Early Teen Hero

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 05:01, 25 January 2023 by Ilikecomputers (talk | contribs) (the wiki, which goes off official published materials, state the characters' ages are sixteen, putting them outside the range allowed by the trope)

You're not as immature as a child, but you haven't lost the glow of youth. I think that makes [14] the perfect age.

—Astrid Zexis, Atelier Meruru

The hero is the single character that people will relate to the most. They get the most screen time, they are the most developed character if they are the protagonist, and, unless you've got an Anti-Hero, they are the character the audience looks up to the most.

What if you want to appeal to children, or anyone who hasn't come of age? Enter the Middle-Aged Kiddo Hero, where the hero is a young teenager or about to become one.

This is a subtrope of Kid Hero. The difference between the tropes is the age range. Whereas Kid Hero refers to any character who hasn't come of age, the difference here is that this trope only applies to twelve to fifteen year olds, with some loose extensions into eleven year olds. Fourteen appears to be a popular compromise. [1]

This age range is specific, and immensely helps any storyteller. The character is young enough to be relatable to every child, but not so young that the writer cannot make the work serious. Having a child too young to be a hero can turn off older teens from viewing the work, but having a teen too old can turn off younger children from a work. Thus, this trope serves as a compromise between the two age ranges. The close age gap to children themselves means they can insert themselves into the character far easier than they can insert themselves into an adult, yet the serious tones which is often presented allows grown-ups to be invested in a work.

Because children prefer the bright and exaggerated scenes of animation over the dull reality presented in Live-Action TV, this is mostly an animation trope [2]. Anime studios love doing this to reflect the younger target demographic many series aim for.

Sometimes the usage of this trope is only implied. If a character starts a Wizarding School or is a young High School student, it probably fits. If they are in primary school, or is about to graduate from said Wizarding School, they do not fit. Often the age of the hero is never explicitly stated. In that case, use common sense and ask yourself if the child is young enough to appeal to kids, yet old enough to appeal to adults. The things the hero does can also give a hint: no twelve year old will calculate interest on their car loan. Similarly, a seven year old probably won't go on a MacGuffin hunt.

When the trope is used, you're almost guaranteed a Hero Protagonist. If it is used, chances of Cerebus Syndrome are high. See also the parent trope Kid Hero.

No real life examples, please; real life does not have heroes.

Examples of Early Teen Hero include:

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Anime and Manga

  • Studio Ghibli productions:
    • The thirteen year old Kiki on her coming of age journey in Kiki's Delivery Service. Tombo also fits this range.
    • The thirteen year old Arrietty in The Borrower Arrietty, turning fourteen at the end of the film.
    • In When Marnie Was There, the twelve year old Anna is the hero.
    • Sheeta and Pazu from Laputa: Castle in the Sky are around this age range, although their ages are never explicitely stated.
    • Shizuku Tsukishima in Whisper of the Heart, attending junior high school. She is around the age of fourteen.
    • How Do You Live? is planned to have fifteen year old Copper as the hero.
    • In Spirited Away, the protagonist Chihiro Ogino is around ten years old, being a couple years behind the range. On the other hand, the male lead Haku fits this age, appearing around twelve in age and being capable of using advanced magic.
  • The Eva pilots in Neon Genesis Evangelion are all fourteen. Justified in that only children born after the Second Impact can pilot the Evangelions. Also Subverted in the sense that Neon Genesis Evangelion is by no means a kids' show nor does it try to appeal to young children.
  • In Violet Evergarden, Violet estimates that her age is around fourteen, although the series makes no effort to appeal to younger audiences. Violet's age allows the series to get dark quickly in episode nine.
  • Mary Smith in Mary and the Witch's Flower is around this age gap, mature enough to go on adventures in the nearby Wizarding School, but not mature enough to excel at it or fit in.
  • In Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water, the titular Nadia is the standard fourteen years old. This age is crucial here, as the series gets dark real quickly.
  • In the Witch Hat Atelier manga, Coco, as well as the other girls at Qifrey's atelier (Tetia, Richeh, Agott) appear around this age. Their age is never explicitly stated, but their range can be inferred to be around this by their appearances, the fact that Qifrey calls them "girls", and by Coco's mum present in the first chapter.
  • Garrod Ran of After War Gundam X is 15, but looks pretty young for his age. Presumably apocalypse induced childhood malnutrition is at fault.

Art

Ballads

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

  • Violet Parr from Pixar's The Incredibles is around this age. Thus, the trope also applies to Incredibles 2.
  • Riley from Inside Out, who moves into a new school, and the film focuses on her emotions while this is happening. She turns twelve at the end, putting her in lower bracket of the age range.
  • In Disney's Encanto, Mirabelle's age is given as around fifteen. That puts her in the upper limit of the demographic--making her less relatable to young children--although her conflict and interactions with her family restore some of that relatability.
  • In How To Train Your Dragon, Hiccup is fifteen years old. Over the course of the trilogy, he grows out of the age range. This allows him to tackle serious issues involving relationships between man and dragon, but also allows him to have lighthearted moments with his crush Astrid.

Literature

  • In the Nevermoor series, Morrigan Crow initially starts out at eleven, however as the series progresses she ages into the trope's range.
  • In the Harry Potter series, Harry initially starts out in this range, but grows out of it as the books progress.
  • Sophie Foster in the Keeper of the Lost Cities franchise starts out being twelve, and remain in the range as the series progresses. Book number nine implies that she may have grown out of it, stating that she no longer keeps track of her age and that she may be sixteen.
  • The heroes of Diane Duane's Young Wizards series range between ten and fourteen, depending on the character and the book.

Live-Action TV

Music

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

Theatre

Video Games

  • The thirteen year old Oliver fro Ni no Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch.
  • Roughly half of the protagonists in the Atelier Series. Since the games typically take place over multiple years, nearly all of them enter late teens or even adulthood by the end of the game.
  • The playable character in Pokémon Legends: Arceus is described to look around fifteen (despite the female being completely flat), scrapping the upper limit of the age bracket.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog's age was given as 15 (5 times the total lifespan of an average non-anthropomorphic hedgehog) on Sega's official website between 2015 and mid-2022 (when the age section was removed entirely). His personality of being arrogant, proud, somewhat impulsive and a show-off but ultimately good natured fits the human perception of this age.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life

  1. Yes, twelve to fifteen is not a middle aged child, but we must compromise for the fact that three year olds cannot wield swords or go on epic adventures.
  2. Although some shows, such as Neon Genesis Evangelion, are distinctly not for kids.