Hell-Bent for Leather



""No cow was sacrificed to a greater cause.""

- Dave, Drop the Dead Donkey

There's a reason we call the trope "Draco In Leather Pants". There's something about tanned cow hide that's cool and extremely sexy to many people.

Leather's Badass associations originally stem from leather being the garb of choice for bikers, who wore it for practical reasons. One of the quickest ways to show that someone is Badass or sexy in a "bad boy/girl" way is to dress them up in shiny black leather.

It will be black leather the vast majority of the time. Other colors just don't have the same effect in most cases, though white and red do sometimes work, as does the traditional brown. For increased badassery, have the black leather lit by a sodium lamp: Black leather, deep green highlights.

See also Spandex, Latex, or Leather, Pretty in Mink, Dominatrix, and Leather Man.

For the colloquial meaning of "Hell-Bent for Leather", see the faster side of the various velocity tropes, especially Too Fast to Stop.

Anime and Manga

 * Yu-Gi-Oh!. Takahashi seems to love this one.
 * Surprisingly enough, though, it's mostly his protagonists that wear leather. Hell Kaiser Ryo in Season 2 of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX plays it straighter than most.
 * Tsume in Wolf's Rain appears to wear a ripped leather jacket and pants. Of course, that's just part of his disguise (look at the title again).
 * Naomi Misora and Mello in Death Note. Interestingly enough, Word of God says that Mello ended up dressing like that because the artist put him in clothes that he likes drawing.
 * Edward Elric from Fullmetal Alchemist is never seen without his leather pants and occasionally even leather jackets. He's regularly mocked for his tacky taste and gaudy fashion sense (at least, in the manga).
 * Fate Testarossa of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha has been fighting in a leather one-piece since she was nine. Before her mother, Precia, was first shown to viewers, many of them wondered why she let her child dress like that. Turns out that, besides being the worst mom ever, she also dresses like that, and her device's most commonly used form is a whip.
 * Nico Robin from One Piece wore a very tight, very leather ensemble during the CP9 story, complete with grade A length, high heeled leather boots.
 * In Gundam Wing Endless Waltz, Duo wore a leather jacket and matching pants.
 * Kira Yamato often wear leather outfits as his civillian clothes, mainly in Gundam Seed Destiny. They are usually complex designs with zipper sleeves and other strange styles.
 * Clair Leonelli of Heat Guy J wears black leather pants. (Like hats in Westerns, they are contrasted to Daisuke Aurora's white jeans.)
 * Archer of Fate/stay night has some amazing pants. While his breastplate is stated to be some futuristic alloy, the trousers look to be leather (that he purchased at a goth or fetish shop).
 * Panty and Stocking's Lawful Evil Counterparts, Scanty and Kneesocks, wear leather during their Transformation Sequence.
 * Surprising amount of characters in Gunnm/Battle Angel Alita, starting from the heroine herself and Zekka, even though they technically don't really need clothing at all, most of them being Hollywood Cyborgs. They usually wear it for its sheer Badass appeal—there's the definite correlation between the amount of leather and general badassitude of the character in the series.
 * Former Badass Biker and now Troubled but Cute Riki wears a leather jacket and pants in Ai no Kusabi.
 * On Tokko, all members of Tokko wear leather jackets and pants except for Ryoko, who wears a standard police uniform.
 * Joe Asakura from Gatchaman wore normal yet skintight clothes in the TV series, but he switches to leather pants and jacket in the OVA. Note that we only said "pants and jacket"...

Comic Books

 * The Authority's Midnighter. Head to toe.
 * And his inspiration, Batman (though just what that costume's made of varies).
 * Jason Todd/Red Hood wears a leather jacket most of the time.
 * Planetary's Jakita Wagner. Black leather body suit with red trim. And a bit on the front she leaves unzipped at all times to expose some of her cleavage.
 * Durham Red in Strontium Dog is certainly fond of leather.
 * The Raven royal family in Scion LOVE black leather.
 * Most of the Front Line in No Hero wear non porous leather with special masks for protection.
 * The Blackhawks are a classic example. Zinda Blake, aka Lady Blackhawk, continues the tradition in Birds of Prey.
 * Chassis Mcbain's racing suit in Chassis. It's not specified exactly what it is made of, but it certainly appears to be leather.
 * Wynonna Earp, especially in her originals 1990s run. Her later series expand her wardrobe slightly.
 * Not an example, but Scrooge McDuck utters this phrase when he sees a tidal wave of kangaroos go stampeding past him.

