Buddy Cop Show: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
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{{quote|''Every police force in the US always contains two officers who are direct polar opposites, but are forced to work together, before eventually getting on quite well.''|'''''Hollywood Rule Book''' Vanity Fair''}}
{{quote|''Every police force in the US always contains two officers who are direct polar opposites, but are forced to work together, before eventually getting on quite well.''|'''''Hollywood Rule Book''' Vanity Fair''}}
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A Buddy Cop Show that tightly focuses on the emotional lives of the two protagonists frequently [[Ho Yay]] among its fans, c.f. ''[[Miami Vice]]''. If the characters spend leisure time together off the job, they're [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]. The buddies are often an [[Odd Couple]], occasionally [[Salt and Pepper|one black and one white]]. In terms of personality, they tend to follow a distinct formula-one is a straight-laced stickler for protocol, the other is an unpredictable loose cannon. One [[By-The-Book Cop]], one [[Cowboy Cop]]. The primary thing keeping them together - at first, before the [[Character Development]] - is that [[They Fight Crime]]. And they're good at it.
A Buddy Cop Show that tightly focuses on the emotional lives of the two protagonists frequently [[Ho Yay]] among its fans, c.f. ''[[Miami Vice]]''. If the characters spend leisure time together off the job, they're [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]. The buddies are often an [[Odd Couple]], occasionally [[Salt and Pepper|one black and one white]]. In terms of personality, they tend to follow a distinct formula-one is a straight-laced stickler for protocol, the other is an unpredictable loose cannon. One [[By-The-Book Cop]], one [[Cowboy Cop]]. The primary thing keeping them together - at first, before the [[Character Development]] - is that [[They Fight Crime]]. And they're good at it.


Movie versions abound, or at least they used to: ''[[Bad Boys]]'', ''[[Lethal Weapon (Film)|Lethal Weapon]]'', ''[[Die Hard (Film)|Die Hard With A Vengeance]]'', etc. It was so common at one point, even making jokes at the expense of the genre is a [[Dead Horse Trope|dead horse]].
Movie versions abound, or at least they used to: ''[[Bad Boys]]'', ''[[Lethal Weapon]]'', ''[[Die Hard|Die Hard With A Vengeance]]'', etc. It was so common at one point, even making jokes at the expense of the genre is a [[Dead Horse Trope|dead horse]].


An increasingly common variant is partnerships between [[Cop and Scientist|cops and scientists]].
An increasingly common variant is partnerships between [[Cop and Scientist|cops and scientists]].
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== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* ''[[FAKE (Manga)|FAKE]]'' takes the trope one further; its [[Odd Couple]], [[Cowboy Cop|Dee]] and [[Team Mom|Ryo]], are a couple in [[Boys Love|more than one sense]].
* ''[[FAKE]]'' takes the trope one further; its [[Odd Couple]], [[Cowboy Cop|Dee]] and [[Team Mom|Ryo]], are a couple in [[Boys Love|more than one sense]].
* ''[[You're Under Arrest (Manga)|You're Under Arrest]]''
* ''[[You're Under Arrest]]''
* ''[[Kiddy Grade (Anime)|Kiddy Grade]]'' starts as one.
* ''[[Kiddy Grade]]'' starts as one.
* ''[[Tiger and Bunny (Anime)|Tiger and Bunny]]'' is essentially a buddy cop show with superheros instead of police officers.
* ''[[Tiger and Bunny]]'' is essentially a buddy cop show with superheros instead of police officers.
* The relationship between Batou and Togusa in ''[[Ghost in The Shell (Anime)|Ghost in The Shell]] 2: Innocence'' takes on elements of this.
* The relationship between Batou and Togusa in ''[[Ghost in The Shell (film)|Ghost in The Shell]] 2: Innocence'' takes on elements of this.


