Important Haircut: Difference between revisions

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When a character cuts off his or her hair, it often symbolizes a rite of passage or bout of character growth. A princess striking out on an adventure, or a new recruit at boot camp, for instance. Hair is something that takes time and effort to grow, so parting with it voluntarily can be a powerful act.
 
This is particularly a big deal when women get haircuts, since [[Long Hair Is Feminine]].<ref>Depending on the culture, of course.</ref> Yet in fiction, even an accidental hair slicing can leave a character with a surprisingly even cut'''Important Haircut'''.
 
In many religions (Western Christianity, Ancient Egyptian religion, and others) priests and/or monks cut/shave their hair. The cutting of one's own hair is also a part of Buddhist mythology, specifically something done by Siddhartha himself early on in his path to enlightenment, so anime examples might draw from this as an allusion. There are also some cultures, including Native American and many Asians, where a person would cut his or her hair as an act of grief, disgrace, or even rebellion. Furthermore, prisoners and psychiatric patients commonly have their heads shaved, often to prevent the spread of lice, but sometimes also [[Traumatic Haircut|as a demeaning measure]].
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* The opening credits for ''[[Full Metal Jacket]]'' consist of a montage of all the <s>maggots</s> new recruits getting shaved in preparation for basic training.
* The transformative moment in ''[[The Legend of Billie Jean]]'' is when Billie Jean hacks off her hair. She goes from a long blond beauty to an avenging rebel.
** This occurs after she sees the 1957 film ''[[The Passion ofSaint Joan of(1957 Arcfilm)|Saint Joan]]'' on TV; she is adopting the hairstyle of that movie's heroine.
** More soberingly, Putter does the same thing out of defiance after her mother hits her.
* The protagonist of ''[[Cthulhu (film)|Cthulhu]]'' (2007), shortly after arriving back in his hometown, shaves his head similar to his estranged father. As this happens early in the movie I'm not sure exactly what it was supposed to symbolise, though it's apparently a case of [[Real Life Writes the Plot]]—the actor had shaved his head for another role, yet was playing a college professor).
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* In ''Frida'', Salma Hayek's titular character gets drunk and cuts her hair in reaction to her marriage failing and then creates a well known painting of the event.
* In ''[[The Long Kiss Goodnight]]'', Geena Davis's character has an Important Haircut (while also dying it blonde) after we've seen the Charly Baltimore personality completely take over (or appear to) and the Samantha Caine personality disappear (maybe).
 
 
== Literature ==
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* Many religions have prohibitions or rules in regards to hair. In literature, the most famous example is probably the Biblical Samson, whose parents were visited by an angel who allowed his barren mother to become pregnant if she would abstain from unclean meat and alcohol and never cut the child's hair or shave him. This essentially constituted a pre-natal initiation into a Jewish ascetic cult, and this super out-of-proportion before-birth devotion granted Samson the mystical power of invincible strength, allowing him to become one of the judges who were leaders of Israel. The major part of his story is a negative Important Haircut that eventually results in his blindness and death, making even the inversion of this trope [[Older Than Feudalism]].
** Isaiah 15:
{{quote|''Surely in a night Ar of Moab is devastated and ruined;''
''Surely in a night Kir of Moab is devastated and ruined.''
''They have gone up to the temple and to Dibon, even to the high places to weep''
''Moab wails over Nebo and Medeba;''
''Everyone's head is bald and every beard is cut off. ''
I'm not sure [[WhatFaux Do You Mean Its Not SymbolicSymbolism|what it means]], perhaps some [[Values Dissonance|context is missing]], but it's clearly important. }}
* In the ''[[Babysitters Club]]'' series, Mary Anne has one when her father stops being overprotective of her.
* In ''[[The Little Mermaid]]'' (the original story) the mermaid's sisters give the sea witch their hair in exchange for a knife that will grant the mermaid her tail back.
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=== Visual Novels ===
* Almost done in ''[[Ace Attorney]]: Investigations'' with Lauren Paups. One of her 'upset' animations is pressing a pair of scissors to a lock of her hair, on the verge of cutting it. She never does, of course. But compare the short, choppy hair she has tied back with her long, curling locks in front, and you can imagine how often this has happened before.
* Similarly, in ''[[Kanon]]'', Ayu's hair has grown long {{spoiler|in a coma}}; {{spoiler|not long before she awakens, Yuuichi gives her her headband}} and Nayuki cuts her hair to look like the Ayu that the viewers know.
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* ''[[Clannad (visual novel)|Clannad]]'', in the Kyou OVA/Kyou route of the game, when Tomoya calls Ryou out to {{spoiler|break up with her and apologize for falling for her sister}}, instead Kyou comes in Ryou's place, but her hair was already cut short, thus making her fool Tomoya until she utters his name.
* In [[Katawa Shoujo]], {{spoiler|Shiina Mikado aka Misha}} chops off her long hair in a very tomboyish cut. It's important because {{spoiler|this happens only in Shizune's route, and Misha cuts it over [[Love Hurts|her feelings of inadequacy and jealousy]] [[Matchmaker Crush|over Shizune and Hisao's relationship]] -- because [[Schoolgirl Lesbians|she loves Shizune]] and feels out of place now that Hisao is her boyfriend, despite Misha's own care for him.}}
 
 
== Webcomics ==
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Important Haircut{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Native American Mythology]]
[[Category:Hair Tropes]]
[[Category:Important Haircut]]