Enemy Mime: Difference between revisions

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== Professional Wrestling ==
* "The Icon" [[Wrestler/Sting (wrestling)|Sting]] played with this trope in [[WCW]] during the fall of 1996 and most of 1997, effectively creating an enormously popular new wrestling character in the process. After being framed by [[Hulk Hogan]]'s New World Order, Sting announced that he was going to go into seclusion for a while until he thought of a way to [[Clear My Name|clear his name]]. As he made this announcement, the audience could see that his "[[Ultimate Warrior]]"-style greasepaint had begun to consume his face in a bizarre and unsettling literal example of [[Becoming the Mask]], bleaching everything but his nose, lips, and lower jaw clown-white. The following week, Sting appeared in the rafters above the arena with a ''completely'' white face, black lips, and black Gothic "crosses" over his eyes, making him look suspiciously like a mime (although Sting's portrayer, Steve Borden, would eventually admit in an interview that the makeup design was suggested to him by nWo member [[Scott Hall]] as a tribute to Brandon Lee's appearance in the movie version of ''[[The Crow]]''). Not only that, but Sting [[The Voiceless|did not speak a single word]] while wearing the whiteface for over a year (finally blurting out an insult to Hogan in anger after he was stripped of the WCW Championship). In the meantime, he kept showing up in the ring (sometimes via the rafters and sometimes via the crowd) with a black baseball bat, attacking the nWo or silently subjecting his former allies to a series of "loyalty tests." The whiteface, black bat, and [[Badass Longcoat]] that Sting also wore would go on to become key parts of his wrestling [[Stealth Pun|iconography]] and are still part of his signature look today (although he now speaks quite frequently, and has hardly ever been a heel since). Long story short: While Sting was never supposed to be taken as a mime, [[Fan Nickname|his fans took to nicknaming him things like "The Sad Mime" or "The Angry Mime."]]
 
 
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* In ''[[The Adventures of Dr. McNinja]]'', the eponymous hero fights a battle (or two) against fast-food pitch-clown [[No Celebrities Were Harmed|Donald McBonald]], who has access to mime powers. The good doctor defeats him with a pantomime of an invisible rocket launcher. (In [https://web.archive.org/web/20090901200058/http://www.drmcninja.com/mcdonalds.html this story].)
* ''[[Casey and Andy]]'' features a Mime Assassin as a recurring antagonist. He utilizes Mime Powers in addition to ordinary and specialized firearms (such as a water-gun loaded with Very Holy Water for fighting off [[Satan]], who just happens to be [[Planet Eris|dating one of the main characters]]), but is foiled when the Quantum Cop turns said powers against him, locking him in an invisible, unbreakable box.
* ''[http://www.livingwithshine.net/comicsENG/lws_006.html Living with Shine]''{{Dead link}}'' has one. He actually has powers... mime powers. (Can create invisible walls) but most of the time he is treated as joke by the cast. [[Running Gag|Also, he speaks...]]
* A now defunct webcomic featured a villain with battle mimes as henchmen. When a character commented on the absurdity of this, the villain replied that, being silent, agile, and well trained, Mimes were just ninjas with pizazz.
 
 
== Web Original ==
* The "Panous-Panous"—Mooks in the amateur French sentai show ''[[France Five]]''—have been described as "[[McNinja|ninja-mimes]]".
* Lord Opticord and his minions in ''[[Sockbaby]]'' have the mime theme going on, but they were most certainly not mute. Quite the contrary...
 
 
== Western Animation ==
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* A Thanksgiving episode of ''[[South Park]]'' from several years back showed the kids getting ready to stage a Thanksgiving pageant starring Timmy as Helen Keller and Timmy's pet turkey, Gobbles, as Helen's pet. Cartman is in charge of writing the songs for the pageant, but he can't come up with lyrics. The play's director suggests that he put on a blindfold (in order to experience what it would have been like to be Helen Keller) and write down what he sees. Once Cartman's eyes are covered, the screen goes black and then yields to a montage of images. Most of them are "traditional" scary things, such as rotting corpses and vermin - but we also see the disturbing shot of a mime [[Alliteration|lasciviously licking his lips]]. What makes it ''truly'' frightening is that when Cartman takes off the blindfold and the director asks him what he has seen, his only response is [[Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant|"Just what I always see when I close my eyes."]]
* An episode of ''[[Family Guy]]'' revealed Paris has a lot of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_jwC8mKpRM mime on mime violence]".
 
 
== Real Life ==
* Heroic Inversion: [[Marcel Marceau]], during World War II and before his miming days, was a member of the French Resistance, and later was a liaison officer with George Patton after the liberation of France.
** {{spoiler|Supposedly, he would defeat people by hiding behind an invisible wall, then silently returning fire.}}
** And yet in Mel Brooks "[[Silent Movie (film)|Silent Movie]]" he was the only person who spoke aloud. First he had to reach the telephone by walking against a terrific wind and when asked if he'd be in the movie he gave his answer aloud. {{spoiler|It was ''no''.}}
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Enemy Mime{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Circus Index]]
[[Category:Silence Tropes]]
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[[Category:Clown Tropes]]
[[Category:Villains]]
[[Category:Enemy Mime]]