Trope Talk: Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass

Published 2019-03-22
Everyone say hello to my favorite character archetype, which just narrowly edges out my second favorite, "crazy-prepared deadpan stoic badass with 37 knives hidden on their person at all times". The CMHB is an impossibly versatile writing tool wrapped up in a goofy, charming exterior, and I'd like to tell you all about its many literary uses today!

Who's your favorite CMHB, and what's your favorite scene with them? Gush about it in the comments!

(Part of this video was inspired in a big way by this excellent Every Frame A Painting video:    • Jackie Chan - How to Do Action Comedy  )

GENERAL EXAMPLES: Trigun, Rurouni Kenshin, Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Elfen Lied, Deadman Wonderland, Bleach, Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, Brooklyn 99, Danny Phantom, Kim Possible, Kung Fu Panda, Dragon Ball Z, Yu Yu Hakusho, Berserk (Manga), Teen Titans, Storm Hawks, Cowboy Bebop, Justice League, Justice League Unlimited, assorted Jackie Chan movies

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All Comments (21)
  • @luckypeanut9943
    Never forget the time spider man lost his voice from a cold and all the villains surrendered cuz they were afraid of how silent he was
  • @RedRegent
    Every D&D campaign I've ever played in has been marked by the players' inability to perform simple tasks. The party can't so much as buy sandwiches without seducing a goat, killing the mayor, and opening a portal to hell in the town square. Then initiative is rolled and suddenly they're a flawless death squad that could kill God.
  • @skyhideaway
    It's amazing how Sokka is both the funny idiot and the genius strategist at the same time. A lot of his comedy actually comes from him being the only braincell in the group and constantly getting frustrated with the carelessness of the others, which is really clever. He's a great fighter but his strength lies in his brains, which is surprising for a "moronic" character (I mean, he's had his share of genuinely stupid stuff too, but still). It's a twist on the badass, with his main power being the smart guy, rather than being the awesome warrior.
  • @Jack-sy8mr
    Luthor’s plan Step 1. Become President Step 2. Kill Flash Step 3. Get killed by Superman Step 4....profit?
  • @alwest4472
    I love iroh, his “moron” side is constantly doing wacky stuff, that on later thought turns out to be calculated and helpful. He’s just wonderful
  • @vermilionrubin
    "People like funny and people like awesome. And I'm people." Can relate.
  • @Ruduwulf
    I love the Flash's scene cuz you know that he isn't scared of dying, he's terrified because he knows that dying under these circumstances is the catalyst for turning his friends/idols into the worst versions of themselves. OOF
  • @chickencurry420
    "Weapons grade slapstick" is the best term I've ever heard to describe Jackie Chan
  • @sambarrett2711
    I would like to think I’m a crouching moron, hidden badass but in reality I’m more of a crouching moron, hidden even more of a moron
  • @galeg4021
    there's a great Jackie Chan outtake where he pops around the corner with a gun and says "CHEESE!" the crew starts giggling and he just "what?" and someone behind the camera says "it's freeze. Not cheese." and jackie laughs "Oh right! Freeze!"
  • I think my personal favorite CMHB is the one and only Captain Jack Sparrow. He pretends to be a bumbling idiot of a pirate when just under the surface he's a simultaneously brilliant and insane master escape artist that can figure out how he can get out of a situation with little more than a glance at a few things that he can use. The idiot act just helps him pull off his escapes from inescapable situations by making everyone else who doesn't know of him already underestimate his affinity for using wacky bullshit to get himself out of trouble.
  • @rage_2000
    The original clip that inspired “Ultra Instinct Shaggy” is a clip of him being awesome and funny at the same time
  • Red: on the opposite end of the spectrum is the man child variant. Me, immediately: Deadpool
  • I like how in most trope talks, Avatar is featured in at least one variant of the trope.
  • "They're dead. People are dead." - Vash the Stampede Unquestionably one of the most amazing moments of a CMHB I've ever seen. This whole show Vash has been preventing people from being hurt, not just dying, bit if possible, hurt. Now people are dead, and Vash's simple statement of that fact is terrifying.
  • Zenitsu, the guy who's first instinct when facing the demons he's supposed to fight is running away, but once he takes a power nap, turns into the living embodiment of the phrase, "Lightning never strikes twice."
  • @someguy4405
    She said badass 57 times , in case you were wondering.
  • @WreckinPoints11
    I think making comic relief characters as snipers or hackers is to keep them out of the direct line of fire so that they can focus more of their brain on being comedic, instead of being forced to worry about getting out of the way of dying.
  • @Maniac4Bricks
    I just realized The Lego Movie technically shared two CMHBs: - Vitruvius as The Faker, normally playing up the senile old blind mentor but still able to fight (in the prologue and towards the end: "well June bug, I'd use the term EXPERIENCED"). - UniKitty as The Goku, courtesy aware of her aggressive side that can pummel through robots in a single leap, but generally reserved for her fun and cheery personality (breaks out when Emmet is trapped during the invasion of Bricksburg: "must stay positive....AW FORGET IT"). However, we can also mark it as Superpowered Evil Side as she does gradually remain angry kitty in this film and its sequel. But it does gradually return over time. There's just a good portion of time between both films in which she adapts the aggressive personality over the norm