Pucca: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]]: Tobe, Fyah, the Vagabond Clan and the Pirates (Bruce even calls the latter group "idiots").
* [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]]: Tobe, Fyah, the Vagabond Clan and the Pirates (Bruce even calls the latter group "idiots").
* [[Kindhearted Cat Lover]]: Dada, as shown in "The Cat Bandits".
* [[Kindhearted Cat Lover]]: Dada, as shown in "The Cat Bandits".
* [[Knight of Cerebus]]: Dong King in ''Love Recipe'' is the only villain who is always treated seriously.
* [[Ladykiller in Love]]: Parodied with [[The Casanova|Casano]], Pucca's third season's [[Hopeless Suitor]].
* [[Ladykiller in Love]]: Parodied with [[The Casanova|Casano]], Pucca's third season's [[Hopeless Suitor]].
* [[Lethal Chef]]: Pucca gets this portrayal in ''Love Recipe''.
* [[Lethal Chef]]: Pucca gets this portrayal in ''Love Recipe''.
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* [[Scout Out]]: The Dragon Girls.
* [[Scout Out]]: The Dragon Girls.
* [[Shout-Out]]: The TV series does this a lot. One episode even features a character who is a blatant reference to [[Tomb Raider|Lara Croft]].
* [[Shout-Out]]: The TV series does this a lot. One episode even features a character who is a blatant reference to [[Tomb Raider|Lara Croft]].
* [[Single Woman Seeks Good Man]]: This is why [[The Hero|Pucca]] and [[Rich Bitch|Ring Ring]] are so smitten with [[The Ace|Garu]].
* [[Something Completely Different]]: We've had Tarzan, Jacques Cousteau, Roman games, and more.
* [[Something Completely Different]]: We've had Tarzan, Jacques Cousteau, Roman games, and more.
* [[Spaghetti Kiss]]: Done with Pucca and Garu in "Noodle Round the World" with the world's longest noodle. Again in "Full moon Pucca". Pucca tries to do this in "Cat toy" but Garu manages to quickly escape.
* [[Spaghetti Kiss]]: Done with Pucca and Garu in "Noodle Round the World" with the world's longest noodle. Again in "Full moon Pucca". Pucca tries to do this in "Cat toy" but Garu manages to quickly escape.

Revision as of 23:41, 7 July 2021

Originally a cute little character created by Korean company Vooz, plenty of merchandise goodies and Web Animation series and later television series, Pucca is a young girl who lives with her uncles, a trio of Chinese chefs. Pucca is in Mad Love with her "boyfriend" Garu, a Ninja who is none too keen on her outlandish displays of affection. The series takes place in the town of Sooga, an Adventure Town with plenty of Eccentric Townsfolk, including off-season Santa, who spends the 364 other days of the year in town relaxing.

Pucca became popular worldwide because it relies on visual and gag humor rather than language, much like the Pink Panther, the Road Runner and other pantomime cartoons. Though the series has since picked up dialog, translation has worked well enough and the series remain mostly silent. Both show leads, Garu and Pucca, are Heroic Mimes, though they do laugh, sigh and make other sounds.

Tropes used in Pucca include:
  • Adaptational Badass: Garu was often subservient to Pucca in the Jetix series. In Love Recipe, he becomes more of an equal and is able to defend himself and have wins more often.
    • Downplayed with Dada, as he's still clumsy, but is shown to be more competent in Love Recipe than in the Jetix series.
  • All Cloth Unravels: In "Woolen Warrior" Pucca uses this on a sheep's wool, Muji's hair and a test pattern on the TV to knit a sweater for Garu.
  • Alpha Bitch: Ring-Ring is portrayed as this, being The Rival to Pucca and (in Love Recipe at least) competing over Garu.
  • American Robot: Texas Lugie and Sloppy Sue have two impressive mechas, one of which transforms from their mobile home and the other from their SUV.
  • Animesque It's Chibi art style with no noses and the awesome Kung Fu scenes make it seem a lot like anime.
  • Anti-Villain: Love Recipe has most of Dong King's restaurant staff aside from Dong King himself and Fyah:
    • Ayo is a complete Nice Guy who is only an antagonist for serving his uncle and Ring Ring and has no beefs with the cast otherwise.
    • Casano is just a Casanova Wannabe who is mostly interested in winning Pucca's heart (in vain, of course).
    • Ring Ring, while a lot more mean than the above two, is more concerned with gaining Garu's heart rather than helping her father's plans on ruining Goh-Rong's restaurant, even willing to do the right thing on occassion.
