Animals Hate Him



""I love all animals, but they don't love me back." "I tend to put them in a state of full attack.""

- 'Sweetmeat' by Pigface

How a character treats, reacts to, and is reacted to by animals delivers a wealth of information to a viewer. The virginal Princess Classic can summon woodland friends with song, the Jerk with a Heart of Gold will (despite hating animals) get Licked by the Dog, while the man in the Black Cloak with a Red Right Hand causes everything around him to wither and die, and the Evil-Detecting Dog just won't stop barking at him!

Then there's people who, regardless of their morality or niceness, simply have Animals Hate Him. Always, without fail. Offering a dove crumbs gets him dive bombed. Petting a cat will result in getting inch deep claws dug into his leg, and don't even ask what happens when they visit the woods or a zoo.

The reason for this animalistic antagonism varies. Maybe they just smell wrong, or good. Perhaps they try too hard, or just have terrible skills at reading an animals' mood. Maybe they're just a Butt Monkey or Chew Toy. Sometimes there's no explanation; animals just don't like him. Characters who consider themselves "in tune with nature" a la the Nature Hero or Granola Girl, or "so pure and innocent" that they should receive friendly animal treatment are the likeliest to be treated this way, often to highlight just how out of touch they really are.

That is, this is an animal combination of Everything Trying to Kill You and 0% Approval Rating. Compare Scare the Dog, where animals react with terror, not hate, although there is some overlap.

Anime and Manga

 * Sakaki from Azumanga Daioh, much to her disappointment. Even a mechanical toy kitten breaks down when she tries to touch it. She loves animals and is to all extent a Kindhearted Cat Lover, but all cats tend to run away or turn violent when she approaches. Only Mayaa, a wild-born Iriomote cat approaches her without fear. Mr. Tadakichi, a dog, likes her just fine though.
 * Nanami in Revolutionary Girl Utena is known for this, especially in Fanon.
 * Even in canon. In "The Great Curry High Trip," Namami is haunted by three elephants who interfere with her journey to retrieve rare spicy explosive curry from India, notably by surfing into her raft. Fortunately, for what thinly-defined realism exists in the show, most of Nanami's dealings with animals are treated humorously and metaphorically.
 * This is implied to be a curse laid down by Anthy, the girl who was cruelly humiliated by Nanami in the third episode, and is shown to have excessive love for animals. It's hardly a coincidence that Nanami's wacky hijinks with animals started in episode four, and would much of the time relate to her selfish, prankster activities.
 * Suzaku Kururugi of Code Geass has difficulties with cats, presumably due to cats being cynical creatures by nature and him being a somewhat hypocritical idealist.
 * The funny thing is, Arthur (the student council's pet cat) actually does like him; it's just that he chooses to show his affection towards Suzaku through biting.
 * Hence one of Suzaku's most recent Fan Nicknames: "Suzakaki"
 * It should be noted that Arthur is the only cat that Suzaku seems to get that treatment from (that we see in the show). However, it's definitely a Tsundere-style dynamic: He takes the cat with him to-and-from Britannia, and Arthur.
 * Don't forget that Arthur actually saved his life near the end of the first season, by leaping on Tamaki's head at the crucial moment.
 * Van Hoenheim of Fullmetal Alchemist, especially in the manga.
 * Saya Otonashi from Blood Plus. Animals of all kinds avoid her constantly.
 * Isumi from Hayate the Combat Butler gets this reaction from Shiranui when they first meet. Hayate smartly averts the anger by spraying her with cat nip.
 * Animals don't necessarily hate Medaka, they just can't see past her very intimidating aura of authority and are thus utterly terrified of her. This is mostly played for laughs as Medaka loves animals but none will come near her leading her bouts of depression when an animal rejects her.
 * For some reason, dogs dislike Batou. They can still detect him when he's camouflaged, and bark at him continuously.
 * No amount of thermoptic camouflage can fool a dog's sense of smell. And given that Batou is a full conversion cyborg, he probably doesn't smell right to them.
 * Animals, like humans, tend to assume Sawako is a walking corpse and react accordingly.
 * In Axis Powers Hetalia, every animal that we've seen meet Russia so far has rejected him.
 * The sole exception is his pet cat, Russicat.

Film
""That's right. I killed women and children. Killed just about everything that walks or crawled at one time or another. And I'm here to kill you, Little Bill, for what you did to Ned.""
 * Failure To Launch protagonist, Tripp (who is a 30+ slacker who refuses to move from his parent's home) is bitten three times by the most improbable creatures: a chipmunk, a lizard and a dolphin, his friends come to the conclusion that this is because what he is doing goes against nature an thus nature rejects him.
 * In There's Something About Mary, Magda's dog "only barks at the bad people", leading Matt Dillon's character to drug it before his date with Mary so both she and Magda think he is a nice guy.
 * Unforgiven: When he cannot mount his own horse, William Munny invokes this by claiming that his horse is taking revenge on him because he was mean with all the animals in his past. Later, Munny will claim:


 * In The Terminator dogs hate them, even in human form. It's not training as dogs react this way even before the terminators were built.

