Dirty Old Monk: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{quote|''"Cor, what a lovely bit of stuff. I'd like to get my fingers around those knockers."''|'''Reverend Ronald Simms, the Dirty Vicar of St Michael's''', ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus (TV)|Monty Python's Flying Circus]]''}}
 
A holy man, or a man pretending to be one (it is often hard to tell an ordained hypocrite from a shameless impostor), who, despite being ostensibly above such worldly desires, is one of the most perverted members of the cast, far more lecherous than any layperson. He's constantly eyeing up and making passes at girls, and often has a sizable stash of skin mags or other pornography.
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== Films -- Live-Action ==
* Martin Luther in a [[Deleted Scene]] from ''[[Monty PythonsPython's theThe Meaning of Life]]''.
* Friar Carl in ''[[Van Helsing]]'', [[Insistent Terminology|but technically he's only a friar,]] [[Blatant Lies|so that makes it okay.]]
 
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== Literature ==
* Zephaniah Cromwell in ''[[Cloud of Sparrows]]'', though he conceals it so well that other characters believe him to be [[Asexual]].
* The Friar, Summoner, Pardoner, and Monk (although he's more of a [[Sexy Priest]] version) from ''[[The Canterbury Tales (Literature)|The Canterbury Tales]]''. Perhaps also the Nun's Priest, but he denies it.
* The ''[[Decameron]]'' starts with the fourth story on the first day (which involves not one but ''two'' monks being naughty), and doesn't really let up after that (not that ''every'' story involves a lecherous monk, but many do).
* Padre Damaso in ''Noli me Tangere''.
* Much of Frollo's villainy in ''[[The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Literaturenovel)|The Hunchback of Notre Dame]]'' is driven by his lust for Esmerelda.
* There are actually ''two'' of these in one of the ''[[Drachenfels|Genevieve]]'' stories from [[Kim Newman]]: Antonio Udolpho, a monk of [[Trickster God|Ranald]], disgraced because this trope, and the Kislevite revolutionary Prince Piotr Kloszowski (who is only ''pretending'' to be a priest of Morr, the god of dreams and death). Of course, since the [[Title Drop|Cold Stark House]] of Udolpho is cursed to be an eternal [[Death Is Cheap]] [[Soap Opera]] until its immortal patriarch dies.
* In the French Sci Fi novel ''[[Malevil]]'', the main character recalls his childhood priest. The Abbè Lebas is completely uninterested in the non-sexual confessions of the pre-teen boys and dismisses them with an impatient "Yes, yes. What else?". However, he wants ''every'' detail of any dirty thought or sexual action the boys might have to confess.
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== Live-Action TV ==
* Friar Bellows, one of the seven wickedest men in England, from ''[[The Black Adder]]''.
** From ''[[Black AdderBlackadder]] II'', The Baby-Eating Bishop of Bath and Wells.
* The Dirty Vicar in ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus (TV)|Monty Python's Flying Circus]]''.
* Father Jack from ''[[Father Ted]]''.
 
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== Theater ==
* The possible [[Ur Example]] and definite [[Trope Codifier]] is the title character of Molière's ''[[Tartuffe (Theatre)|Tartuffe]]''. The entire plot of the play revolves around Tartuffe's lechery and general hypocrisy.
** Might be even older, as the lecherous cleric is a stock character appearing in many a French farce from the middle-ages.
 
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== Video Games ==
* Thoroughly [[Averted]] in [[Girls Love]] [[Visual Novel]] ''[[Aoi Shiro]]'' with the [[Cool Old Guy]] Suzuki Yuukai. You'd think an old man living alone in a rural temple would be a lot more... ''invigorated'' being surrounded by blooming, beautiful highschool girls. To be fair, Suzuki is an acquaintance of the father of girls' teacher, so he view them (including said teacher) as granddaughters. He does become {{spoiler|Nekata Tsu}}Nami's adoptive grandfather in some route.
* One sidequest in ''[[Kingdoms of Amalur Reckoning (Video Game)|Kingdoms of Amalur Reckoning]]'' has the Fateless One searching all of Amalur for an old monk's collection of ribald literature.