High-Class Glass: Difference between revisions

moved "Print Media" into Literature, moved "Board Games" into Tabletop Games, moved "Visual Novels" into Video Games, deleted some excess whitespace, fixed a link
(Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.8.6)
(moved "Print Media" into Literature, moved "Board Games" into Tabletop Games, moved "Visual Novels" into Video Games, deleted some excess whitespace, fixed a link)
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** [[The Office|Dwight Shrute]] disagrees.
* [[The Man Your Man Could Smell Like]] Isaiah Mustafa has introduced the term [[Memetic Mutation|Monocle Smile!]], useful in everything from referencing Anonymous to helping [[Barack Obama]]'s public image.
* In a Frank's redRed hotHot sauce commercial, where Ethel makes Cucumber sandwiches for the Queen of England, she says the secret is Frank's red hot, she puts that **** on ''everything''. Someone drops his monocle.
 
== Anime &and Manga ==
 
== Anime & Manga ==
* Walter Dornez, loyal retainer to the Hellsing family in ''[[Hellsing]]'' wears a monocle. It goes into [[Scary Shiny Glasses]] mode when he's ready to kick undead ass.
* Dr. Adashino from ''[[Mushishi]]'' wears a monocle, presumably to make him look more intellegent and make him visually distinguishable from the other villagers, since the series' art style mostly averts the [[Hair Colors]] commonly see in anime and gives most people black hair.
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* Prof. Moriarty in ''[[Sherlock Hound]]'', who looks like a traditional melodrama villain with cape, tophat and mustache.
* Whenever [[Arsène Lupin]] appears in [[Lupin III]] (usually via flashback), he's usually shown with one of these.
 
 
== Board Games ==
* Aversion that apparently needs mentioning: Rich Uncle Pennybags, a.k.a. Mr [[Monopoly]] does ''not'' wear a monocle, even though he looks like he should.
* Colonel Mustard from ''[[Clue (game)|Clue]]'' is usually depicted as wearing one.
 
 
== Comic Books ==
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* In ''[[Dark Reign]]'': ''[[Fantastic Four]]'', the FF traveled through several alternate universes, including one with the FF as the royal family in a mock-Elisabethan England. The Thing, dressed as a chamberlain and sporting a monocle, has become an internet meme.
{{quote|"Milady, [[Sophisticated As Hell|'tis the clobbering hour.]]"}}
 
 
== Fan Works ==
* In ''[[Pretty Cure Perfume Preppy]]'', classmate Arisa Erisawa wears a monocle over one of her eyes—because she's blind in that eye.
 
== Film ==
 
== Films -- Animation ==
* The Grand Duke from ''[[Cinderella (Disney film)|Cinderella]]''.
* For sure, Mr. Grasshopper in ''[[James and the Giant Peach]]'' is this. Especially when he puts on a top hat during the song number "That's the Life for Me".
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* Professor Z, [[The Dragon]] of the Pixar film ''[[Cars 2]]'' actually wears a monocle over his windshield.
* The evil owl from ''[[Rock-a-Doodle]]'' is first seen with a monocle over his face, but then he takes it off when he finds out that Edmund had touched his face (or at least on a storybook illustration of his face). He then turns Edmund into a cat with his magic as revenge.
 
 
== Films -- Live-Action ==
* Edgar Bergen's dummy Charlie McCarthy.
* In [[Mel Brooks]]' ''[[Young Frankenstein]]'', Transsylvanian police Inspector Kemp is evidently so attached to his monocle he continues to wear it even though the eye in question is also covered with a patch.
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* Invoked in ''[[Night Train to Munich]].'' Randall wears one as part of his [[Those Wacky Nazis|Nazi]] [[Dressing as the Enemy|disguise.]]
* The Three Stooges in ''Three Sappy People'' go to a party pretending to be psychiatrists. There they meet a stuffy woman identified as "Countess" who wears a monocle.
 
