Evil Twin: Difference between revisions

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|'''[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?name=evil%20twin Evil Twin]''', ''[[Magic: The Gathering|Magic the Gathering]]''}}
 
Take a popular character and introduce us to the evil version of this character. Naturally, it's a favorite [[Soap Opera]] device. It's also very prevalent in genre shows, where the events may happen in an [[Alternate Universe]]: for example, the [[For Want of a Nail|Wishverse]] in ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'', or the ''[[Star Trek]]'' [[Mirror Universe]]. Typically the evil'''Evil twinTwin''' will be [[Acting for Two|portrayed by the same actor]] as the regular character.
 
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 [[Starfish Character]] 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.]]
 
Sci-Fi versions usually wind up playing [[Spot the Imposter]].
 
Compare [[Criminal Doppelganger]], [[Evil Counterpart]], and [[Enemy Without]], and see also [[Doppelganger]]. For the situation where the original character pretends to be the '''Evil Twin''', see [[Impersonating the Evil Twin]]. When multiple characters' '''Evil Twins''' team up, they become [[The Psycho Rangers]].
 
If they are [[Different As Night and Day|literal twins]], they might be [[Cain and Abel]] and/or [[Separated at Birth]], but an '''Evil Twin''' need not be a relative of the original, and a separated pair doesn't necessarily include an evil one.
 
If the two end up fighting, it is always a [[Mirror Match]].
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{{examples}}
== [[Advertising]] ==
* One Priceline advert includes the appearance of the company's spokesman's Evil Twin, complete with the [[Beard of Evil]], the spokesman? William Shatner!
 
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* The evil twin was actually a major plot point for ''[[Blue Seed]]''. Momiji's twin, Kaede, was called in first to deal with the evil plant monsters, due to her family's bloodline power, and ended up faking her death to join them.
* Yuuna's evil twin in ''[[Maburaho]]'' was magic-derived.
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* Arguably, Suboshi from ''[[Fushigi Yuugi]]'', Amiboshi's [[Hot-Blooded]] younger twin brother.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* The entire [[Bizarro Universe|Bizarro World]] in the [[Pre Crisis]] [[Superman]] mythos can be considered a form of Evil Twin by [[Applied Phlebotinum]], though it slowly changed from "evil opposite" to "goofy opposite".
** Eh? Bizarro STARTED as a "goofy opposite". Oddly, ''he'' arguably had an Evil Twin, in the form of Bizarro-Bizarro, who looked like Superman, spoke like Bizarro, and acted like a [[Jerkass]].
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* 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.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
Hoo boy. Let's say it's popular, and even more so if the base subject has a [[Mirror Universe]] or an Evil Twin as part of its own canon.
* Case in point: [[Darkwing Duck]] fanfic writers take trips to the Negaverse every so often. A popular subject is 'NegaGosalyn' and her relationship with the Friendly Four ([[Hurt/Comfort Fic]] pops up here). {{spoiler|One story even explains why Gosalyn wasn't evil there--the ''normal'' one would've turned rotten.}}
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* ''[[Turnabout Storm]]'': [[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic|Pinkie Pie]] suggests that Rainbow Dash has one of these, called [[Sdrawkcab Name|Wob Niar]], as a possible explanation of how the murder of [[Original Character|Ace Swift]] went down. [[Ace Attorney|Phoenix]] insists on it being a stupid idea, but Pinkie being [[Cloudcuckoolander|Pinkie]], she sticks with it.
 
== [[Film]] ==
* In the superhero comedy ''[[Sky High]]'', one of the teachers tries to set up a colleague on a blind date with his girlfriend's sister. "What if I said it's not just her twin? It's her evil twin." "This Friday, you say?"
* [[The Movie]] of ''[[The Magic Roundabout]]'' introduces Zebedee's Evil Twin, the ice-wizard Zeebad who was imprisoned under the Roundabout itself. This would probably qualify it for [[Canon Discontinuity]] were it not for Tom Baker's wonderful [[Large Ham]] voice role. And then he became [[The Daily Show|Jon Stewart]] in the [[Cultural Translation|American]] version.
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* Avatar and Black Wolf in [[Ralph Bakshi]]'s ''[[Wizards]]'', although they look nothing alike. Avatar is short, portly, friendly, and fairy-like (minus the wings). Black Wolf is tall, thin, evil, and mutated. The only thing they have in common is that they're both bearded.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* In [[Lois McMaster Bujold]]'s ''[[Vorkosigan Saga|Vorkosigan]]'' book series: After the ''very'' distinctive-looking Miles Vorkosigan claims (as a coverup for his secret identity) that he has a clone running around, it turns out he does have one. Who's been trained to take his life over. Turns out the twin, Mark, isn't necessarily born evil, just brainwashed (plus has [[Split Personality]], with the personalities generally being pretty dark). Lampshaded in Mirror Dance: "Some people have evil twins. I am not so lucky. I have an ''idiot'' twin."
* In [[William Sleator]]'s ''[[The Duplicate]]'', the clone isn't really evil, just resentful of being treated as a clone (he has all the memories of the original, so he believes he is the original). However, this leads him to {{spoiler|make another clone, who really is evil (or at least not exactly sane)}}.
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{{quote|"Are there no Prisons? Are there no Workhouses?"}}
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* ''[[Gunsmoke]]'': One episode had Festus jailed on charges of murder and robbery ... only someone who [[Identical Stranger|looked just like him]] was the actual criminal.
* ''[[The Dukes of Hazzard]]'': Two instances, both involving the series' two main villains (one each per episode):
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* 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.}}
 