== [[Comic Books]] ==
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* ''[[Gorsky and Butch (Comic Book)|Gorsky and Butch]]''
* ''[[Gorsky and Butch]]''
* ''[[Cable and Deadpool (Comic Book)|Cable and Deadpool]]''
* ''[[Cable and Deadpool]]''
* ''[[Tales Designed to Thrizzle]]'' features [[Mark Twain|Twain]] and [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] as cops in a recurring segment.
* ''[[Tales Designed to Thrizzle]]'' features [[Mark Twain|Twain]] and [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] as cops in a recurring segment.
* ''[[Birds of Prey (Comic Book)|Birds of Prey]]''
* ''[[Birds of Prey (comics)|Birds of Prey]]''


== [[Film]] ==
== [[Film]] ==
* Parodied in ''[[Last Action Hero (Film)|Last Action Hero]]'' where the police station in movie world assigns humorously mismatched partners to every cop.
* Parodied in ''[[Last Action Hero]]'' where the police station in movie world assigns humorously mismatched partners to every cop.
* The ''[[Rush Hour]]'' movies. [[Jackie Chan]] plays a serious cop who wants to follow procedure, Chris Tucker is the complete opposite.
* The ''[[Rush Hour]]'' movies. [[Jackie Chan]] plays a serious cop who wants to follow procedure, Chris Tucker is the complete opposite.
* ''[[Tango and Cash]]''
* ''[[Tango and Cash]]''
* ''[[The Other Guys]]''
* ''[[The Other Guys]]''
* ''[[Hot Fuzz]]''
* ''[[Hot Fuzz]]''
* ''[[Lethal Weapon (Film)|Lethal Weapon]]''
* ''[[Lethal Weapon]]''
* ''[[Dragnet (Radio)|Dragnet]]'' (1987)
* ''[[Dragnet]]'' (1987)
* ''[[Alien Nation (Film)|Alien Nation]]''
* ''[[Alien Nation (film)|Alien Nation]]''
* ''[[The Presidio (Film)|The Presidio]]'' - Although neither Inspector Austin nor Lt. Colonel Caldwell particularly like each other, they are forced to work together because neither has the [[Jurisdiction Friction|jurisdiction]] to pursue the full case alone.
* ''[[The Presidio]]'' - Although neither Inspector Austin nor Lt. Colonel Caldwell particularly like each other, they are forced to work together because neither has the [[Jurisdiction Friction|jurisdiction]] to pursue the full case alone.
* ''[[Bad Boys]]''
* ''[[Bad Boys]]''
* ''[[Die Hard With a Vengeance]]''... to an extent.
* ''[[Die Hard With a Vengeance]]''... to an extent.
* ''[[Cop and A Half]]''
* ''[[Cop and a Half]]''
* A subplot in the first ''[[Dirty Harry]]''. Subverted, as {{spoiler|Harry's partner quits in the second half of the film, just as it seems like they're becoming a team.}}
* A subplot in the first ''[[Dirty Harry]]''. Subverted, as {{spoiler|Harry's partner quits in the second half of the film, just as it seems like they're becoming a team.}}
* ''[[Men in Black (Film)|Men in Black]]'' staring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones.
* ''[[Men in Black (film)|Men in Black]]'' staring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones.