 
== Literature ==
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* In ''[[King Solomon's Mines|King Solomons Mines]]'' by [[H. Rider Haggard]], Sir Henry's monocle is a plot-point that endears him to the denizens of the secret African kingdom.
* In [[Patricia A. McKillip]]'s ''The Bell at Sealey Head'', Mr. Moren eyes Emma with a monocle while quizzing her about where the heiress, Miranda Beryl, went. (And expresses disdain for the local squire's son while he's about it.)
* In [[P. G. Wodehouse|PG Wodehouse]]'s fiction:
** Galahad Threepwood wears a black-rimmed monocle in the ''[[Blandings Castle]]'' stories.
** [[Psmith]] habitually wears a monocle.
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* In ''[[A Little Princess]]'', in one of the scenes illustrating Sara's luxurious lifestyle, it's mentioned that her new ''doll'' has its own little opera glasses.
* The Oberstleutenant Boerner bot from ''[[Daemon]]'' wears a monocle.
* In ''[[Discworld/Monstrous Regiment|Monstrous Regiment]]'' Prince Heinreich wears one. There's no particular comedy to it, although a groan may result from his [[Obligatory Joke]], "If I had two I'd make a spectacle of myself."
* A trademark of [[Arsène Lupin]], along with a top hat and cape.
* ''The New Yorker'' has as an official (?) mascot Eustace Tilley, a top-hatted, monocled dandy who appeared on the cover of the first issue, and has been parodied lots and lots over the decades.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
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* An incident on ''[[QI]]'' where Stephen Fry [[Pop Cultural Osmosis Failure|had to have the expression "beer goggles" explained to him]] resulted in the panel accusing him of using "Madeira pince-nez" or a "sherry monocle" instead.
* Queen Machina from ''[[Power Rangers Zeo]]'' wears a monocle over her left eye.
 
 
== Music ==
* The cover of Belgian [[Thrash Metal]] band Cyclone's ''[http://www.metal-archives.com/images/2/9/5/4/2954.jpg Brutal Destruction]'' shows a monocle-wearing skull.
 
== Tabletop Games ==
=== Board Games ===
* Aversion that apparently needs mentioning: Rich Uncle Pennybags, a.k.a. Mr [[Monopoly]] does ''not'' wear a monocle, even though he looks like he should.
* Colonel Mustard from ''[[Clue (game)|Clue]]'' is usually depicted as wearing one.
 
=== PrintTabletop MediaRPG ===
* ''The New Yorker'' has as an official (?) mascot Eustace Tilley, a top-hatted, monocled dandy who appeared on the cover of the first issue, and has been parodied lots and lots over the decades.
 
 
== Tabletop Games ==
* A number of ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' magic items are monocles. They are often described as a "lens". The "Lens of True Seeing", which allows someone to see through illusions and invisibility (well, to ''not'' see through invisible creatures), is probably the most famous.
* ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]''
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** ''[[Rogue Trader]]'' has Targeting Monocle - disguised wireless version of an advanced camera sight that also can show weapon status. Of course, disguise implies that normal monocles are fairly common in these circles.
 
== TheaterTheatre ==
* Three [[Gilbert and Sullivan]] characters, all of them George Grossmith comic baritone roles, wear monocles as part of their costume. Sullivan himself wore a monocle.
** [[Modern Major-General|Major-General]] Stanley in ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]''.
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* Sir Edward Ramsay in ''[[The King and I]]'', whose monocle causes a panic among the King's wives.
* Gwendolyn in [[Oscar Wilde]]'s ''[[The Importance of Being Earnest]]'' uses a lorgnette.
 
 
== Video Games ==
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* Similiar to the [[Warhammer 40,000]] example above, [[Cowboy Cop|Garrus]] [[Vigilante Man|Vakarian]] in [[Mass Effect]] games wears the sci-fi version of it, with the HUD showing tactical data, helping him to aim etc.. In second and third game, [[Player Character|Commander Shepard]] can acquire one like that, too.
 
=== Visual Novels ===
 
== Visual Novels ==
* ''[[Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney|Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney]]''
** [[Affably Evil|Gentleman]] [[Career Killers|assassin]] Shelly DeKiller in ''Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Justice for All'', and Detective Luke Atmey in the sequel ''Trials and Tribulations'', who has a monocle that doubles as magnifying glass. Curiously enough, when de Killer {{spoiler|testifies in court via transciever, the gadget's button}} mimics his monocle.
** And {{spoiler|the trailer to ''Ace Attorney Investigations 2'' shows him holding an ice cream cone with a cherry to mimic the monocle.}} Guy really loves that monocle.
 
 
== Web Animation ==
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* Used frequently in ''[[Zero Punctuation]]'', most often when Yahtzee wants to depict a particular person (such as the creators of ''[[Penny Arcade (Webcomic)|Penny Arcade]]'') as being wealthy.
{{quote|'''Viewer:''' Monocles and Top Hats, eh?}}
 
 
== Web Comics ==
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{{quote|"What's with the monocle?"
"It's an affectation." }}
 
 
== Real Life ==
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Luxury Tropes]]
[[Category:Glasses Tropes]]
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[[Category:Costume Tropes]]
[[Category:Sublime Rhyme]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Gothic Horror Tropes]]
[[Category:Esoteric Trope Names]]