  • Aww, Look! He Really Does Love Her: Despite his distant behavior, Garu proves at times he does care about Pucca and even like her back, mostly in the webisodes and Love Recipe.
  • Back-to-Back Badasses: Cowboy episode when Pucca gets back to back with the western Pucca.
  • Badass Adorable: Pucca, Garu, Ching, and Abyo pretty much have this covered.
  • Balloon Belly: Pucca in "Noodle Round the World" after sucking up the record-breaking noodle Garu was pulling in order to steal a kiss.
    • And again in "Four-Alarm Fire" after drinking a whole lake.
    • Every party guest in "Ring-Ring's party favors" after drinking Ring-Ring's contaminated punch.
  • Battle Strip: Abyo, though sometimes he does it after beating up the bad guys.
  • Berserk Button: It's a bad idea to insult or harm Garu in any form in front of Pucca. Also, don't undo Pucca's twin odango.
  • Beta Couple: Abyo and Ching are an on-off example.
  • Betty and Veronica: Pucca (Betty) and Ring-Ring (Veronica) to Garu. Especially evident in Love Recipe.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Ching, Pucca's best friend. She's a sweet Pollyanna who knows real well how to use her twin swords, after all.
    • Pucca is usually a Nice Girl until she gets pissed off, which is an awful idea.
  • Book Ends: Love Recipe begins and ends with a cooking contest.
  • Break the Cutie: Pucca on occassion. Garu in the final episode of Love Recipe.
  • Bruce Lee Clone: Abyo. He even wears the famous yellow and black jumpsuit at least twice. Ironically, his dad is named Bruce.
  • Brutal Honesty: Ayo, as nice as he is, doesn't mince words when it comes to his uncle ans Ring Ring's plans, something they duly note.
  • Character Exaggeration: The TV series takes Pucca and Garu's Mad Love to really annoying extremes. Thankfully dialed back in Love Recipe.
  • The Chew Toy: Poor Dada! Santa is also this.
  • Clingy Jealous Girl: Pucca, Ring-Ring and sometimes Ching (but much less).
  • Close-Knit Community: Sooga Village.
  • The Comically Serious: Garu and Dandy.
  • Conflicting Loyalty: Garu in the final episode of Love Recipe, thanks to Dong King's manipulations.
  • Conservation of Ninjitsu
  • Continuity Reboot: The 3D third season Love Recipe functions as this.
  • Cooking Duel: Pucca's trio of adoptive chef parents often have to defend their culinary honor.
  • Costumer: Some episodes are set in different time periods, such as Greece ("Gold Medal Garu"), Egypt ("Puccapatra"), and the 1950s ("Ching It On").
  • Cute Bruiser: Pucca, Ching and Ring-Ring. All of them are tiny, pre teen Action Girls with very cute appearances.
  • Darth Vader Clone: Dong King, the Big Bad of Love Recipe, is a thinly-veiled parody. He even invokes Luke, I Am Your Father to Garu (though it's a blatant lie in his case).
  • A Day in the Limelight: Ching, Dada, Abyo, Tobe, and Ring-Ring all get oneshots. The three chefs get two.
  • Deus Ex Machina: These happen all the time.
  • Digging to China: Inverted; one episode has the characters winding up through a hole in a Western (in most every sense) counterpart of Sooga, whose version of Garu (who is a cowboy drifter here) takes a liking to Pucca; but then there's Pucca's own counterpart...
  • Eagle Land / Everything Is Big in Texas: Texas Lugie and Sloppy Sue are both type 2 Americans. They throw packs of dollars into the faces of the people of Sooga, pollute the environment with crude oil and smoke, make people unhealthy and fat with their greasy and unhealthy fast food, and generally just wreak havoc with their obnoxious personalities and their indifference to the people of Sooga.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones:
    • In "The Dong King Mascot", Tobe and his gang grow fond of the Flower Fairy mascot, and blow Fyah's deception once they see him attacking her.
    • The Pirates may be... well... pirates, but they do care about each other a great deal, as seen in "Garu in Jail".
    • Averted with Dong King, as he and his daughter Ring Ring can't stand each other.
  • Eyes Always Shut: Pucca, except for one episode in which a sock turns her evil and her eyes are opened for a few seconds. Her eyes are shown to be red.
  • Faceless Masses: Rendered as blue and pink waist-high smiley faced gum-drop people. Averted because Sooga has a lot of extras and no real need for them.
  • Far East: Sooga village and its denizens have elements of Japanese, Chinese and Korean culture.
  • Flanderization: The Jetix series does this to the characters to the point of being a world of Jerkass. This is thankfully undone in Love Recipe.