== [[Literature]] ==
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[Discworld (Literature)|Discworld]]'' partnered Cuddy, a dwarf, and Detritus, a troll. Of course, [[Discworld]] being a [[Theory of Narrative Causality|narrative universe]], they eventually became best friends. {{spoiler|Then brutually subverted when Cuddy is killed suddenly. Detritus has gone on to become arguably the fourth most powerful cop in the city, behind Angua, Carrot, and Vimes}}.
* ''[[Discworld]]'' partnered Cuddy, a dwarf, and Detritus, a troll. Of course, [[Discworld]] being a [[Theory of Narrative Causality|narrative universe]], they eventually became best friends. {{spoiler|Then brutually subverted when Cuddy is killed suddenly. Detritus has gone on to become arguably the fourth most powerful cop in the city, behind Angua, Carrot, and Vimes}}.
* [[Isaac Asimov]]'s ''Robot'' series, with Elijah Baley and Robot Daneel Olivaw. Lije and Daneel are partners in the first book and remain good friends throughout the rest of the series, but each book of the trilogy examines a different facet of the relationship between robots and humans at a societal level.
* [[Isaac Asimov]]'s ''Robot'' series, with Elijah Baley and Robot Daneel Olivaw. Lije and Daneel are partners in the first book and remain good friends throughout the rest of the series, but each book of the trilogy examines a different facet of the relationship between robots and humans at a societal level.
* A subplot of [[Tad Williams]]' ''[[Otherland]]'' features Australian detectives Calliope Skouros and her partner Stan as they investigate a long-unsolved murder believed to be the work of a [[Serial Killer]] named John Wulgaru, who ends up being the series' [[Big Bad]]. The subplot uses all the standard Buddy Cop tropes and spends a fair bit of time [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshading]] them.
* A subplot of [[Tad Williams]]' ''[[Otherland]]'' features Australian detectives Calliope Skouros and her partner Stan as they investigate a long-unsolved murder believed to be the work of a [[Serial Killer]] named John Wulgaru, who ends up being the series' [[Big Bad]]. The subplot uses all the standard Buddy Cop tropes and spends a fair bit of time [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshading]] them.
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* ''[[Adam-12]]''
* ''[[Adam-12]]''
* ''[[Alarm Fur Cobra 11]]''
* ''[[Alarm Fuer Cobra 11]]''
* ''[[Alien Nation (TV)|Alien Nation]]''
* ''[[Alien Nation (TV series)|Alien Nation]]''
* ''[[Ashes to Ashes]]''
* ''[[Ashes to Ashes]]''
* ''[[Black and White TW (TV)|Black And White]]'', an award-winning [[Taiwanese Series]] from 2009.
* ''[[Black and White TW|Black And White]]'', an award-winning [[Taiwanese Series]] from 2009.
* ''[[Cagney and Lacey]]''
* ''[[Cagney and Lacey]]''
* ''[[Car Fifty Four Where Are You]]?'' was one of the first Buddy Cop shows, and the first TV police comedy.
* ''[[Car Fifty Four Where Are You]]?'' was one of the first Buddy Cop shows, and the first TV police comedy.
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* ''[[Dalziel and Pascoe]]''
* ''[[Dalziel and Pascoe]]''
* ''[[Dempsey and Makepeace]]''
* ''[[Dempsey and Makepeace]]''
* ''[[Dragnet (Radio)|Dragnet]]''
* ''[[Dragnet]]''
* ''[[Due South]]''
* ''[[Due South]]''
* ''[[The Good Guys (TV)|The Good Guys]]''
* ''[[The Good Guys]]''
* ''[[Houston Knights]]''
* ''[[Houston Knights]]''
* ''[[Hunter]]''
* ''[[Hunter]]''
* ''[[Keen Eddie]]''
* ''[[Keen Eddie]]''
* ''[[Life]]''
* ''[[Life]]''
* ''[[Life On Mars 2006 (TV)|Life On Mars 2006]]''
* ''[[Life on Mars|Life On Mars 2006]]''
* ''[[Life On Mars 2008 (TV)|Life On Mars 2008]]''
* ''[[Life On Mars 2008]]''
* ''[[The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed]]''
* ''[[The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed]]''
* ''[[The Man From UNCLE (TV)|The Man From UNCLE]]''
* ''[[The Man from U.N.C.L.E.|The Man From UNCLE]]''
* ''[[The Professionals]]''
* ''[[The Professionals]]''
* ''[[Randall and Hopkirk Deceased (TV)|Randall and Hopkirk Deceased]]''
* ''[[Randall and Hopkirk Deceased]]''
* ''[[The Sentinel (TV)|The Sentinel]]''
* ''[[The Sentinel (TV series)|The Sentinel]]''
* ''[[Starsky and Hutch (TV)|Starsky and Hutch]]''
* ''[[Starsky and Hutch (TV series)|Starsky and Hutch]]''
* ''[[Sledge Hammer]]''
* ''[[Sledge Hammer]]''
* ''[[TJ Hooker]]''
* ''[[T. J. Hooker]]''
* [[White Collar]]
* [[White Collar]]


