Era-Specific Personality: Difference between revisions
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{{examples}} |
{{examples}} |
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== Comic Books == |
== Comic Books == |
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* One issue of ''Superman'' (''Superman: The Man of Steel #37''), during the 1994 [[Crisis Crossover]], ''Zero Hour'', had a barrelful of [[Batman|Batmen]] show up, each based on a particular artist's rendition (e.g., Frank Miller, Neal Adams, Carmine Infantino, Dick Sprang, Bob Kane). |
* One issue of ''Superman'' (''Superman: The Man of Steel #37''), during the 1994 [[Crisis Crossover]], ''Zero Hour'', had a barrelful of [[Batman|Batmen]] show up, each based on a particular artist's rendition (e.g., Frank Miller, Neal Adams, Carmine Infantino, Dick Sprang, Bob Kane). |
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* A ''[[Planetary]]'' crossover had them running into various versions of Batman as they shifted between Gotham realities. Batmen they ecountered were, in order - modern Batman, [[Adam West]] Batman, [[Dark Knight Returns]] Batman, Denny O'Neil Batman, original Batman and future Batman. |
* A ''[[Planetary]]'' crossover had them running into various versions of Batman as they shifted between Gotham realities. Batmen they ecountered were, in order - modern Batman, [[Adam West]] Batman, [[Dark Knight Returns]] Batman, Denny O'Neil Batman, original Batman and future Batman. |
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== Film == |
== Film == |
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== Live Action TV == |
== Live Action TV == |
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* ''[[Doctor Who]]'' provides a notable aversion of this trope. Thanks to the regeneration plot device, Time Lords are in fact ''expected'' to change their personality [[The Nth Doctor|whenever they're recast]]. |
* ''[[Doctor Who]]'' provides a notable aversion of this trope. Thanks to the regeneration plot device, Time Lords are in fact ''expected'' to change their personality [[The Nth Doctor|whenever they're recast]]. |
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** In fact, for any work of fiction featuring this trope, you can expect at least one person to declare that "such-and-such character is a Time Lord" on the [[Wild Mass Guessing]] page. |
** In fact, for any work of fiction featuring this trope, you can expect at least one person to declare that "such-and-such character is a Time Lord" on the [[Wild Mass Guessing]] page. |
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** [[Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan|1982]] - [[Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country|1994]]: More fallible and a bit of a [[Military Maverick]] type. |
** [[Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan|1982]] - [[Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country|1994]]: More fallible and a bit of a [[Military Maverick]] type. |
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** [[Star Trek (film)|2009 - present]]: Arrogant young hot shot. |
** [[Star Trek (film)|2009 - present]]: Arrogant young hot shot. |
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*** Though unlike many of the other examples on this page, this can be explained by the character aging in real time and then having his backstory [[Cosmic Retcon]]ned by a time |
*** Though unlike many of the other examples on this page, this can be explained by the character aging in real time and then having his backstory [[Cosmic Retcon]]ned by a time-traveling villain. |
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== Professional Wrestling == |
== Professional Wrestling == |
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* WCW once did this when Sting, a veteran wrestler who had drastically changed his look several times over the years, was attacked during a match by a series of assailants, each of whom wore a different-era Sting costume. |
* WCW once did this when Sting, a veteran wrestler who had drastically changed his look several times over the years, was attacked during a match by a series of assailants, each of whom wore a different-era Sting costume. |
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* Another wrestling example might be WSX's Matt Classic, a wrestler who was "in a coma for 40 years" and therefore uses moves, mannerisms, and phrases from 1960s pro wrestling. |
* Another wrestling example might be WSX's Matt Classic, a wrestler who was "in a coma for 40 years" and therefore uses moves, mannerisms, and phrases from 1960s pro wrestling. |
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** ''[[Sonic Generations]]'' places the Genesis-era Sonic and Dreamcast-era Sonic side-by-side, freely inviting comparisons between the two. |
** ''[[Sonic Generations]]'' places the Genesis-era Sonic and Dreamcast-era Sonic side-by-side, freely inviting comparisons between the two. |
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* Ganon(dorf) existed as a [[Evil Is Hammy|hammy villain]] up through ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time|The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time]]''. He has gotten more subtle nuances since then, but whether he is a [[Tragic Villain]] or just an [[Evil Overlord]] sans ham seems to depend on [[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker|which]] [[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess|timeline]] we see him in. |
* Ganon(dorf) existed as a [[Evil Is Hammy|hammy villain]] up through ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time|The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time]]''. He has gotten more subtle nuances since then, but whether he is a [[Tragic Villain]] or just an [[Evil Overlord]] sans ham seems to depend on [[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker|which]] [[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess|timeline]] we see him in. |