  • Friendly Rivalry: Garu and Abyo are best friends and like to spar with each other from time to time.
    • A one-sided example is Goh-Rong's chefs' attitude towards DK Restaurant.
  • Fun with Flushing: Pucca pulls a drain under the lake after saving Garu from a shark. They get stuck in the pipes and Dada inadvertently saves them while unclogging one of the toilets, freeing them both.
  • Getting Crap Past the Radar: All the time. Notably the birthday episode, where Garu glared at an animate statue - who made a farting noise and dropped a brick. And not five minutes later, the police station falls down to reveal Bruce sitting on the toilet.
  • Head Pet: Won, Ching's chicken. She needs her or else she'll feel no reason to be alive. They're best friends after all.
  • Here We Go Again: "Feud Fight" It starts with the chefs going separate with their restaurant because of Dada's clumsiness and ends exactly how it started, only worse.
  • Heroic Mime: Pucca and Garu, though they do make some noises here and there.
  • Heterosexual Life Partners: Pucca's uncles Dumpling, Ho and Linguini, though it isn't specified if they're actually related or not.
    • As for the kids, there's Garu/Abyo and Pucca/Ching.
  • Hopeless Suitor: Ring Ring has Dada (first two seasons) and Ayo (Love Recipe).
    • Anybody who pursues Pucca will be this by default, due to them not being Garu.
  • Hot Amazon: More like Cute Amazon, but hey. A whole episode is dedicated to Ching trying several plans to get Abyo's attention, and only succeeds when she saves his life.
  • Incredible Shrinking Man: Garu does this in "Cat Toy" to avoid having Pucca kiss him.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold:
    • Abyo is arrogant, loud, and brash, but he's a loyal friend and usually means well.
    • Pucca herself is quite self-centered, clingy, and gets angry easily (mostly in the Jetix series), but otherwise is a sweet Nice Girl who is willing to help others and go through hell for those she cares about (especially Garu).
    • Even Ring-Ring can be this, though is more evident in Love Recipe.
  • Karma Houdini: In "Noodle Round the World" Pucca gets away with eating her guardians' world record entry before it can be judged just so she can steal a kiss from Garu. Her guardians are just happy that they finished the noodle, but she didn't know this.
  • I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Casano is willing to help Pucca with her crush Garu, only getting angry when Garu rejects her.
  • Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: Tobe, Fyah, the Vagabond Clan and the Pirates (Bruce even calls the latter group "idiots").
  • Kindhearted Cat Lover: Dada, as shown in "The Cat Bandits".
  • Knight of Cerebus: Dong King in Love Recipe is the only villain who is always treated seriously.
  • Ladykiller in Love: Parodied with Casano, Pucca's third season's Hopeless Suitor.
  • Lethal Chef: Pucca gets this portrayal in Love Recipe.
  • Love Epiphany: Love Recipe features one instance from Garu. He even blushes when seeing her afterwards.
  • Mad Love: Pucca and Garu's constant cat-and-mouse chase for her to steal kisses.
  • Made of Iron: Pucca, although mostly for a Running Gag.
  • Make Me Wanna Shout: Ring-Ring (again) example here (begins at 5:42)
  • Martial Arts and Crafts
  • Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: Love Recipe has an example in "Master Chef of Dong King?". Turns out Dada stole Goh-Rong's Special Sauce for Dong King's restaurant due to feeling unappreciated by the chefs. This doesn't last long, of course, and he realizes they do value his presence in the restaurant.
  • Motor Mouth: This is one of the few examples of a trope whose aversion was subverted. In the episode "Trial By Fury," Garu is called to the witness stand. The scene cuts to Judge Santa telling him to step down, after which he whispers, "I thought he'd never shut up."
  • Never Bring a Knife to A Fist Fight: Pucca never fights armed, and though Tobe uses a katana, he's lucky if he can get a swing in edgewise.
  • New Powers as the Plot Demands: Pucca will sometimes have a new power out of nowhere when it suits the plot. Like when she used her hair buns as a beacon to contact aliens. Lessened in Love Recipe.
  • Nice Guy: Ching, Dada, and Ayo.
  • Ocular Gushers: Pucca creates a literal waterfall when she can't find any of her friends on her birthday. The blast get turned on Garu and knocks him away! She does this to Bruce and her guardians in "The usual Ching".
  • Official Couple: Guess.
  • The Only One Allowed to Defeat You: Tobe is Garu's sworn rival. In a sense Abyo also fits, though more in a friendly way.
  • Parental Substitute: The Chefs to Pucca. In Love Recipe, they extend this to Garu, which may be why they ship them together.