Fan Works

 * The Official Fanfiction University of Middle-earth gave us Elves in Black Leather. (There's some fanart as well.)
 * Mario Kart AU fanfic Firefly stars a human Bowser whose clothing tastes consist almost solely of leather and spikes, likely inspired by Nintendo's official designs and artwork for him.
 * Part of the Isuten Junior High uniform in Pretty Cure Heavy Metal, for both the boys and the girls!

Film

 * Marlon Brando in The Wild One.
 * In fact, that iconic image of Brando in the leather jacket is a big reason leather and badass became associaed in popular culture.
 * Arnold Schwarzenegger in The Terminator.
 * And again in Terminator 2.
 * And once more in Terminator 3, though with red leather, and increased sexiness.
 * Most of the protagonists in The Matrix dress in a combination of leather and latex.
 * Catwoman.
 * Late-night DJ Midnight Mark wears clingy leather trousers in The Boat That Rocked. Later lampshaded by Quentin.
 * Selene from Underworld is why leather was invented.
 * Razor Blade Smile:, , , ,
 * Velma in the Scooby-Doo movie dresses in leather to seduce Seth Green's character. Played for laughs because she sounds like she farts when she moves.
 * Mad Max
 * Austin Powers: Mimi Rogers in skintight black leather. Sweet Jesus...
 * Heroic characters in The Deaths of Ian Stone generally avoid leather, but the Harvesters seem to have realized its intimidation factor. in particular really works it.
 * Red is featured again in the Klingon dinner dress attire in Star Trek VI.
 * Emmanuelle Singer in Frantic, in deliberate contrast to suit-wearing Harrison Ford.
 * Fight Club: Tyler Durden wears red leather and goes as far as to say that in an ideal world a man will own just one set of clothes for his entire life, made of leather.
 * Johann Schmidt from Captain America: The First Avenger seems to wear nothing but leather.
 * The alternate title of the 1968 British-French film The Girl on a Motorcycle is Naked Under Leather.
 * In the movie, Eragon and just about everyone of importance wears leather of some kind. This is extremely not accurate. Justified, though not trope-wise, in that the wardrobe production was given little time to make the vast amounts of costumes needed, and someone had bought large quanties of leather; they had to use what they had, budget wouldn't allow more costs.

Literature

 * Arya from the Inheritance Cycle wears black leather in combat, presumably for Fan Service.
 * Well it wasn't for logic, the elves of the series were of the "die-hard vegan, would die rather than kill an innocent bunny" variety.
 * Every male character in J.R Ward's Black Dagger Brotherhood wears black leather when fighting lessers.
 * Sherrilyn Kenyon's Dark Hunters series: Badass Army protecting the human world from things that go bump in the night.
 * Caine, the Badass protagonist from Heroes Die always wears black leather.
 * Geralt is almost never seen out of his favorite leather jacket with lots of silver trim and studs, and matching pants. Somewhat justified in that leather indeed was a material of choice for a combat wear in The Dung Ages, and silver is useful in his line of work, but we sometimes almost get to hear Dandelion cringe at his friend's fashion sense.
 * Kate Daniels bought her black leather jacket in her teenaged "bravo" days, when she was deliberating trying to invoke this trope. Developing into a more mature, sensible adult doesn't stop her from wearing leather at every chance, though, because leather affords some protection from attacks.
 * In her first appearance in Time Scout, Margo Smith is wearing a nigh-heart-stopping tight leather miniskirt. A character later describes her as "doe eyed one second, hell bent for leather the next".
 * The Doctor's companion Fitz, from the Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures, has a leather jacket. He also wears leather trousers once or twice.
 * Harry Dresden's distinctive, enchanted black leather duster comes up frequently in The Dresden Files, though its badassery is rarely explicitly stated. It is brought up when Harry needs clearance to enter a decidedly shifty night club, but Thomas is able to get him in because he's "A man in a black leather coat."

