Evil-Detecting Dog: Difference between revisions

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* In episode 15 of ''[[Tiger and Bunny]]'' Keith Goodman's dog, John, growls at and tries to keep Keith away from the pretty girl on the park bench. The reason being that while Cis looks like a nice lady, {{spoiler|she's a Deceptively Human Robot (in appearance if nothing else) and Keith doesn't realise this.}}
* Hotarubi from ''[[Basilisk]]'' has a pet viper that could see through [[Master of Disguise|Kisaragi Saemon's]] disguise. Unfortunately, Hotarubi didn't understand the meaning of her snake biting [[Dead Person Impersonation|her lover]] and just tossed the animal away and sucked the poison out of Saemon's finger by herself!
 
 
== Comic Books ==
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* The demons in [[Chick Tracts]] are invisible to all the characters...except for Fang, a (badly drawn) dog who occasionally barks at them in the background.
* In the mid-90s ''[[Robocop vs. Terminator]]'' comic book, one of the humans remarks on the fact that a dog acts friendly, rather than hostile, to Robocop, proving to the human that said character couldn't be a Terminator.
 
 
== Fan Works ==
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* In ''[[The Dilgar War]]'' dogs are the only thing that can locate the [[Elite Mooks|Spectre]], Dilgar special forces equipped with cloaking suits.
* Invoked in ''[[Ghost Story (fanfic)|Nutss Ghost Story]]'' when Murphy tries to convince Molly that Shepard's alright by reminding her that Mouse hasn't had his usual reaction to Outsiders around Shep.
 
 
== Film ==
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* Kelly's dog Ginger in ''[[Race with the Devil]]'' is the first to notice the cultists. It later gets hanged from the RV's door.
* Used a ''lot'' in the 1944 film ''[[The Mummy's Hand|The Mummy's Ghost]]'', in which dogs barking the alarm or biting at his ankles actually pose a greater obstacle to the mummy's comings and goings than anything the human characters do.
 
 
== Literature ==
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* Gavin de Becker's book ''The Gift of Fear'' claims that dogs will growl at untrustworthy people because their owners will detect the malicious intent and broadcast their discomfort with subconscious cues.
* In [[Arthur Conan Doyle]]'s "[http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/d/doyle/arthur_conan/d75ca/chapter8.html The Adventure of the Creeping Man]" [[Sherlock Holmes]] asks "Why does Professor Presbury's wolfhound, Roy, endeavour to bite him?" Answer: {{spoiler|because Presbury was injecting himself with ape glands to boost his virility, which made him act, and smell like, an ape.}}
** "[httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20140822075618/https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/d/doyle/arthur_conan/d75me/chapter1.html Silver Blaze]", by contrast, famously includes "the curious incident of the dog in the night-time" - the curious incident being that the dog did ''not'' bark at an intruder, thus alerting Holmes to the fact that the dog knew the intruder, therefore the crime in question must have been an inside job.
* Pretty much universally true in [[H.P. Lovecraft]]'s works. (Below are just a few examples.) On the other hand, humans have almost the same ability, as Lovecraft's narrators and characters constantly go on about how eldritch and wrong the things they encounter feel (or seem or look or smell or sound), even if they can't explain why or don't even clearly see anything.
** In ''[[The Dunwich Horror]]'', the weird (and unnatural) Wilbur Whateley carries a gun for self-defense against other villager's dogs. A dog still gets him in the end. In a ''library'', of all things. And just to show just how much dogs hated him, it actually crashed through a plate glass window in order to attack Wilbur.
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* The Starks' direwolves in ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' will growl at anyone their masters don't trust, and in at least one instance, someone they trusted but ''really'' shouldn't have.
* In [[Andre Norton]]'s ''Victory on Janus'', the garth guard dogs, like the Iftin, can distinguish the [[Deceptively-Human Robots]] from true humans and true Iftin by smell.
* In ''[[Discworld/Sourcery|Sourcery]]'', the Patrician's dog, Wuffles, growls at the sourcerer's staff.
* In [[J. K. Rowling]]'s ''[[Harry Potter]]'' novels, the cat-like creatures called Kneazles explicitly have this ability. Crookshanks is part-Kneazle. When Ron realizes that this is the reason Crookshanks hated {{spoiler|Scabbers}} so much, he holds his new owl in front of Crookshanks to test his reaction; Crookshanks's lack of interest is good enough for Ron.
* In the book ''[[The Zombie Survival Guide]]'', dogs can sense zombies, reacting with maddened rage unless having been born in fully zombie-infested times. Taken further, in ''[[World War Z]]'', dogs are specifically trained for zombie-fighting, helping escort special forces teams and scouts, and with smaller, tough breeds, going into areas humans cannot fight safely in.
** Although all other animals take the second variety; one way of telling if a zombie is near you is if the wildlife is [[It's Quiet... Too Quiet|unnaturally quiet]]. This comes in quite handy in bogs, rainforests, etc., but applies everywhere.
** Also in ''[[World War Z]]'', one safe zone is shown using dogs in kennels arranged along a walkway as a screening process for refugees entering the city. If the dogs go nuts when you walk by... well, sucks to be you.
* In ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' animals react strongly to the presence of the Ringwraiths. In the books, the wraiths' horses (and later fell beasts) are an exception, due to being trained from birth to tolerate them. The first movie features spiders, wetas and other creepy-crawlies moving to ''get away'' from the wraiths, although the horses look quite evil.
** A dog specific example would be Farmer Maggot's dogs who really didn't like the Ringwraith who came visiting.
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* In ''[[Perdido Street Station]]'', Lublamai's pet badger Sincerity is the first one to detect the threat of the runt slake-moth, growling downstairs as it emerges from its cocoon in Isaac's loft.
* Inverted in the [[Belgariad]], birds seem to instinctively know (and love) Polgara, even if they've never met her. The Emperor's bird even chews him out for not recognizing her.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
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* ''[[Xena: Warrior Princess]]'' had Argo, her trusty horse that could tell something was wrong when [[Grand Theft Me|Xena's body was hi-jacked by Callisto's spirit]].
* In ''[[The Nanny]],'' while C.C. wasn't evil (supposedly,) she was a full-blooded [[Rich Bitch]], and her Pomeranian Chester had no trouble letting her know it. He would snarl and growl every time she was anywhere near him, while being perfectly friendly to everybody else in the house. In real life, despite [[Mean Character, Nice Actor|Lauren Lane (C.C.) being a very sweet and pleasant person]], Chester was Fran Drescher's real life dog, and was so fiercely loyal to her any time Lane picked up the dog, he would just naturally growl, so they wrote it into the story that way.
 