  • Personal Raincloud Pucca gets one that turns into a hurricane.
  • Pet the Dog: Love Recipe's final episode has Tobe and Ring Ring of all people cheering upon Goh-Rong's victory over Dong King.
  • Pretty Boy: Garu is described as one in the opening song. The third season has Dandy.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: Garu is apparently better at knitting than Pucca is in "Woolen Warrior". He also has a red heart on his jumpsuit although it doesn't indicate his interest in romance.
  • Redshirt Army: Tobe's Ninjas all wear the exact same suit.
  • The Rival: Tobe to Garu, and Ring Ring to Pucca.
  • Rule of Funny: The whole show pretty much lives off of this trope.
  • Running Gag: Various; the most frequent is Abyo randomly tearing off his shirt, which comes close to being a Once an Episode event.
  • Scenery Porn: The web episode "Fragrance of Spring".
  • Serial Escalation: The TV series seems to thrive on becoming as weird as possible, then topping it. Santa is secretly a ninja ex-thief? We got that. A jive-talking, lounge-singing dragon being added to the supporting cast partway through the series? We got that. An entire episode revolving around a sock that turns anyone who touches it evil? We got that. The web animations and Love Recipe are a bit less bizarre.
  • Serious Business: The three uncles' perseverance to be the best noodle cooks in Sooga.
  • She Is Not My Girlfriend: Garu, for Pucca. However, there are a few instances in the web animations where he does seem to have feelings for her - an example is when he actually melts down his beloved sword to make a ring for her, which he also uses as a holder for a long, rolled up note that he intends to give to her. He is later horrified when she completely fails to notice the ring, throwing it away and fawning over the letter instead.
  • Scout Out: The Dragon Girls.
  • Shout-Out: The TV series does this a lot. One episode even features a character who is a blatant reference to Lara Croft.
  • Single Woman Seeks Good Man: This is why Pucca and Ring Ring are so smitten with Garu.
  • Something Completely Different: We've had Tarzan, Jacques Cousteau, Roman games, and more.
  • Spaghetti Kiss: Done with Pucca and Garu in "Noodle Round the World" with the world's longest noodle. Again in "Full moon Pucca". Pucca tries to do this in "Cat toy" but Garu manages to quickly escape.
    • Love Recipe reuses this gag in "Amnesia", though it's to recover Pucca's memories.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Pucca, on occasion. Ring Ring becomes this in Love Recipe.
  • Terrible Trio: The Vagabond Clan; Chief, Shaman, and Clown. Not exactly evil since most of their schemes center around getting food.
  • The Stoic: Garu, foiled because Pucca's schemes to steal a kiss succeed often. He's Not So Stoic in Love Recipe, with Dandy taking up the mantle.
  • Sugar and Ice Personality: Garu is very much this, mostly in the original web shorts and Love Recipe.
  • Thick Line Animation: The first two seasons employ this.
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: One episode is all about Garu trying to perfect a move and Pucca's interference constantly both impeding and progressing the progress. He perfects the technique, making him intangible. Pucca attempts to glomp him, but fails, giving Garu a much needed happy ending.
    • Another episode gave the Chew Toy Dada a temporary level in badass, using his janitorial skills to fight in a tournament.
    • There's a food drive for the Vagabonds in "Jingle Cans".
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Love Recipe does this to most of the characters, especially the main ones.
  • Tsundere: Pucca and Garu themselves.
  • Ultimate Job Security: Dada screws up so much it's a miracle he hasn't been fired, though this is lessened in Love Recipe.
  • Unholy Matrimony: Tobe almost had this with Chief in one episode, before the love potion wore off.
  • Unknown Rival: Dong King has a beef with Uncle Dumpling ever since the latter defeated him on a cooking contest. Dumpling, for his part, doesn't seem to know who he is.
  • Why Do You Keep Changing Jobs?: Santa Claus. No, really. He's had A Day in the Limelight episode or two, but he's mostly there to be whatever strange job is needed, from ticket taker, to "guy in a frog costume." Since he only works his well-known job one day a year, he seems to have a lot of hobbies and side jobs.
  • Verbal Tic: Officer Bruce ends all his sentences with over. (Over.)
  • Violently Protective Girlfriend: Pucca, when Garu is in trouble. Despite being very peaceful and child-like, she can be roused into the most powerful martial artist in Sooga.
  • Yandere: Pucca, mostly in the Jetix series. She's more of a Clingy Jealous Girl in the web shorts and Love Recipe.
    • Love Recipe features a worse example in Casano's ex-girlfriend, who kidnaps him, Uncle Dumpling, Bruce and Garu.