). It wasn't exactly a roaring success. Fortunately, the man behind the gimmick,, would go on to be considerably more popular as.

Radio

 * Arch Oboler, creator of the vintage radio horror show Lights Out, did a creepy little number called "A Day at the Dentist's". Stephen King discusses it in his book Danse Macabre.

Tabletop Games

 * Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay had, in its first edition, an adventure called Enemy Within. The Big Bad was called "Zahnarzt", which is the german word for 'dentist'. Sadly he wasn't one, but the name cannot be anything other than intentional.

Theater

 * Orin Scrivello of Little Shop of Horrors, from whom the page quote is taken. This leather-clad hoodlum literally gets off on torturing patients. In The Movie, he meets his match in masochistic patient Arthur Denton, whom he eventually throws out of his office in disgust. The roles were memorably played by Steve Martin and Bill Murray respectively.

Television

 * In Married... with Children, Al's new dentist, after the two have established a rapport, promises to go easy on him while drilling...until a call from his ex-wife's attorney sends him over the edge.
 * The killer in one episode of Monk.
 * In Seinfeld, Jerry attends an "adults only" dentist who doesn't allow kids in his office, keeps copies of Penthouse in the lobby, and routinely swap nurses with his fellow dentists. After waking up from an anaesthesia induced coma, Jerry is under the distinct feeling he's been violated. Later on, his suspicions are confirmed. In another episode, the same dentist inflicts pain on Jerry after finding out Jerry was telling "anti-dentite" jokes (You know what the difference is between a dentist and sadist? Newer magazines.)
 * Alias has a torturer who removes peoples' teeth (including one of Sydney's), known at Television Without Pity as "The Sadistic Dentist of Asian Persuasion".
 * Doesn't fit this trope perfectly, but on Desperate Housewives, Orson is a dentist and is certainly "depraved":
 * Dexter:
 * A Lighter and Softer version appears in the Nickelodeon comedy series Turkey Television, with the dentist making small talk with his patients while handcuffing them to the chair.

Video Games

 * Dr. Loboto in Psychonauts is a mad dentist who harvests brains.
 * The unnamed dentist in Toejam and Earl, who is also a Giggling Villain.
 * One of the early levels of BioShock (series) takes you through the medical ward. In addition to some normal doctors, there is also a dental section...
 * In one of their developer videos, Dead Space's developers said that they based the lights in the Ishimura off of the light that dentists place above their patients, due to the inherent fear they know many people have of it.
 * Zahin Schmartz (Punny Name and Bilingual Bonus) the dwarven dentist in The Witcher isn't a villain, but takes unabashed pleasure in his victim's pain. When the city is on fire, he comfortably sets up shop in a torture chamber because it already had all the tools he needed. Also collects teeth, and has an academic appreciation for monster teeth.
 * XIII

Web Comics

 * One of (many) recurring background characters in Sluggy Freelance is Nana Avarre, the "angsty dentist" who combines stalking, Goth, and dentistry into one dangerous package. She likes to work without painkillers, but she still manages to get patients to return because her waiting room has arcade games. She was also one of Riff's old flames. So terrifying is she that when Torg was attempting to sabotage Leo, then a boyfriend of Zoe's, he gave him a coupon for a free cleaning from her office. Which actually went to Kent, whose screams were heard outside the clinic. They're dating now.

Web Original
"1349. I will not program the medical droid for “aggressive dentistry.”"
 * Fred Figglehorn's music video: "Don't Forget To Brush".
 * Things Mr. Welch Is No Longer Allowed to Do In An RPG include

