Cute Monster Girl: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Invincible]]'' has a heroine who transforms into a monstrous form. While the monster transformation isn't exactly cute, the actual girl {{spoiler|who is really older than she appears}} is
* [[Cute Mute]] assassin and enforcer Miho from ''[[Sin City]]''. As [[Frank Miller]] has [[Word of God| confirmed]] she is a "demon" of sorts in the guise of a human. He claims the same thing about Kevin (who is far more malevolent than Miho) but he is clearly not this Trope.
* From ''[[The Sandman]]'', Death qualifies. Also sometimes applies to Delirium (depends on her mood) and Desire (depends on [[A Form You Are Comfortable With| who is viewing her]]).
* [[Chaos! Comics]]; pretty much all nonhuman female characters, most notably Lady Death, [[Evil Counterpart| Lady Demon]], and Purgatori, all cute (and volumptuous) demon girls.
* [[Vampirella]], cute [[Multiple Choice Past|vampire, alien, and.or demon girl]].
* [[Marvel Comics|Marvel's]] version of Death can be this depending on her mood, motives at the time, and how she feels about the mortal she is confronting. Towards a friend, lover (like Deadpool or Thanos), or someone she wants to negotiate with, she plays the Trope straight. Otherwise, she appears in some mysterious or monstrous form, often that of a typical skeletal Reaper or a dark, cloaked entity.
 
== Fan Works ==
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** Chain Chompette rounds out the Super Crown trio, as the female version of Chain Chomp. While there is slightly more variation in her artwork, nearly all of it depicts a cute girl in a long black dress... and a mouth full of razor-sharp teeth.
** To be honest here, fan artists ''never'' seem to tire of using the Super Crown = [[Rule 63]] theme. In [https://www.deviantart.com/thebourgyman/art/We-Created-A-Monster-765375657 this comic] on [[DeviantART]] (caution, slightly NSFW), Mario, Peach, ''and'' Bowser are sick of it all and decide to throw the Crown into lava. Unfortunately, [[From Bad to Worse|the Czar Dragon finds it...]]
* One artist on [[Deviant ART]] was actually able to [https://www.deviantart.com/zakoholic/art/Z-Putties-1035719138 apply this Trope] to the [[Mighty Morphin Power Rangers| Putty Patrollers]], believe it or not. Unfortunately for them, [https://www.deviantart.com/zakoholic/art/Mistaken-Identity-1049114490 they were no more competent than the ones from the source.]
 
== Film ==
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* In the fifties film ''[[The Mole People]]'', a girl named Adad was born to a race of subterranean albinos, but has none of their features, and thus is hated and shunned by her folk. One of the archaeologists falls madly for her and promises to help her escape this hell with them. Sadly [[Downer Ending|Adad is killed by a falling pillar moments after she sees the surface world for the first time]].
* [https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Siren_Sara Siren Sara] from ''[[Willy's Wonderland]]'', though her eerie beauty is clearly "only skin deep". As the movie progresses, her wounds (''and'' the wounds she inflicts on victims) give her a horrific [[Glasgow Grin]] that makes her far ''less'' cute
* Gozer, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[Ghostbusters]]''; at least that's the form she takes.
 
== Literature ==
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* In the ''[[Discworld]]'' books female Igors, known as Igorinas, are every bit as svelte and beautiful as their male counterparts are deformed, hunchbacked, and misshapen. Handwaved by the fact that Igors of both sexes are crazy-talented at all forms of surgery, including plastic, and as Igors are devoted followers of "tradithion" it is probably that male Igors remain ugly because male assistants to [[Mad Scientist]]s are ''supposed'' to be ugly, just as female assistants are meant to be beautiful.
* Asenath Waite from "The Thing on the Doorstep", part of [[H.P. Lovecraft]]'s fiction, ''might'' qualify, sort of. She's a Deep One hybrid from Innsmouth described as "dark, smallish and very good looking except for over-protuberant eyes." Unlike most of her brethren, she doesn't seem to perpetually smell like fish. The fact that Deep One ancestry often doesn't show up too much until you're 25 to 30 if you're a late-bloomer probably helped her, that and {{spoiler|the fact that her [[Evil Sorcerer]] father probably made arrangements so his [[Body Surf|current host body]] could interact with polite society long enough to find a more suitable one.}}
** ''[[Cthulhu Mythos]]'':
** The ''Shadow over Innsmouth''-based [[B-Movie]] ''[[Dagon]]'' throws in a Deep One Cute Monster Girl by way of [[Our Mermaids Are Different]]. They still get to play the initial reveal of her monstrous, octopoidal features for Horror somehow. This trope allows the movie to play a {{spoiler|romantic angle on the original [[Tomato in the Mirror]] ending}}, giving it minor justification.
** From the ''[[Seekers of Truth]]'', Natalie Beckett aka Golem. Fairly attractive if you can ignore the stone skin. And apparently her boyfriend, Timothy Landerman aka Echidna, can. It helps that he's basically a venomous lobster-man.
** Cthulhu itself has a daughter named Cthylla; most stories portray her as similar to her father (as in, a horrific, disgusting abomination) but the story "In the Hall of the Yellow King" has her assume a pleasing, human-like form in order to seduce Hastur, another of the Great Old Ones.
*** And of course, there are the [[Widget Series| weird modern adaptations]] like ''[[Chaos Code]]'' and ''[[Devil Maker: Tokyo]]'' where she is a [[Magical Girl]].
* Used as a major plot device in the [[Neil Gaiman]] short story "Talking to Girls at Parties", where a bunch of attractive adolescent girls turn out to be odd extraterrestrial visitors.
* Subverted in the ''[[Codex Alera]]''. Her Imperial Bugginess the [[Hive Queen|Vord Queen]] ''tries'', but mostly just manages to [[Uncanny Valley|give everyone the creeps]] by combining a "[[Green-Skinned Space Babe|green]] [[White-Haired Pretty Girl|Kitai]] with [[Rapunzel Hair]]" look with a few too many insectile features and a frightening lack of understanding of human emotion.
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* Illyria from ''[[Angel]]''. An [[Eldritch Abomination]] trapped in a human corpse, basically her only non-human attributes (physically, at least) are blue lines on her face and blue streaks in her hair.
* In ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]'', though they all look human, the male reapers all look like balding old people that can keel over anytime, while female reapers are all at least conventionally attractive.
* The famous "Eye of The Beholder''" episode of ''[[The Twilight Zone]]''.
 