* Spoofed in a [[Conan O Brien]] sketch, which paired the extremely tall Conan with the extremely short Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich as buddy cops. Reich informing a perp "You have the right... to be my [[This Is for Emphasis, Bitch|bitch]]!" was possibly the [[Crowning Moment of Funny]].
* Spoofed in a [[Conan O'Brien]] sketch, which paired the extremely tall Conan with the extremely short Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich as buddy cops. Reich informing a perp "You have the right... to be my [[This Is for Emphasis, Bitch|bitch]]!" was possibly the [[Crowning Moment of Funny]].
* Spoofed in the Les Nuls sketch "Magnum Choucroute." Talk about [[Odd Couple|mismatched]]: one of the cops is actually a jar of sauerkraut.
* Spoofed in the Les Nuls sketch "Magnum Choucroute." Talk about [[Odd Couple|mismatched]]: one of the cops is actually a jar of sauerkraut.
* ''[[Community (TV)|Community]]'' parodies this in "The Science of Illusion" when Annie and Shirley become temporary campus security guards. They end up getting into an argument about which one of them should be the [[By-The-Book Cop]] and which one should be the [[Cowboy Cop]] despite the fact that both of them are equally suited to both roles, and [[Genre Savvy]] Abed, who is following them around, ends up invoking a whole load of tropes based on this.
* ''[[Community]]'' parodies this in "The Science of Illusion" when Annie and Shirley become temporary campus security guards. They end up getting into an argument about which one of them should be the [[By-The-Book Cop]] and which one should be the [[Cowboy Cop]] despite the fact that both of them are equally suited to both roles, and [[Genre Savvy]] Abed, who is following them around, ends up invoking a whole load of tropes based on this.
* In ''[[Noah's Arc]]'', the movie Wade had written appears to be one of these (based on the lines we overhear and what Wade and Noah discuss).
* In ''[[Noah's Arc]]'', the movie Wade had written appears to be one of these (based on the lines we overhear and what Wade and Noah discuss).
* Also parodied on ''[[The Late Late Show]] with Craig Ferguson''--Geoff often refers to his idea for a cop show called ''Bone Patrol with G.P. and the Fergs''.
* Also parodied on ''[[The Late Late Show]] with Craig Ferguson''--Geoff often refers to his idea for a cop show called ''Bone Patrol with G.P. and the Fergs''.


== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* Prosecutors are the direct partners of their detective counterparts in the ''[[Ace Attorney (Visual Novel)|Ace Attorney]]'' universe, which makes Gumshoe and Edgeworth fill this trope during their cases in ''Investigations''.
* Prosecutors are the direct partners of their detective counterparts in the ''[[Ace Attorney]]'' universe, which makes Gumshoe and Edgeworth fill this trope during their cases in ''Investigations''.
** There's also an unnamed [[Show Within a Show]] that Gumshoe likes featuring a strong prosecutor/detective bond that's almost as good as the one Gumshoe (thinks that he) shares with Edgeworth.
** There's also an unnamed [[Show Within a Show]] that Gumshoe likes featuring a strong prosecutor/detective bond that's almost as good as the one Gumshoe (thinks that he) shares with Edgeworth.
* ''[[Policenauts]]'', essentially a Sci-Fi version of ''[[Lethal Weapon (Film)|Lethal Weapon]]''.
* ''[[Policenauts]]'', essentially a Sci-Fi version of ''[[Lethal Weapon]]''.
* ''[[The House Of The Dead Overkill]]'' is all about this sort of relationship between Isaac Washington and Agent G.
* ''[[The House Of The Dead Overkill]]'' is all about this sort of relationship between Isaac Washington and Agent G.