== [[New Media]] ==
* ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''{{'}}s [http://www.wizards.com/magic/ official site] did a theme week where most of the weekly articles were written by "evil twins" of their usual writers. Even the writer that's supposedly a supervillain; the twin is such a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]], he makes [[Death Note|Light Yagami]] look like a [[Technical Pacifist]].
* ''[[World of Warcraft]]'' info site Thottbot.com allows you to switch between ''Classic'' and ''Evil Twin'' themes (white background vs. black background, among other color changes), and the loading screen when switching to ''Evil Twin'' mode says "Growing goatee..." (while the loading page to get back to ''Classic'' mode says "Shaving...").
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* In ''[[GURPS]]'', "Evil Twin" is a disadvantage a character can take for additional points. The disadvantage makes the PC have to take the fall for things his evil twin does, as well as other characters thinking that the PC is crazy, or has a split personality. Interestingly, the Evil Twin has this disadvantage as well, and occasionally the Evil Twin will be blamed for something the PC did. And if you play an evil character with this disadvantage, you have to worry about getting the credit for your "Good" Twin doing things like saving orphanages.
* In ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'', Hextor, the god of Tyranny and War, is the Evil Twin of Heironeous, the god of Chivalry and Justice.
** ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' has a variation: There's an entire ''race'' called dopplegangers, who can shapeshift into any similarly sized humanoid-including other people.
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* [[Magic: The Gathering]]: [http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=229965 Like so]
 