Western Animation

 * Dr. Rabbit has become this via Memetic Mutation.
 * Dr. Wolfe in The Simpsons episode "Last Exit to Springfield." When Ralph Wiggum claims to brush regularly, Wolfe says, in a Boris Karloff-like voice, "Why must you turn my office into a house of lies?" and proceeds to scare him straight with the horrific Big Book of British Smiles. He then terrifies Lisa and Marge with an over-the-top computer simulation of what Lisa will look like unless she gets braces. And when Wolfe does outfit her with braces and headgear, Back-Alley Doctor style, she reacts like the Joker.
 * Subverted in Johnny Bravo in that the title character's dentist seems to like to torture very much, which causes Johnny to run away and cause havoc in the hospital. Then after he gets captured, the dentist works very efficiently and cures Johnny in seconds.
 * Hermey from Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is a subversion. He is a heroic character, who helps in the defeat, or in other words, the Bumble becoming a good guy.
 * Dr. Bender, the dentist in The Fairly OddParents is this (and his son is not much better.)
 * Variant: In Codename: Kids Next Door, the villain Nightbrace acts as an evil dentist. His secret identity, however, he is a sweetshop owner who was expelled form dental college after trying to put braces on babies.
 * Subverted in an episode of Justice Friends, when Krunk has a piece of potato chip lodged in his tooth and Major Glory refuses to let him go see a dentist. After watching Krunk be subjected to various unpleasant and unsuccessful methods to correct the problem, Valhallen simply takes him to the dentist, where the chip is removed painlessly in a few seconds. Played straight when Major Glory is forced to go to the dentist himself at the end of the episode, but only because he refused to go to regular check ups and thus had lots of cavities.
 * Metalocalypse plays with this trope, with Nathan fearing that his dentist will try to kill him. He eventually gets over it, and instead manages to befriend him instead, realizing that he actually does need a friend..
 * It almost seemed as though Nathan expected the dentist to brainwash him into killing himself by manipulating his teeth, which would produce some sort of indirect effect on his brain. And that the dentist would molest him under anesthesia. It really wasn't a very well-thought-out fear.
 * The phrase "murder-suicide" probably had something to do with it.
 * On Cow and Chicken, the Devil is some kind of self-appointed orthodontic policeman who fits the entire town into painful, elaborate braces and headgear.
 * In Storm Hawks, its implied that all Wallop dentists are like this.
 * One of Tim Burton's early cartoons had a Mad Scientist who's revealed to be a dentist.
 * Doug had an episode where Doug had a cavity, which featured him and Skeeter going to see a Smash Adams film where Smash fights an evil dentist named Dr. Decay, a spoof of Dr. Szell from Marathon Man (right down to going "Is it safe?"). After Doug gets a cavity, he sees the name of the dentist he is going to see is "Dr. D. Kay," and imagines they'll be a sadistic loony like the one in the movie. Instead, Dr. Kay turns out to be a kindly woman who painlessly fixes Doug's cavity.
 * In Dinosaucers, Styraco of the Tyrannos was originally a dentist working for Pinchem, Pullem and Yankem.
 * In Dan Vs "The Dentist", Dan's dentist seems overly friendly at first, but is later revealed to be a sadistic supervillain who deliberately damages his patients' -- who are children—teeth, forcing their parents to make repeated and expensive visits. He also plans to implant pain inducing mind control devices into the teeth of world leaders so he can rule the world.
 * One Goof Troop family album episode featured Prehistoric Goofy putting Prehistoric Pete through a great deal of abuse in various failed attempts to pull a bad tooth so Pete wouldn't have to go to the dentist. In the end, Pete ends up at the dentist by accident, and he removes the tooth painlessly. The horrific drill-like thing that so terrified Pete was actually a watering can used on the dentist's potted plants.

Real Life

 * Some of the Nazi death camps employed dentists who would harvest gold fillings from inmates, without replacing them. Some patients were "lucky" enough to be dead, others were very much alive.
 * Don't forget the "Angel of Death". Although he wasn't just a dentist...
 * In the Holocaust memoir Night, Elie Wiesel met Mengele in person. He was only fifteen.
 * The concept of the Electric Chair was also invented by a dentist.
 * Glennon Engleman was a dentist, who also worked as a hitman.
 * Junji Ito, author of Uzumaki, Gyo, and The Enigma of Amigara Fault, was trained as a dentist before he devoted his life to scaring the crap out of people. In his cat diary he says his training had no bearing on his comics.
 * While not completely a Real Life example, Paul McCartney was around the time of the dissolution of The Beatles plagued by nightmares where Allen Klein, whom John Lennon had brought on board as the band's new business manager, would assume this role and inject him with drugs that made him powerless. The dreams were what finally pushed Paul to file the lawsuit that would officially put a stop to The Beatles.

No, Dr Szell, I don't believe it is safe.