== [[Web Original]] ==
== [[Web Original]] ==
* Parodied on ''[[I'm a Marvel And Im ADC|I'm A Marvel... And I'm A DC]]'' with [[Watchmen (Comic Book)|Rorschach]] and [[Deadpool]].
* Parodied on ''[[I'm a Marvel And I'm a DC|I'm A Marvel... And I'm A DC]]'' with [[Watchmen (comics)|Rorschach]] and [[Deadpool]].
{{quote| '''Rorschach''': How the hell did I end up being the *GOOD COP*?}}
{{quote| '''Rorschach''': How the hell did I end up being the *GOOD COP*?}}
* ''[[Civil Protection]]'', which stars two Civil Protection agents, Mike and Dave, from ''[[Half Life|Half-Life 2]]''.
* ''[[Civil Protection]]'', which stars two Civil Protection agents, Mike and Dave, from ''[[Half Life|Half-Life 2]]''.
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== [[Web Comics]] ==
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* ''[[Double K (Webcomic)|Double K]]'', an ''AU'' ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'' webcomic based off of what the show would be like if Kamina and Kittan were two cops partnered up ''Starsky & Hutch''-style.
* ''[[Double K]]'', an ''AU'' ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'' webcomic based off of what the show would be like if Kamina and Kittan were two cops partnered up ''Starsky & Hutch''-style.


== [[Western Animation]] ==
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* ''Ozzy And Drix'', which takes place inside a boy's body, and is [[Recycled: The Series|based on the much-maligned movie]] ''Osmosis Jones''.
* ''Ozzy And Drix'', which takes place inside a boy's body, and is [[Recycled: the Series|based on the much-maligned movie]] ''Osmosis Jones''.
* ''Funky Cops''
* ''Funky Cops''
* ''[[The Critic]]'', in the episode "Sherman of Arabia," heavily mocked this genre with ''[[Show Within a Show|Beverly Hills Robo K9 Cop and a Half 2]]'', wherein [[Cowboy Cop]] ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' is partnered with, to quote the [[IMDb]]...
* ''[[The Critic]]'', in the episode "Sherman of Arabia," heavily mocked this genre with ''[[Show Within a Show|Beverly Hills Robo K9 Cop and a Half 2]]'', wherein [[Cowboy Cop]] ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' is partnered with, to quote the [[IMDb]]...
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* ''[[Fillmore]]'': A [[Buddy Cop Show|Buddy]] [[Yellow Sash of Power|Hall Monitor Show]].
* ''[[Fillmore]]'': A [[Buddy Cop Show|Buddy]] [[Yellow Sash of Power|Hall Monitor Show]].
* Adult Swim's ''Stroker and Hoop''
* Adult Swim's ''Stroker and Hoop''
* ''[[Bonkers (Animation)|Bonkers]]''
* ''[[Bonkers]]''


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 11:18, 8 April 2014

File:964E3B437244578A355F845D8CE2.jpg
Every police force in the US always contains two officers who are direct polar opposites, but are forced to work together, before eventually getting on quite well.
Hollywood Rule Book Vanity Fair

A Cop Show which focuses on a partnership of two males, as opposed to a Cop Show which focuses on a single officer/detective or an entire squad, or Lovely Angels, the Distaff Counterpart. If the primary officers are a man and a woman it's Just Partners.

A Buddy Cop Show that tightly focuses on the emotional lives of the two protagonists frequently Ho Yay among its fans, c.f. Miami Vice. If the characters spend leisure time together off the job, they're Heterosexual Life Partners. The buddies are often an Odd Couple, occasionally one black and one white. In terms of personality, they tend to follow a distinct formula-one is a straight-laced stickler for protocol, the other is an unpredictable loose cannon. One By-The-Book Cop, one Cowboy Cop. The primary thing keeping them together - at first, before the Character Development - is that They Fight Crime. And they're good at it.