== [[Toys]] ==
* A few variants used in ''[[Bionicle]]''. First, we have ''an army'' of corrupted Alternate-universe versions of Takanuva, and then we have an inversion with {{spoiler|"White Teridax", a "good" version of the main [[Big Bad]]}}.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
* In the ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' video games, Sonic has had a number of evil robotic duplicates—the number of ''characters'' involved is unclear, but at least five different bodies have been used. In addition, the sometimes-evil character Shadow is [[Evil Counterpart|very similar to Sonic in appearance and abilities]].
** Character-wise, there are at least two. Metal Sonic, who debuted in ''[[Sonic CD]]'', is the most popular and consistent of Sonic's mecha-twins. Then there's Silver Sonic from ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 2]]'' (both the Game Gear and the Genesis version) and Mecha Sonic from ''[[Sonic 3 and Knuckles]]'', but neither of them showed any personality.
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* In [[Space Ace]], Dexter has a clone named Hexter. He energizes into a bigger form when Dexter energizes into Ace.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* ''[[Life of Riley]]'' features an early villain in Evil Dan, opposite of the main character Dan. Slightly subverted in that Evil Dan is even more of a moron than Good Dan, and has no real skills as an evil opposite.
* ''[[Kid Radd]]'' features an Evil Twin as one of a [[Goldfish Poop Gang]] duo - he serves as the titular character's [[Shadow Archetype]] later in the story.
* The ''Sister'' arc of ''[[El Goonish Shive]]'' has main character Elliot get "cursed"<ref>i.e. being zapped by a [[Transformation Ray]] gun</ref> into a [[Gender Bender|female form]], then touch a [[Green Rocks|magical diamond]] which separates him into his normal male self, and a female version, named Ellen, who has all of the same memories, experiences, etc. Believing that she's the embodiment of his "curse", and thus will disappear when it wears off in less than a month, she goes crazy and tries to become his evil twin in a desperate attempt to gain ''some'' sort of identity. {{spoiler|She was wrong about disappearing, and wasn't so good at the evil twin thing. She now lives as Elliot's twin sister, joins the cast, and is accepted by Elliot's friends and family against the initial predictions of others. An extremely rare case of a "clone" getting a happy ending.}} All that stuff you saw in that spoiler? [http://www.egscomics.com/sketchbook/?date=2003-07-27 May not have been Dan Shive's plan to begin with...]
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* ''[[Basic Instructions]]'' helps us to distinguish the good and the evil twin [http://basicinstructions.net/basic-instructions/2006/7/9/how-to-prove-which-of-you-is-the-evil-twin.html in this strip]
* [http://www.instantclassic.net Instant Classic's] arc, [https://web.archive.org/web/20090220110418/http://www.instantclassic.net/story.php?comicID=125 Brothers Donathan], introduces us to {{spoiler|Xauthor, Author's evil twin, complete with [[Beard of Evil|a goatee]].}}
* ''[[Dead of Summer]]'' has an {{spoiler|evil clone of [[The Protomen|Panther]]. This isn't revealed until the ''real'' one shows up to save the day.}}
* ''[[Irregular Webcomic]]'' features the good alternate-universe version of colonel Haken.
* ''[[Penny Arcade]]'' put a [http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2010/7/2/ Twisp & Catsby twist on it].
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* Alexis of ''[[A Magical Roommate]]'' considers her sister Alexandra ([[Only Known by Their Nickname|Better known as X]]) to be her evil twin. Of course, X isn't really evil, just anti-social and disturbingly fond of explosives.
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
* The '''Bert is Evil''' websites: Featuring images of the Muppet character Bert (of ''[[Sesame Street]]'') [[Photo Shopped]] into pictures with the world's most evil people, including [[Adolf Hitler]], [[Osama Bin Laden]], [[Saddam Hussein]] and others. Played up as Internet humor.
* Arglwydd in ''[[ARCHON]]'' lampshades this, saying "...It always astounds me how the primary antagonist being the protagonist’s father, brother, evil twin or all of the above simultaneously comes as a shock."
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* [[I Wanna Be the Guy]] and [[You Have to Burn The Rope]]. The former, of course, is the evil one.
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* In ''[[Family Guy]]'', Lois confronts two Peters on a rooftop. They both make claims to be the genuine article, and she finally shoots one. As she hugs the injury-free Peter his face pops off to reveal robotic insides. She asks "What was that?" to which he quickly replies "Nothing", and the scene cuts away.
** See also Peter's evil brother Thaddeus, who is [[Dastardly Whiplash|ridiculously over-the-top.]]
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* ''[[Freakazoid!]]:!'' Guitierrez made an evil clone of Freakazoid which he then sent out to create havoc and commit crimes. He's quickly found out when he refuses to attend a Yakov Smirnoff film festival with Sgt. Cosgrove.
* [[Samurai Jack]] vs. Mad Jack.
* One episode of ''The [[Scooby-Doo|The Scooby-Doo]] Show"]]'' featured Arlene Wilcox, whose evil twin tried to take advantage of their resemblance to have her executed as a witch. It'd have worked if not for those [[Meddling Kids]].
* One episode of ''[[Garfield and Friends]]'' featured Stinky Davis disguising himself as Binky the Clown, after which he starts a crime wave for which the real Binky is falsely accused and is almost imprisoned for it until Garfield saves the day.
** [[Lampshade Hanging|Lampshaded]] by Garfield when he reads up on Davis disguising himself and exclaims, "Oh, no! It's an evil twin story! It's come to that!"
* In the cartoon version of ''[[Space Ace]]'', besides Hexter in the games, Dexter has a ''second'' evil clone named Baby Face Nerks, who looks like Dexter, but does not energize, and also wears a cowboy hat and wears a bandana around his neck. He appears in ''Wanter Dexter!''.
* Spider-Carnage of ''[[Spider-Man: The Animated Series]]'', [[Beta Test Baddie]] and [[Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds]] par excellence. "I'm more you than you'll ever admit!"
* ''[[Stunt Dawgs]]'' villain Richard P. Fungus and his insane twin brother R. Peter Fungus.
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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? {{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.
 
== [[Other Media]] ==
* In ''[[Where's Waldo]]'' Odlaw acts as Waldo's evil twin, being a criminal, and having a black and yellow colour scheme. Just as Waldo makes a journey to the "Land of Waldos" which is filled with Waldos, it is later reveled that Odlaw comes from "Odlaw's Swamp" which is filled with Odlaws.
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
* In France, during the time of the Directory, a man named Joseph Lesurques was guillotined for ostensibly being the leader of a vicious highway attack on the Lyon Mail carriage. Despite the fact that boatloads of character witnesses vouched for him, everyone knew him as nothing but a decent citizen, he had a valid (if not airtight) alibi, circumstances allowed for it to have easily been someone else, another criminal involved in the murders even confessed his own guilt and denied that of Lesurques, and anyone with half a brain could see that all of the evidence pointed towards Lesurques being innocent. The real murderer was later caught, and he did indeed look exactly like Lesurques. (His name was Dubosq, and he was obviously no [[Les Misérables|Jean Valjean.]]) In keeping with the "slight tweak" aspect of this trope, the resemblance was only complete when Dubosq wore a blond wig (as he did the day of the robbery).
* The [[wikipedia:Han twins murder conspiracy|Han twin murder conspiracy]]—Jeena Han tried to have her identical twin sister Sunny murdered.