Literature

 * Wilbur Whateley from HP Lovecraft's The Dunwich Horror was so violently hated by any dog that came in close proximity to him that he always had to carry a revolver for protection. In the end he's brutally attacked and killed by a dog after his revolver malfunctioned while he was trying to steal the Necronomicon from the Miskatonic University's library.
 * Played for comic purposes in the Dalziel and Pascoe novels, as Sergeant Wield's partner Edwin Digweed winds up at odds with both a small dog and a marmoset.
 * Dexter finds that animals in general just can't stand him. He has a theory that they don't appreciate the horrible things he occasionally does to their masters, but his numerous attempts at keeping animals have all resulted in horrible failure (including a turtle that starved to death rather than come out of its shell and deal with him.)
 * Sir Hugh Snuffler, a zoologist from the novel Starclimber by Kenneth Oppel, is an ironic example of this trope.
 * Zachary Gustafson of Gordon Korman's The Chicken Doesn't Skate is constantly attacked by the titular chicken, and considers it his enemy. (Of course, he still saves it from the slaughterhouse after he becomes unable to write a screenplay without putting in chickens out of guilt.)
 * In the Zombie Survival Guide, animals are terrified of zombies. They can smell The Virus, and they don't like it.
 * Probably related, in Night Watch it is said that animals are instinctively afraid of the Dark Others just as they fawn upon the Light Ones.
 * In Discworld, most animals (except dogs, for reasons explored in the books) instinctively flee or cower in the presence of werewolves. It's an apex-predator thing.
 * Subverted with Death. Cats can see the supernatural for what it really is, and lack the Weirdness Censor that normal humans possess, so you think they'd react poorly to the End of All Things. In fact, Death is a Kindhearted Cat Lover, and they like him just fine. He also has a living horse named Binky that he gets along well with.
 * In the Aubrey-Maturin series, Nathaniel Martin is almost as dedicated a naturalist as Stephen Maturin, but unlike Stephen, is almost invariably bitten or otherwise abused by the animals he studies. He has one eye... not an Eyepatch of Power due to battle or dueling, but due to an unfortunate encounter with an owl. (On the other hand, Maturin is the one who contrives to get poisoned by a platypus in Australia.)
 * In The Saga of the Noble Dead, the ancient elf Most Aged Father is intensely disliked by the majay-hi, magical wolves which normally get along well with elves, because of the manner in which he has unnaturally extended his lifespan.
 * Mixed instance in the ST:TOS novel Ishmael, which has an amnesiac Spock stuck on Earth in the 19th century. Reactions from the town's dogs range from hostility to terror, but cats find him fascinating.

Live Action TV

 * In the pilot episode of Criminal Minds, a dog barks angrily at Dr. Spencer Reid. The owner apologizes, and Agent Hotchner replies, "It's okay. It's what we call the Reid Effect. It happens with children too."
 * Poor Sweetums in one episode of The Muppet Show is depressed because of this. When he says hello to a dog, it bites his hand. When he says hello to a flower, it wilts.

Music

 * The song of the page quote.

Tabletop Games

 * Exalted features a Celestial level spell that inflicts this on a person for as long as the caster wants. By the standards of the beings who can use that level of magic (At Essence 4 it's technically possible to kill Primordials) it's not terribly powerful but for when you absolutely, positively have to make someone's life hell it's pretty neat.
 * In Vampire: The Masquerade most vampires freak out normal animals (though it can be somewhat mitigated with proper skills training). The exception are those gifted with animal-related mind powers.
 * In the old edition Warhammer Fantasy Battle rpg, wizards dabbling in dark arts would sometimes develop an aura of "wrongness" as a work-related disorder. It scared children and made animals flee or attack.
 * In the BattleTech Role-Playing Game, A Time Of War, Animal Antipathy is a negative trait you can choose for your character that causes this trope. It applies a penalty to all skill checks involving animals (riding, animal training, ect) makes them more likely to attack or flee from you, and causes any animals with the Aggressive trait to behave as if they have the Blood Rage trait, attacking the character automatically
 * Combining it with the Unlucky trait, and you can wind up with a character who was killed by a shark while walking through the desert.