Live-Action TV
"Black Leather Pants of Evil (Worn by Angelus, Faith, Vampire Willow and Xander.) Red Leather Pants of Righteousness (Worn by Buffy.) Green Leather Pants of Jealousy (Worn by Willow.) Pink Leather Pants of Enthrallment (Worn by Buffy.)"
 * Xena, Ares and Callisto all say 'hi'! (Especially Ares... w00f!)
 * Brian Kinney of Queer as Folk.
 * Diana Rigg as the archetypal Mrs. Emma Peel in her first season of The Avengers.
 * Honor Blackman before her.
 * Stella, Project Runway season five contestant, sure loved her 'leatha.'
 * Max from Dark Angel even had leather PANTS. Hell, the whole X5 Escapees group were hell-bent on wearing leather jackets.
 * Sam Tyler wears a leather jacket, which makes a cameo in a late episode of Ashes to Ashes.
 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Vampire Willow.
 * When Willow is worried that Oz is paying too much attention to the sultry Veruca, she dresses up in leather pants to seduce him.
 * Buffy and Faith are both seen wearing leather pants and jackets on more than one occasion, especially Faith. Angel and Spike both go in for leather jackets.
 * Especially Faith. And don't forget: Spike's leather coat is one he took off the corpse of a Slayer he killed. So maybe it is standard issue clothing.
 * Spike and Faith prefer black leather jackets, but change to brown leather on occasions when they're trying to get in Buffy's good books.
 * Leather pants in the Buffyverse are colour coded. We have the:

"KELLY: Nothing says "Bridesmaids are easy" like short black leather."
 * This was Lampshaded rather hysterically by Arizona filker Nancy Freeman, in the song called (what else?) "Leather Pants of Evil". They're from an evil cow.
 * Angel. When Wesley makes his return as a "rogue demon hunter", he's wearing all leather. He has to change out of them though, as they chafe his...legs.
 * And Illyria. Oh dear Christ, Illyria.
 * Angelus's trademark is his leather pants, which Spike makes a hobby out of making fun of.
 * Parodied in one or more Benny Hill sketches. Benny plays an actor playing a bad boy dressed all in leather while filming a scene. Not only is it not sexy (cause, y'know, it's Benny Hill), the leather squeaks so much whenever he moves that it drowns out recording the dialogue, especially when he sits on a leather covered chair.
 * Ross on Friends tries to look cool for a date by putting on tight leather pants. Then he goes to the bathroom and finds that he can't put them back on.
 * Farscape. Just... Farscape. John and Aeryn's Peacekeeper uniforms (with more than a touch of the Reich), Jool's ab-baring corset, Scorpy's gimp suit...
 * Was described as a "long, hot slog in leather" and Claudia Black has been known to say that all she needed to perk her up when she was tired or burnt out was Ben to walk in wearing his leathers.
 * There is a reason Warren Ellis described Farscape as "one American's descent into Australia's S&M scene" (aside from him being, y'know, Warren Ellis).
 * Stargate Atlantis did this increasingly so as the series went on. By season five virtually the entire main cast are wearing as their standard off-world outfits: black leather jackets (McKay, Keller, and occasionally Sheppard), black leather jacket and pants (Teyla), or black leather trenchcoats (Ronon). Then there's the Wraith...
 * Intendent Kira in the Mirror Universe on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
 * Seven of Nine's first Borg catsuit on Star Trek: Voyager—it probably wasn't leather, but it was plainly meant to invoke this trope.
 * Fonzie from Happy Days.
 * Often seen on Charmed demons.
 * On the Charmed ones as well. Leather hit a peak from about 1998-2003.
 * Lampshaded on Married... with Children when Kelly gets dressed for her cousin's wedding.


