Wallace and Gromit/YMMV


 * Alternate Character Interpretation: Reverend gave Lord Victor a golden bullet to kill the Were-Rabbit. He may not be so pure then.
 * Complete Monster: In A Matter of Loaf and Death: Piella Bakewell is the seemingly-sweet villain of this short. After gaining too much weight to keep her job as a model, Piella murders bakers associated with the company she worked with, killing twelve in total and keeping their hats as trophies. Seeking to kill "a baker's dozen", she seduces the kind-hearted Wallace and makes multiple attempts on his life while trying to create a wedge between the man and his protective dog Gromit by framing him for attacking her. During the short's climax she attempts to kill Wallace with a bomb disguised as a gift, and tries to murder Gromit and her own dog Fluffles, who she heartlessly abuses, when they intervene. With none of her comedic moments detracting from the viciousness of her villainy, Piella stands out as a very dark antagonist in an otherwise light-hearted franchise.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: Shaun the Sheep from A Close Shave, to the point he got his own series in 2007. Shaun the Sheep in turn had its own Ensemble Darkhorse in the form of Timmy the lamb, who got his own kiddy series, Timmy Time, in 2009.
 * Germans Love David Hasselhoff: The series is quite popular with the French, who enjoy the quirky British humour.
 * Growing the Beard: A Grand Day Out isn't necessarily bad, but it's far more Surreal than the later episodes, Wallace's only invention is the rocket, and the bad guy is a... living oven. With The Wrong Trousers, Wallace became far more of a tinkerer, Gromit became the archetypal Silent Snarker and the series received a massive Animation Bump.
 * Karma Houdini:.


 * Moral Event Horizon: During his malfunctioning,  Surely that qualifies.
 * Lord Victor Quartermaine is willing to kill the Were-Rabbit (even though he knows ) just so he can marry Tottington for her fortune.
 * Nightmare Fuel:  is a surprisingly terrifying villain, due in part to being a serial killer.
 * Tear Jerker: When Gromit runs away from home in Wrong Trousers and when  in 'Were-Rabbit.
 * Another example is in "A Close Shave." In the last newspaper with the headline of Gromit going to jail for life that Wallace and Shaun are reading, both have tears in their eyes, as do several other sheep reading with Wallace and Shaun, as Wallace says, "Oh, Gromit," before he and the sheep look at a portrait of the two together.
 * The Woobie: Gromit, particularly in Wrong Trousers. Fluffles also qualifies up until the end of Loaf and Death.
 * Fluffles is probably the most Woobie character in the franchise.
 * Twitch, the scared, frightened pup in Muzzled!
 * "The Cooker" from A Grand Day Out, the Designated Villain that just wanted to get to Earth and ski in it's mountains. Even though he did get the ski run he always wanted that loose change likely isn't going to last very long.
 * Wallace at the end of A Close Shave. After everything that they had gone through up to that point to earn their happy ending, Wallace finds out that.
 * "The Cooker" from A Grand Day Out, the Designated Villain that just wanted to get to Earth and ski in it's mountains. Even though he did get the ski run he always wanted that loose change likely isn't going to last very long.
 * Wallace at the end of A Close Shave. After everything that they had gone through up to that point to earn their happy ending, Wallace finds out that.