Movie versions abound, or at least they used to: Bad Boys, Lethal Weapon, Die Hard With A Vengeance, etc. It was so common at one point, even making jokes at the expense of the genre is a dead horse.

An increasingly common variant is partnerships between cops and scientists.

See also: Crime-Time TV, Forensic Drama, Cop Show, Police Procedural, Wunza Plot.


Examples of Buddy Cop Show include:


Anime and Manga

Comic Books

Film

Literature

  • Discworld partnered Cuddy, a dwarf, and Detritus, a troll. Of course, Discworld being a narrative universe, they eventually became best friends. Then brutually subverted when Cuddy is killed suddenly. Detritus has gone on to become arguably the fourth most powerful cop in the city, behind Angua, Carrot, and Vimes.
  • Isaac Asimov's Robot series, with Elijah Baley and Robot Daneel Olivaw. Lije and Daneel are partners in the first book and remain good friends throughout the rest of the series, but each book of the trilogy examines a different facet of the relationship between robots and humans at a societal level.
  • A subplot of Tad Williams' Otherland features Australian detectives Calliope Skouros and her partner Stan as they investigate a long-unsolved murder believed to be the work of a Serial Killer named John Wulgaru, who ends up being the series' Big Bad. The subplot uses all the standard Buddy Cop tropes and spends a fair bit of time lampshading them.
  • In the anthology Zombies vs Unicorns edited by Holly Black and Justine Larbalestier, there's a story called Prom Night. In Prom Night, the kids are running the (now barricaded) town they live in because of a Zombie Apocalypse that was Only Fatal to Adults. Tahmina and Jeff play the role of cops, keeping down crime and shooting any zombies that pop up. The story mostly focuses on their interactions with each other and their (mis)adventures as teenaged cops, and there's a bit of a Running Gag where Jeff constantly jokes about how stuff would be good material for when they get their own TV show. although it's implied that whatever they're doing to the zombies at the burning ground isn't really working or is generating something else, so it's unlikely at best that things will ever be back to normal

Live Action TV

  • Spoofed in a Conan O'Brien sketch, which paired the extremely tall Conan with the extremely short Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich as buddy cops. Reich informing a perp "You have the right... to be my bitch!" was possibly the Crowning Moment of Funny.
  • Spoofed in the Les Nuls sketch "Magnum Choucroute." Talk about mismatched: one of the cops is actually a jar of sauerkraut.
  • Community parodies this in "The Science of Illusion" when Annie and Shirley become temporary campus security guards. They end up getting into an argument about which one of them should be the By-The-Book Cop and which one should be the Cowboy Cop despite the fact that both of them are equally suited to both roles, and Genre Savvy Abed, who is following them around, ends up invoking a whole load of tropes based on this.
  • In Noah's Arc, the movie Wade had written appears to be one of these (based on the lines we overhear and what Wade and Noah discuss).
  • Also parodied on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson--Geoff often refers to his idea for a cop show called Bone Patrol with G.P. and the Fergs.

Video Games

  • Prosecutors are the direct partners of their detective counterparts in the Ace Attorney universe, which makes Gumshoe and Edgeworth fill this trope during their cases in Investigations.
    • There's also an unnamed Show Within a Show that Gumshoe likes featuring a strong prosecutor/detective bond that's almost as good as the one Gumshoe (thinks that he) shares with Edgeworth.
  • Policenauts, essentially a Sci-Fi version of Lethal Weapon.
  • The House Of The Dead Overkill is all about this sort of relationship between Isaac Washington and Agent G.

Web Original

 Rorschach: How the hell did I end up being the *GOOD COP*?

Web Comics

Western Animation

 Da Chief: ...a woman, a cute little kid, an ugly old dog, a dinosaur, and a leprechaun.

Leprechaun: I'll be your lucky charm!

[Leprechaun explodes]

Not Schwarzenegger: You think you've got problems? I'm partnered with a pig, an alien, Siamese twins, a sofa, and a second rate mime.

(The mime also exploded.)