Evil Twin: Difference between revisions

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It's worth noting that in the overwhelming majority of cases the twin is evil; only rarely does an evil character suddenly find themselves contending with a good twin, and in those cases the good version is often simpleminded or purely comic. See [[Good Is Impotent]].
 
Often, in science fiction, the Evil Twin is often created from the original character by [[Applied Phlebotinum]]. Most of the time, this results in a "Good Twin" and "Evil Twin", neither of which are complete entities on their own. See [[StarfishLiteral CharacterSplit Personality]] for examples of this.
 
[[Beard of Evil|A goatee or other beard]] is a staple of Evil Twins everywhere. This comes from the ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' episode "Mirror, Mirror", in which the evil duplicate of Spock is distinguished only by the fact that he has a beard. It is common for parodies of Evil Twin to use a [[Good Hair, Evil Hair|beard]] as a distinguishing characteristic, in some cases even when they shouldn't be able to grow facial hair - for example, Flexo in [[Futurama]] or Cartman in [[South Park]]. Some evil twins use [[Identical Twin ID Tag]]s to differentiate from their good counterpart such as [[Good Scars, Evil Scars|scars]] and [[Evil Makeover|evil costuming.]]
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* [[The Smurfs]] deal with evil duplicates of themselves in ''The Smurf Threat'' that were created by Papa Smurf in order to get the Smurfs to stop fighting with each other.
* In the [[Doctor Who Expanded Universe]] comic ''The Forgotten'', a brain parasite attacking the Tenth Doctor takes on the appearance of an evil twin version of him, complete with beard and black pinstripe suit, and claims to be the Valeyard. The real Doctor immediately mocks the parasite's complete lack of originality.
* The ''[[Secret Empire]]'' storyline put an odd twist on this. [[The Red Skull]] convinced [[Goo-Goo Godlike| Kobic]] (the evolved form of the [[Artifact of Doom| Cosmic Cube]] he used to own, who now had the appearance, personality, and naivete of a little girl) to [[Rewriting Reality|Rewrite Reality]] so that [[Captain America]] was - and always was - his apprentice, changing reality so that Cap was a villain and a sleeper agent. [[The Starscream| Evil!Cap turned against the Skull]] (who clearly [[Didn't Think This Through]] when he assumed turning Cap evil would ensure loyalty) and proceeded to take over the United States, and then the world, with the clear intent of turning the whole universe into the Fourth Reich. Kobic, however, came to her senses and was terrified at the world she had created, but because she had no idea what Cap’s original history was (she was born long after World War II and had, in effect purged history from that point) she couldn’t simply undo it. So she created an [[Eldritch Location]] called the Vanishing Point, a repository for memories that have been [[Ret-Gone]] away. <ref>Yeah, this is sort of an [[Author's Saving Throw]] sort of thing for just such an occasion.</ref> Long story short, the real Captain America emerges from the Vanishing Point, and after an epic battle (using Thor’s hammer, no less) beats the crud out of his evil self, and the true reality is restored.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
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* [[Starsky and Hutch (TV series)|Starsky and Hutch]] each had one. {{spoiler|These evil twins were pinning crimes on the original duo under orders of a corrupt attorney.}}
* In the Fox TV movie ''Dark Reflection'' (aka, ''Natural Selection''), C. Thomas Howell plays a dual role. In one, he is a successful computer programmer named Ben with a great house and an awesome sports car but is neglectful of his wife and son. In the other role, he is Adam, a clone of Ben who has been running around the country killing his other clones and taking over their lives. (There were seven clones all together). Well, Ben is last on the list. So, Adam gets a job at Ben's company, charms the wife and kid, and infiltrates Ben's life to learn all the little details he will need to accomplish his evil pan. Along the way, {{spoiler|Adam kills a private detective who has figured it all out and Ben's mother who is the only one who know that Ben has a clone. He also has sex with Ben's wife, who can't tell the difference.}} In the climax, Ben and Adam fight on the roof and one kills the other. At the end, we find out that {{spoiler|evil Adam survived and that he's a better father to Ben's son and wife, neither of whom know they're now living with a murderous clone who has killed.}}
* In ''[[I Dream of Jeannie]]'', Jeannie's sister (also named Jeannie, [[Acting for Two|also played by Barbara Eden]], but with a brunette wig) was not truly her twin, but could easily pass for her sister and was clearly evil, trying many times to steal Tony for herself. Jeannie's sister wore a green version of Jeannie's pink harem girl outfit, but with a skirt rather than pantaloons.
* In ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'', one episode has the musical virtuoso Chandell, who is being blackmailed by his mobster twin brother Harry. Both brothers were played by [[Special Guest]] celebrity [[Liberace]].
 