 * The Ninth Doctor's signature black leather jacket on Doctor Who.
 * Parodied in "Smith and Jones" in which a "Slab" slave is supposedly leather all the way through. to which, the Doctor says "Someone's got one hell of a Fetish"
 * Cameron from The Sarah Connor Chronicles has a leather jacket.
 * The short-lived series Roar. This was historically inaccurate, as the actors themselves acknowledged.
 * Drop the Dead Donkey. On seeing Helen's girlfriend—a lesbian motorcycle courier—Dave provides the above page quote, while Henry is ecstatic when she straddles her motorbike.
 * Both heroes and villains in Blakes Seven. Apparently an S&M shop made the outfits, as they had the most experience in working with leather (there's a cute anecdote about the shopworkers frantically hiding the porn and the nipple clamps when Michael Keating (Vila) turned up for a fitting with his little daughter in tow).
 * Especially Avon.
 * The Mord-Sith in Legend of the Seeker (and the Sword of Truth novels) are a blatant dominatrix archetype. With Cara a main character in season two, every episode is chock full of skin-tight red leather goodness (and somehow even more cleavage than Kahlan).
 * Future Claire in season 3 of Heroes has quite the black leather ensemble.
 * Seldom has black leather and studs looked better than on Evillll Prince Dirk Blackpool. But it just doesn't work on his brother Prince Geoffrey.
 * The Classy Cat Burglar Alex on White Collar is known to wear a black leather jacket and leather pants pretty often. Probably too tight for a good thief to conceal anything, but we're not complaining.
 * When Ryu Terui first showed up in Kamen Rider Double, he always wore a leather pants/jacket outfit in either red or black. After, he switched to some kind of lighter material with leather patches on the shoulders and joints in red or blue.
 * This seems to be the standard attire along with the Badass Longcoat for Makai Knights in GARO.
 * In one episode of That '70's Show Kelso gets a leather jacket because he wants to look like Brando in The Wild One. Instead everybody laughs at him for looking like Fonzie. When he throws it away in anger Hyde puts it on and immediately becomes irresistible
 * The Vampire Diaries gives us Damon Salvatore, who is the king of this Trope. Stefan tries, but somehow it doesn't have quite the same effect.
 * Alex Krycek of The X-Files is rarely seen without a black leather jacket. It's rarely the same one from episode to episode, though, since they tend to get ruined when someone (usually Mulder) beats him up.
 * Mulder himself has been seen wearing a leather jacket.
 * The Gorma Triumvirate in Gosei Sentai Dairanger.
 * Emma usually wears a red leather jacket in Once Upon a Time.

Tabletop Games

 * Leather armor is, fittingly enough, the armor of choice of rogue classes, especially in Dungeons & Dragons. Sadly, real leather armor is boiled into rigid pieces, and doesn't look or behave anything like leather clothing.
 * The "Leather armor" card in Munchkin.
 * In Vampire: The Eternal Struggle, the Leather Jacket is an equipment card. It prevents all damage from a single attack, and is then destroyed. By comparison, the Flak Jacket can be used every round, but only prevents 1 damage.

Video Games
"Flustered Lady: Such tight leather pants."
 * Tequila Yuen sports a brown one and pulls it off. Maybe it's because he is Chow Yun Fat...
 * Trish from Devil May Cry.
 * Dante has more. But only because Trish isn't wearing as much.
 * All of Organization XIII in the Kingdom Hearts series wear long, black leather trenchcoats. Perhaps this has something to do with their Draco in Leather Pants status among the fandom.
 * Also, Riku and Vanitas pretty much fit this trope, y'know, with their tendencies to wear odd outfits made of some ambiguous leather made of Darkness.
 * Etna from Disgaea has an outfit composed primarily of black leather... though she's not wearing a lot of it.
 * In Disgaea 4: A Promise Unforgotten, Fenrich black leather pants, a read leather jacket, and not much else.
 * Haken Browning from Super Robot Taisen OG: Endless Frontier. His outfit is a black leather trench coat. He is ridiculed for complaining of overheating during the groups journey through East Elftale.
 * Fallout, after Mad Max above. Complete with one arm missing.
 * Full Throttle
 * Angel Devoid, with a really Badass sounding walkloop to boot.
 * Psycho Mantis. The man is a villain, true, but given that his personal outfit is a few yards of leather away from being a gimp suit does help in solidifying his place as one of the most badass bosses in all the games.
 * He would also set you on fire with his mind for thinking of him in a sexual context.
 * Original poster. Sexual nothing. I'm just fascinated by the garters.
 * A lot of the characters in Brutal Legend, but the Fire Barons, Zaulia, and Tainted Coil are standouts.
 * This trope especially applies to Lita Halford, who wears a sexy outfit that consists of a midriff-baring, cleavage-enhancing leather halter top and skin-tight leather pants.
 * Special mention to the Baron leader who is modeled after Rob Halford, the man considered as having brought the leather fashion into Heavy Metal culture.
 * Ezio Auditore of Assassin's Creed II back in his younger years wore leather pants that left only a bit to the imagination. It is actually Lampshaded by one of the bystander dialogues.
 * K' and Kula Diamond from The King of Fighters.