 
== Music ==
* Suggested by [[Loreena McKennitt]]'s version of W. B. Yeats' "The Stolen Child", about mysterious faeries that seduce and steal away the titular child, which begins and ends with a chorus of barking hunting dogs who have detected the sinister faeries.
 
 
== New Media ==
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* In ''[[Tales of MU]]'', dogs can detect the main character's ancestry and are utterly hostile to her. This naturally results in her being afraid of them.
* In the ''Ted the Caver'' webfiction, a Jack Russel terrier named Trip refuses to go into a sinister cave the protagonists are investigating.
 
 
== Tabletop Games ==
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** [[Vampire: The Requiem|Vampires]] also have trouble dealing with animals unless they know the Discipline of Animalism, being living corpses. Conversely, if they ''do'' know Animalism, they can seem like a [[Friend to All Living Things]].
* Reversed in ''[[GURPS]]''. The effect comes from entities with the Frightens Animals disadvantage rather than special powers that dogs have.
* In ''[[Dungeons & Dragons|D&D]]'' natural animals will usually refuse to approach a variety of undead creatures, so this can be a good way of searching for them.
 
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
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* When you first enter the main city in ''[[Shining the Holy Ark]]'' you see one of the villains walking around. A cute little puppy starts barking like crazy at her, a flash of light blinds you, she's gone and so is the puppy leaving a crying child.
 
== Web Comics ==
 
== Webcomics ==
* Similar to ''[[The Parent Trap (1961 film)|The Parent Trap]]'' example: see a particular webcomic modernization of [http://extd-grb-injoke.livejournal.com/17376.html The Prince and the Pauper].
* ''[[Blip]]'': The comic begins with K taking her dog Poo for a walk, and Poo begins barking at a man on the sidewalk. Said man turns out to be an angel in disguise.
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** Also, Brian the dog is the only one who realizes Stewie is evil. Of course, that is more that he is the [[Only Sane Man]] on the show.
* In ''[[Samurai Jack]]'', a mouselike creature accepts food from him, but hisses and runs from his traveling companion Ikra {{spoiler|who turns out to be Aku in disguise.}}
* In the somewhat forgotten kids' cartoon ''[[The Magician (French TV series)|The Magician]]'', an [[Identical Stranger]] (thanks to plastic surgery) kidnaps and switches places with the eponymous main character, taking care to plant a behavior modification chip on his pet dog to ensure it will bark distrustfully at the ''real'' guy, and stop doing so at him, which is useful to fool the sidekick.
* Radarr, [[Team Pet]] of the ''[[Storm Hawks]]'', detects evil in two episodes that were broadcast consecutively.
** In "Best Friends Forever", [[Big Bad]] Cyclonia disguises herself as an ally of the team. At first, only Radarr is able to sense that something's wrong.
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* In the [[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy]] episode 'Run for your Ed', the Kankers lost their 'Ship Inna Bottle' due to Ed's sleepwalking. They decide to search the Cul-de-sac in their usual chaotic mischief, which results in mass destruction. Prior to that, Rolf's animals catch on to their impending visit and all flip out (from his goat standing stiff, his chickens and pig screaming and flailing around, [[Rule of Funny|and even a piece of fried chicken seem to give some reaction to Rolf when put against his ear]]). He quickly carries all his farm animals into the basement and closes it, waiting there for the rest of the episode.
{{quote|''Rolf'': The stench of immortal doom still thickens the air, yes? [[Casual Danger Dialogue|Or perhaps it is Wilfred's cabbage evacuation. Hard to tell.]]}}
 
 
== Real Life ==
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[[Category:Canine Tropes]]
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