== [[New Media]] ==
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* In ''Gaming Guardians'', Ultima was a [[Shape Shifter|doppelganger-demon]] who was permanently empowered by Scarlet Jester with a copy of Radical's powers, which also caused her default form to become a duplicate of Radical.
* Depending on how you look at things, {{spoiler|April}} in ''[[CRFH]]'' could be considered to be {{spoiler|her 'sister' June's evil duplicate.}}
* Subverted in ''[http://www.melonpool.com [[Melonpool]]]'', in which the duplicate, Ralphie, is the good one. Also, the ''Melonpool''/''[http://www.itswalky.com It's Walky!]'' [[Crossover]] used the Dup-o-matic on an opposing army, who then immediately began fighting amongst each other. This crossover led to the creation of 'Anti-Joyce', who was the opposite of Joyce in that she was sexually active, rather than prudish. Interestingly, the storylines would have long-term consequences in both series: Ralphie joining the crew in [[Melonpool]], while the murder of Anti-Joyce in ''It's Walky!'' would lead to serious psychological (and later, legal) problems for the original.
* Subverted in ''[[Concerned]]'', as protagonist Gordon Frohman's twin brother Norman Frohman is a highly-effective special ops agent working for the resistance. Since Gordon Frohman is Dr. Breen's biggest fan, wants to join the Combine, and is bitterly jealous towards Gordon Freeman, that makes him...
* {{spoiler|Cloney}} from ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'' is eventually revealed as {{spoiler|Aylee}}'s Evil Clone. There's also Alt-Alt-Torg compared to regular Torg.
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* ''[[He-Man and the Masters of the Universe|Skeletor]]'' used a similar mirror to create an evil twin of one of He-Man's allies. When the ally tricked Skeletor into allowing a good duplicate into existence, it lead to He-Man asking both Skeletors to claim to be his friend. The original Skeletor was too evil to comply.
* An interesting example in one episode of ''[[American Dad]]''. The CIA develops cloning technology that makes an exact copy of the existing individual, same age and memories. After disputes with Francine over how to raise Steve, (with Francine winning the bike race, meaning Steve gets raised her way) Stan clones a second Steve to raise as his own, naming the clone "Stevearino". The clone is later shown to be evil, however, it is the result of Stan's overly-strict rules and not some inherent evil-ness that comes with being a clone.
* The cartoon version of ''[[Dragon's Lair]]'' had a episode called ''"Mirror Mirror", in which Singe disguises himself as Dirk to trick the villiage people. The episode ends with two morals. The second one? is {{spoiler|"Evil dragons should learn how to swim."}}
* In the first season finale of ''[[The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes]]'', {{spoiler|[[Captain America (comics)]]}} gets knocked out, then duplicated, by a Skrull invader. If the warning of {{spoiler|Kang the Conqueror}} is to be believed, {{spoiler|this Skrull will eventually betray the Avengers and/or the Earth, and this action will cause the destruction of the world}}.
* ''[[Edgar and Ellen]]'' are identical twin siblings that cause mischief and mayhem to the peaceful town of Nod's Limbs through the use of pranks. They live in a tower mansion located at the outskirt forest near the town where they plan all their schemes to terrorize the citizens and the mayor's daughter Stephanie.