Video Games

 * The Grox in Spore are literally this- so much so that you can kill them by making their planets habitable.
 * Half Life 2: "Barney, you're not an animal person."
 * The scripting in the Neverwinter Nights mod The Bitter Taste of Blood is set up so that if your vampiric player character tries to use his/her powers near normal animals (it doesn't affect wolves, but does affect deer) they will turn hostile and attack you.
 * Crossing with Evil-Detecting Dog, in Snatcher, Animals DO not react well in the presence of the titular Identity-stealing robots - the feeling's mutual.
 * Yuina Himoo from Tokimeki Memorial. Do NOT take her out to the zoo, or the koalas will attack her on sight.
 * The feeling that the central character of Red Dead Redemption suffers from this becomes difficult to shake once you've experienced a few minutes in Cougar country. Or Bear country. Or if you've ever been in one of those spots where new packs of wolves appear to spawn every thirty seconds or so. Very occasionally, you may run into an animal that isn't actively trying to kill you; instead, it will be trying to kill someone else.
 * This makes completing some of the hunting challenges particularly annoying- you can be skinning a dead wolf, surrounded by more than a dozen other dead wolves, only to have yet another pack of wolves spawn and attack you. Occassionally, they spawn so quickly that you end up facing an ever increasing horde of predators.
 * Yes, even the bunny rabbits. Look, that rabbit's got a vicious streak a mile wide! It's a killer! That's why I had to shoot it six times. You know, to be safe.
 * Non-monstrous animals in The Legend of Zelda series usually like Link (even when his current appearance is unimpressive or frightening to humans). Except that one time he got turned into a Deku Scrub, and a dog apparently mistakes him for a stick...
 * Except for Cuccos. Their chicks are worse; they try to eat mini Link.

Webcomics

 * Zig Zagged in Darwin Carmichael Is Going to Hell. One the one hand, cats freak out at the sight of Darwin, most likely because of his overpowering aura of bad karma. On the other hand, his pet Manticore Skittles adores him, and unicorns just can't get enough of him.
 * Sam of Freefall is sort of this... apparently, his alien cellular structure makes him incredibly tasty to any terran animal - as a result, anytime he sticks a tentacle outside his environment-suit, it's liable to get bitten off by any nearby animal - regardless of its usual diet. He's been harassed by doves, frogs, dogs, and an emu... and that's just what we've heard of or seen.
 * He once stuffed his pants full of crickets as live packing material for some stolen goods. When the crickets woke up, they tried to eat him.
 * Hanna from Hanna Is Not a Boy's Name claims to have this problem in an interview.
 * Asher of Get Medieval has a propensity for being menaced by waterfowl. Bees and badgers seem to have it in for him, too.
 * Duane of Unsounded says this to explain why a usually-sweet dog has a violent reaction towards him, omitting the detail that he's actually a zombie.
 * Memoria The children have been long attacked by animals.
 * Tamuran I'm not so good with animals

Web Original

 * There's no love lost on either side between The Nostalgia Critic and fuzzy animals. He nearly always wants leading dogs to die, and a puppy turned into a gorilla to attack him.

Western Animation

 * Owen, who regularly gets abused by even sleeping animals on Total Drama Island, but then, TDI resident animals are all horribly antagonistic and way outside their normal biomes.
 * Outside of the above image, this didn't really apply to DJ... until World Tour.
 * Chris also appears to be a target towards animals.
 * I.R. Baboon, the literal Butt Monkey of the I Am Weasel Cartoon Network shorts, gets this a lot. Most notable in the Season 5 episode, "Mission: Stupid," in which I.R. tries to rescue a kitten stuck on top of a tree, but gets accosted by a squirrel, an eagle, and bumblebees, in that order, on the way there.
 * If an animal appears in American Dad in a subplot involving Steve, it's a sure bet it will attack him at some point.
 * Parodied in one episode of Dexter's Laboratory. Dexter accidentally blows a fuse in his lab, so must wait for the self-repair to come online. Unfortunately, it takes a full 48 hours. And that means...going outside! GASP! He promptly has an Imagine Spot where he is sitting outside only for a bear, several racoons, a few squirrels, a couple of birds, and a fish to Zerg Rush him, creating a Big Ball of Violence. He curls up into a ball, shivering, until his sister DeeDee convinces him to outside and enjoy nature. It takes considerable coaxing, but he eventually makes it, and is starting to enjoy it...until the aforementioned Imagine Spot comes true and he is beaten up by the animals. The End.
 * This was actually said word for word by Candace in an episode of Phineas and Ferb. Given the situation, it was perfectly justified....
 * To clarify, Candace was attacked by a dog trained to purposely hurt her and keep her away from her Love Interest. She comes screaming into her yard about how much she hates animals, and how stupid they are...on the very day her brothers have built an animal translator. Her mum says that at least "Perry likes [her]", but he's not exactly a normal animal...
 * And a few episodes seem to indicate that Perry doesn't even like her all that much.
 * In The Mr. Men Show there's Mr Bump. Numerous animals always attack him first even though there are other Mr Men or Little Misses who are much closer to reach. This ranges from bee's, reptiles, even fish.
 * In SpongeBob SquarePants there's of course Squidward, who gets mauled by numerous animals, even his own plants hate at him.
 * Biff from Tom and Jerry: Fast And The Furry