 * Albert Wesker of the Resident Evil used to wear just normal-looking combat gear in the first game and Code Veronica. However, he shows up in 5 wearing head-to-toe black leather complete with a leather Badass Longcoat, just in case the viewer still wasn't completely sure about his alignment.
 * Squall Leonhart from Final Fantasy VIII has his famous black leather and lion fur jacket and matching pants. On the opposite side, The Rival Seifer wears a white leather trenchcoat.
 * Sephiroth of Final Fantasy VII fame, in black. His Gackt-Expy rival Genesis from Crisis Core shops at the same place, but goes for red.
 * Soul Calibur's Voldo seems to have attended the Psycho mantis School of Fashion. wears leather pants as well, but he's far easier on the eyes,.
 * The Dark Queen from Battletoads, to the max.
 * Aside from her Badass Cape, Karst's outfit in Golden Sun: The Lost Age is mostly black and red leather. Like the above Etna, she's not exactly wearing a lot of it.

Web Comics

 * In Miscellaneous Error, the main feature of Jack's Limited Wardrobe is a leather Badass Longcoat.
 * Von Pinn.

Web Originals

 * According to Marik, the Pharaoh's power comes from his leather pants. He was half right - apparently the Pharaoh gets his power from
 * Benedict from Warlock Games is an interesting aversion: although he wears leather, he leaves the one fight he helps in abruptly and eventually
 * Dark Nella's Badass Longcoat.
 * Angry Joe, the most Hot-Blooded member of TGWTG, sports a trademark leather jacket that grants him Sith-like powers.

Western Animation

 * The Lead Eliminator in The Fairly OddParents: Wishology. No surprise, since he's a parody of The Terminator.
 * June the Bounty Hunter from Avatar: The Last Airbender.
 * Vanessa Doofenshmirtz in Phineas and Ferb.
 * Episodic character Sigmund the Sorcerer from Fanboy and Chum Chum.

Real Life
""Given that Morrison seems to be wearing the same pair of leather trousers in every picture there is of him, and given how difficult it is to clean leather properly, assuming you even try, I don't imagine you'd have wanted to stand downwind of the Lizard King.""
 * Jim Morrison. This was memorably deconstructed by Mitch Benn in the intro to his song "Stinky Pants":


 * Gerard Way from My Chemical Romance used to wear leather jackets until they fell apart. See above, speculation on how bad Jim Morrison's pants smelled.
 * "I have a leather jacket that could turn your stomach..."
 * Joan Jett is a good female example of this- she's frequently seen in leather pants or jackets, or head-to-toe leather outfits. (Though if the leather flag sticker on her guitar is indication, this may be more than just a fashion choice.)
 * Many metal artists, including Trope Namer Rob Halford with a similarly titled Judas Priest song. Ironically, Halford himself prefers pleather so as not to sacrifice innocent cattle, and the song title itself was originally used in the theme to Rawhide, though these days it's more associated with Halford and Judas Priest than anything else.
 * Red Commissars and Chekists of the Russian Civil War era. Their uniform included a black leather peaked cap (replaced with a red headscarf for female commissars), a black leather jacket and jackboots. Particularly Ksanka in the Soviet action movie The Crown Of The Russian Empire, or The Elusives Again.
 * The crew of Trotsky's personal armored locomotive train wore red leather outfits—military-style jackets, pants, jackboots, and hats that looked sort of like ushankas.
 * Younger panzer crews in Nazi Germany, particularly in regiments which were formed in the middle to late war years, were fond of wearing U-boat crew leathers.
 * Both of the above had practical considerations, as both train crews and panzer crews were working with hot machinery that could probably set cloth on fire. Plus it really did look pretty badass. So... yeah.
 * Many steam-locomotive crews wore either a jacket or a vest made of thick black leather, to aid in protection from inclement weather in the open cabin and from searing-hot metal parts. Knowing how dirty one gets when dealing with coal dust and also how dirty is the job of lubricating the running gear of the locomotive with grease guns and oil dripper cans, they were worse than Jim Morrison.
 * Los Angeles-based clothing designers Lip Service are quite fond of this, as it's been their longest running line for about 15 years.
 * Of the red leather variety: Thriller.
 * Early aircraft pilots wore fur lined leather jackets for the warmth, leading to Bomber Jackets.
 * Suzie Quatro. Especially here