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== Web Original == |
== Web Original == |
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* The trope is also used in the ''[[Mega Man (video game)|Mega Man]]'' centric sprite comic ''[[Bob and George]]''. The time frame is measured by bittage: 8 bit is the past, 16 bit is the present, and 32 bit is the future. |
* The trope is also used in the ''[[Mega Man (video game)|Mega Man]]'' centric sprite comic ''[[Bob and George]]''. The time frame is measured by bittage: 8 bit is the past, 16 bit is the present, and 32 bit is the future. |
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* At one point in ''[[I'm a Marvel And I'm a DC|Marvel/DC After Hours]]'', Superman, Batman, and Spider-Man go back in time to shortly before [[Marvel Comics]] was founded. Superman and Batman briefly revert to their [[The Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]] personalities, which was signified by the use of older action figures. When they revert to their modern personalities, Superman remarks that he'd forgotten how nice Batman [[Darker and Edgier|used to be]]. |
* At one point in ''[[I'm a Marvel And I'm a DC|Marvel/DC After Hours]]'', Superman, Batman, and Spider-Man go back in time to shortly before [[Marvel Comics]] was founded. Superman and Batman briefly revert to their [[The Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]] personalities, which was signified by the use of older action figures. When they revert to their modern personalities, Superman remarks that he'd forgotten how nice Batman [[Darker and Edgier|used to be]]. |
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== Western Animation == |
== Western Animation == |
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* When [[Woody Woodpecker]] was revived in the 1990s, they used the wilder, more irreverent 1940s version, rather than the softer 1950s version that had been used until then. |
* When [[Woody Woodpecker]] was revived in the 1990s, they used the wilder, more irreverent 1940s version, rather than the softer 1950s version that had been used until then. |
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* [[Looney Tunes|Daffy Duck]] went from being a wacky trickster to cowardly and non-too-bright to being rather serene and positive, and from there on became cunning and greedy, to be used as foil to Bugs Bunny. |
* [[Looney Tunes|Daffy Duck]] went from being a wacky trickster to cowardly and non-too-bright to being rather serene and positive, and from there on became cunning and greedy, to be used as foil to Bugs Bunny. |
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* Shaggy from ''[[Scooby Doo]]'' was stripped of all his hippie during the 80s, but got |
* Shaggy from ''[[Scooby Doo]]'' was stripped of all his hippie elements during the 80s, but got them back in the 90s. |
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** Velma's also gotten [[Deadpan Snarker|snarkier]] as time went on. |
** Velma's also gotten [[Deadpan Snarker|snarkier]] as time went on. |
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** The 90s-and-later incarnations of the franchise are generally more self-aware and willing to play with the series tropes, where the originals played it all straight. |
** The 90s-and-later incarnations of the franchise are generally more self-aware and willing to play with the series tropes, where the originals played it all straight. |
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* When Betty Boop first appeared in the early 30's, she was portrayed as a teenage (sometimes young-adult) flapper-girl with an outgoing personality and loads of [[Fetish Fuel|sexuality]]. After the [[Hays Code]] of the mid-30's however, Betty was aged up to her mid-twenties, wore long, conservative dresses and became more passive and less wild. However, as she experienced a re-birth in popularity after the |
* When Betty Boop first appeared in the early 30's, she was portrayed as a teenage (sometimes young-adult) flapper-girl with an outgoing personality and loads of [[Fetish Fuel|sexuality]]. After the [[Hays Code]] of the mid-30's however, Betty was aged up to her mid-twenties, wore long, conservative dresses and became more passive and less wild. However, as she experienced a re-birth in popularity after the 50s, she reverted back to her sexy, Jazz Baby persona in most portrayals and is remembered by these images and behaviours mostly today. |
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* Parodied in the episode of [[Fairly |
* Parodied in the episode of ''[[The Fairly Odd Parents]]'' "The Crimson Chin meets Mighty Mom and Dyno Dad"- The Crimson Chin has wildly different Era-specific personalities, from [[The Golden Age of Comic Books|30s pulp-fiction Chin]], to [[Darker and Edgier|edgy]] [[The Dark Age of Comic Books|1985]] [[Darker and Edgier|Chin, who got cancelled for swearing.]] |
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* The ''[[My Little Pony]]'' franchise tends to do this with reoccurring ponies. Most of the characters in the current series ''[[My Little Pony: |
* The ''[[My Little Pony]]'' franchise tends to do this with reoccurring ponies. Most of the characters in the current series ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic]]'', that were carried over from the earlier G3-series have personalities that are completely different from the ones they had in G3. This is because, while those ''Friendship is Magic''-characters do have the names and color-schemes of characters from G3, their personalities are actually based on characters from G1, the original ''My Little Pony'' version from the 1980's. A curious special case is the character of Applejack, a ''Friendship is Magic''-character who has the name and color scheme of a G1 pony, but whose personality is completely different from that Pony. |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |