Paper-Thin Disguise/Western Animation: Difference between revisions

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*** There was the one where Peter went to his high school reunion pretending to be a space cowboy but one guy didn't believe him because his hat comes right off. A similar gag was done in "Road to Germany" when a Nazi found out Mort wasn't a priest by removing his collar.
** In addition, Old Man Herbert attempts to disguise himself as a fifth grader for the school dance, [[Dirty Old Man|for obvious reasons]]. However, Brian apparently sees through the disguise, and humiliates him by talking about stretching his "creamy hamstrings."
* Used in ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'', when three adult-sized (male) crooks put on Powerpuff Girl costumes and somehow manage to deceive the entire town.
** Used in one episode when three adult-sized (male) crooks put on Powerpuff Girl costumes and somehow manage to deceive the entire town.
** Not to mention, once they meet up, the girls themselves and ''each other''. And the disguises were merely correctly-colored clothing and cardboard cutout masks.
** The only one not fooled by the disguises was Ms. Bellum she saw their body hair and bad manly body odor, and the fact that they kept hitting on her.
** Also used when Mojo Jojo goes to the Powerpuff Girls' slumber party disguised as a little girl. Though the Powerpuff Girls (even [[The Ditz|Bubbles]]) aren't fooled, the other girls and [[Idiot Ball|the Professor]] are.
*** Or when Mojo Jojo sneaks into a show and tell of the Professor's time machine, by disguising himself as a preschool student. Which this time seems to fool everyone, ''including'' the girls and their teacher (who is one of the more responsible and competent characters).
** In the relaunch, Mojo tries a similar trick while [[Delivery Guy Infiltration|posing as a pizza delivery guy]], but this time [[Subverted Trope|neither the Girls nor their guests are fooled at all]], and forcibly "invite" him to their party.
* In ''[[South Park]]'', Towelie assumes a fake moustache and a hat in order to get his "A Million Little Fibers" book published. The first person to realize this is Oprah Winfrey's sapient vagina.
** Played with when Cartman disguises himself as AWESOM-O the robot. Butters's relatives have no trouble figuring out that he's just a kid in a cardboard costume, but everyone else is convinced that he's a genuine robot, up to and including the ''military''.
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** After failing to get the [[MacGuffin|Triangle of Zinthar]] from the boys, [[Barbra Streisand]] dons a fake mustache and glasses on her second attempt. The boys are fooled and freely mock Streisand in her presence, much to her indignation.
* Used with gusto throughout the ''[[Rocky and Bullwinkle]] Show'', in various manners.
** It gets [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] in the Banana Formula story when Boris worries how, after all the times Rocky and Bullwinkle have never seen through his disguises, the Law of Averages was sure to turn on him. Natasha reassures him by pointing out that [[Good Is Dumb]].
** Of course, a big reason Rocky and Bullwinkle could never see through their disguises is that [[Unknown Rival| they never seemed to remember them at all]], disguised or not. There was ''one'' episode where Rocky seemed to recognize Boris' voice, but no further than that.
* In ''[[DuckTales (1987)]]'', no one ever recognizes the disguised Beagle Boys under the fake mustache (or whatever), even though they always wear their robbery masks and prisoner numbers. Considering even their own family hasn't seen them without the masks, simply removing them might be far more effective than anything else they could do.
** In a (non-''DuckTales'' related) comic story, this is [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] by the Beagle Boys ridiculing one of them when he pulls off a disguise that's actually somewhat more convincing than most others, since he actually bothers to make the mask less noticeable by wearing huge glasses. Earlier and later in the story, the other Beagle Boys had worn disguises that didn't even cover any of their faces.
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*** Wayne's not the only game in town when it comes to rich people with advanced toys. By that standard alone, [[Lex Luthor]] and [[Vandal Savage]] are also likely candidates.
*** He further covers his back when explaining to his mechanic he has "backers" funding his crusade.
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd2PXC9Aw_k Harley's disguise] in the episode "The Man Who Killed Batman" might have been convincing, but using her real name is what makes it fit this Trope. Downplayed, as Bullock is a ''little'' suspicious.
* In the third episode of ''[[Transformers Generation 1]]'', the Autobots decide to set up an ambush for the Decepticons. Hound uses his holographic projector to make a fake "rocket base" and the Autobots will be in it, under disguise, to attack the Decepticons when they show up to raid the base. What disguise do the Autobots go for? If you guessed "Disguised in their car mode in the base parking lot", congratulations, you're smarter than an Autobot. They decide to don ''labcoats'' and pass for the human scientists. Despite the fact that even the smallest of them is twice as tall as a human and about 3 times as wide.
** Almost used in ''[[Transformers Cybertron]]''. After Bud describes conventions and cosplay to the Autobots, Jetfire jokingly suggests that they pretend they're fanboys in public, to the amusement of all. However, Optimus Prime takes him seriously and thinks this is a wonderful idea until the humans talk him out of it.
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* On ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'', one of the villains ridicules the Toilenator by mentioning that he was once fooled by Numbuh One in disguise, even though the disguise consisted solely of a T-shirt that said "[[Most Definitely Not a Villain|I'm not Numbuh One]]."
{{quote|'''Toilenator:''' [[Too Dumb to Live|I didn't think a T-shirt would lie to me!]]}}
** And in the KND crossover with ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy and& Mandy]]'', ''The Grim Adventures of the KND'', Numbuh One's tomato-nose Billy disguise is intended to fool Billy's dad... but fools Grim before Dad can even get home. And when Mandy disguises herself as Numbuh One [[Clark Kenting|with his sunglasses]] and shirt, she fools the entire KND organization and takes over!
*** And changes the name to "Mandy", no less.
** [[The Tough Guy|Numbuh 4]]-30teen-7 manages to get into a girl's slumber party. Though since the show itself would lampshade and subvert tropes, it's debatable that the girls may have known all along and merely acted surprised when his obvious wig fell off (they're supposed to be [[Genki Girl]]s in general, closet or otherwise, but maybe that would be the point of their apparently not seeing through the disguise, rather than having IQ levels stereotypical for that).
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* "[[You Look Familiar]]", says Jinx to Cyborg in ''[[Teen Titans (animation)|Teen Titans]]''. Could the young villainess only see past her nemesis' cunning disguise as ''himself'' (without cybernetics), she'd undoubtedly fry his wirings on the spot and spare herself a broken heart.
* The ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987]]'' could fool anyone by wearing a trenchcoat and fedora, despite their green skin being clearly visible. As soon as they lost the hats, though, it was obvious to all. They did occasionally wear human masks, though.
{{quote|'''Michelangelo:''' Well, we don't look like mutant turtles anymore.
** It wasn't just the turtles. Shredder, Rocksteady, and Bebop could also easily fool anyone, including our heroes. In one episode, April can't see past Shredder's disguise despite it simply being a train conductor's outfit worn over his metal costume... and yet, she found out Bebop and Rocksteady hiding behind a sheet only by catching sight of their shoes.
'''Raphael:''' Yeah, [[Sarcasm Mode| now we look like mutant turtles wearing people-masks]].}}
*:* It wasn't just the turtles either. Shredder, Rocksteady, and Bebop could also easily fool anyone, including our heroes. In one episode, April can't see past Shredder's disguise despite it simply being a train conductor's outfit worn over his metal costume... and yet, she found out Bebop and Rocksteady hiding behind a sheet only by catching sight of their shoes. In another episode Shredder was able to fool an alien tourist by disguising himself as a hot dog vendor - again, wearing the disguise over his armor - but this time, April recognized him quickly.
* On ''[[Jimmy Two-Shoes|Jimmy Two Shoes]]'', Jimmy managed to pass for [[Drill Sergeant Nasty|Molotov]] in a spacesuit with nothing but a crudely made stuffed head on a pole.
* In ''[[Futurama]]'':
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* From ''[[Star Wars: The Clone Wars|Star Wars the Clone Wars]]'': Despite supposedly being [[Informed Ability|the best]] [[Bounty Hunter]] in the galaxy after the late Jango Fett, Cad Bane's Jedi disguise is pretty pathetic. You'd think that a guy like him would put a little more effort into it.
* Parodied and inverted in ''[[Garfield and Friends]]'', with Orson wearing nothing but a moustache and costume posing as the Rooster Ranger to play a trick on Roy. Roy immediately recognized it as "Orson in a pathetic disguise", but when Orson fell into his mudhole {{spoiler|Orson came up to investigate. It turned out that the Rooster Ranger was actually Lanolin in costume.}}
* Philemena pulls this off successfully with a fake moustache in ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic|My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic]]''. It should be noted that she's a ''bird'' in a town populated solely by ''ponies''. ([[And Zoidberg|And Spike.]])
** Fluttershy used a large hat and sunglasses to go unnoticed during her fashion model career, which would have been more convincing if her canary yellow body and distinctive cutie mark were also concealed.
** Inverted in "Party of One". Pinkie Pie disguises herself as a block of hay. Wearing [[Conspicuous Trenchcoat|a trenchcoat and fedora]]. [[Up to Eleven|And Groucho glasses]]. Despite the over-the-top silliness, it ''could'' be a effective disguise, if everyone didn't already knew [[Cloudcuckoolander|Pinkie Pie]] would be the only one crazy enough to wear that in the first place.
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* In every episode of the British children's animated series ''Poppy Cat'', the badger Egbert appears in the characters' adventures as a villain wearing a paper-thin disguise. The catch, however, is that unlike most instances of this trope, the characters ''always'' recognize him who he is and even call him "Egbert," but he insists "I am ''not'' Egbert, I am such-and-such character."
* In the "Christmas: Impossible" segment of ''Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas'', Huey, Dewey, and Louie mosey around Santa's workshop wearing their usual [[Color-Coded for Your Convenience|monochrome shirts]] plus green hats. Their doubts of success disappear the moment an elf addresses one as "fellow elf."
* The ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'' short "Puttin' on the Dog''" has Tom disguising himself as a dog to infiltrate a dog pound that Jerry is hiding in, with nothing but a yellow dog mask. The short's gags revolve around Tom trying to keep track of his mask. At one point, Jerry hands a suspicious Spike this message: [[Lampshade Hanging|"Yes stupid, it's a cat."]]
* In ''[[Get Muggsy]]'', the title character's friends (an opossum, raccoon and ''spider'') need only stuff sticks of white gum in their mouth to fool others into thinking that they are beavers.
* In an episode of ''[[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy|Ed, Edd n Eddy]]'', the Eds manage to sneak past Kevin by disguising themselves as Jonny. Which means all three Eds are crammed into a gigantic papier-mâché sphere vaguely shaped like Jonny's head, with the eyes cut out and ''all three Eds plainly visible inside'' and an imitation [[Companion Cube|Plank]] glued to the side. Kevin doesn't seem to notice, saying hi to "Jonny" and muttering "What a freak" when "he" hits the fence and falls over it.
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* In the original ''[[He-Man and the Masters of the Universe]]'', He-Man is basically Prince Adam with different clothes and... that's it. Same face, same haircut, same body, same VOICE. Likewise, Kringer becomes Battlecat by... putting some bronze armor on.
** Averted in one episode, where Kobra Khan disguises himself as a human: there is no resemblances at all, except in his speech... and Orko is still able to see through it.
** Averted in the 2002 remake. He-Man has a ''very'' different build from Adam. Played straight in one episode where Cringer is able to get past Whiplash and Mer-Man guarding the entrance to Snake Mountain after Orko uses magic to turn his fur purple. While Cringer is much smaller and skinnier than Panthor, the two still assume its him and let him pass. Although, Whiplash does seem to notice a difference but figures Skeletor might just not be feeding him as much.
** Averted in the 2002 remake. He-Man has a ''very'' different build from Adam
** His sister has the same problem. Adora's disguise is nothing more than a costume-and-hairdo change, and unlike Adam, she makes no [[Obfuscating Stupidity]] act as Adora. Seeing as Adora used to work for the Horde, one gets the idea that Hordak isn't very smart.
*** In the [[Netflix]] remake, this is averted, as Adora does not keep her identity secret; subverted in one episode where Adora fails the old [[Dressing as the Enemy]] routine because she has no poker face whatsoever.
* In ''[[Miraculous Ladybug]]'', Marinette's domino mask does very little to hide her identity. As Cat Noir, Adrian puts a little more effort into it, his eyes turning green and cat-like while in costume, but still not much of a disguise. Despite Marinette's ''obsession'' over Adrian and Adrian's similar feelings for Ladybug, neither seems able to figure it out, despite always working as partners. Also true with [[Big Bad| Hawk Moth]] (most viewers figured out who he was before the "official" reveal) and villains like Lady Wifi whom the two heroes have problems identifying.
* In ''[[The Owl House]]'' episode "Eclipse Lake", this is inverted twice over. Hunter tries to infiltrate Kikimora's project, and his disguise - a regular Emperor's Coven uniform - seems sound, having a full-head helmet. Unfortunately for him, Kikimora quickly recognizes his "whiny voice", as does Eda when he flees and runs into her.
* In ''[[The Tick (animation)|The Tick]]'' episode “Armless But Not Harmless”, one-shot villain Venus uses a high-tech device to steal the Tick and Arthur’s arms, and then place them on robot “duplicates” to frame the heroes for her crimes. Both these robots are the wrong color, aside from the arms and heads (the imposter Tick is red, imposter Arthur is brown), the heads look like buckets with faces drawn on by markers, and everything but the arms looks jury-rigged and mechanical. Even the dim-witted Tick notices, “That doesn’t even look like me, they got my antennae all wrong!” Despite these obvious fakes, the press, the police, and even the manager of the Comet Club (where both heroes are regulars) are fooled by the ruse, requiring both to clear their names.
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* In the ''[[Harley Quinn (TV series)|Harley Quinn]]'' episode "Icons Only", [[This Is My Side| Harley has a very hard time fitting in at the villain-exclusive resort]] now that her [[Heel Face Turn]] has become public. She is able to pass as a villain when she simply puts on a pink wig and glasses and calls herself "Hargret". Despite not changing the rest of her costume at all, only Ivy recognizes her. Every other villain there whom she is familiar with, even Clayface (a former member of her gang) is fooled.
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* Downplayed in ''[[Hazbin Hotel]]'', where Vaggie is able to conceal her true nature - that of a former Exorcist - from Charlie for three entire years. Carmilla, however, is not fooled:
[[Category:Paper-Thin Disguise]]
{{quote|'''Carmilla:''' You have a giant X over your eye and wield an angelic spear. It's not rocket science.}}
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