== Music ==
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** ''The Fiendish Codex: Hordes of the Abyss'' introduces Obyriths, outrageously bizarre demons (as opposed to the more humanoid Tanar'ri) whose forms exude such a primal ''[[Eldritch Abomination|wrongness]]'' that looking at them can do permanent damage to your mind. Pale Night (their queen, more or less) has a "soft, feminine form," though it would be hard to describe her as cute, but then you find out that that's just the veil surrounding her, which formed because the plane of ultimate, horrible madness that spawned her refuses to accept that she is real. If looking at her true form doesn't simply kill a victim, he won't remember what he saw; and if it ''does'' kill the victim, and magic is used to raise him from the dead or communicate with his soul, he ''still'' won't be able to describe what he saw.
** In ''[[Planescape]]'', female tieflings and aasimar often fit; PC versions of both have Charisma bonus to show it.
** Forgotten Realms heroine [https://forgottenrealms.fandom.com/wiki/Alias Alias]. When the bardic hero Finder Wyvernspur wanted a daughter who could carry on his legacy, he was duped into allying himself with an evil organization who magically created one. They had meant to mold Alias into a brutal assassin, but [[I Am Not a Gun| instead she became a heroic sellsword]].
* Used to its fullest in the ''[[Talislanta]]'' game-setting with the [[Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism|Batrean race]], whose females are [[Green-Skinned Space Babe|green-haired space babes]] (except when they're ''[[Flip-Flop of God|blue]]''-haired) with [[Love Is in the Air|seductive pheromones]], and whose males are gangling hairy ogres. Technically also true of the singular race of Gnorls and Weirdlings, although not for the usual reasons: Although Gnorls (the females) look like someone's 80-year-old grandma, that's ''still'' prettier than their male counterparts, the Weirdlings (who look like anorexic Yodas in their skivvies).
* In ''[[Changeling: The Lost]]'', a woman who has become a draconic Fairest is this by default, as Fairest are literally "the fairest of them all", and draconics have aspects of the Great Beasts of Faerie, such as [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|dragons]].
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* ''[[Martin Mystery]]'' has Diana becoming a half-lizard girl in the second part of the third season finale. The eponymous character even jokingly compliments that she's only a mini-mutant because her eyes changed and she has a tail.
* April O'Neil had the misfortune of being turned into one ''twice'' in ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987 series)|Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]''; she was turned into a feral [[Cat Girl]] in one episode and into a Fish Girl later, courtesy of a [[Mad Scientist]]. Fortunately, it was reversible both times. Donatello told her the second time she might have looked better with green skin and a shell...
* Mavis, [[Dracula]]'s daughter in the ''[[Hotel Transylvania]]'' movies. She's far-more human-looking than any of the monsters in the franchise, including her dad, with far less-pronounced fangs. Only a few odd habits indicate her nature as a vampire. This extends to her bat form, which suggests a [[Cute Kitten]] with bat wings.
* In ''[[The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes]]'', Wasp becomes one when she's mutated by Gamma Radiation.
* {{spoiler|Lena Dupree}} from ''[[Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island]]'' is an... interesting variation. She's certainly [[Moe|cute]], and she's certainly a monster, but her monster form itself? NOT. CUTE.
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[[Category:Urban Fantasy Tropes]]
[[Category:Turn-On Tropes]]
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