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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)

 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
type
TVTItem
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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RatMan1989
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
comment
Rat-Man was an Italian comic book created in 1989 by Leonardo "Leo" Ortolani and published until 2017. It depicted the adventures of an unlikely hero, the eponymous Rat-Man, a not very bright (and very inept) guy without any superpowers in a goofy yellow rat costume.What had begun as a Shallow Parody (albeit very funny) of Tim Burton's first Batman film progressively grew into a very complex storyline, full of homages to the Silver and Golden Age of comics (Leo is an avid admirer of Jack Kirby's characters), but also to the gritty realism of the Dark Age. The main purpose of the comic was originally to make a parody of anything and everything, not only superhero-related tropes, but of other genres, films and popular culture in general; however, it introduced a number of long and fairly serious story arcs that gave a deeper insight into Rat-Man's previous life. Of course, there were still plenty of parodies and wacky moments.In 2006, Rat-Man was given an Animated Adaptation which was not very well received.Unfortunately, the series is not yet available in English language. There were shy attempts at translating Rat-Man in Croatian and Spanish, but they didn't go beyond a few dozen issues due to the lack of a genuine interest among non-Italian readers.The Spin-Off 299+1 has a separate page.Not to be confused with the manga Ratman, nor with Ratfist.
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No Celebrities Were Harmed
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comment
No Celebrities Were Harmed: Many characters have features based on popular actors and other celebrities. Brakko is based upon Danny Glover, Kalissa (Janus Valker's Love Interest) looks like Cher. Lupo, Rat-Man's former instructor, is based on Sylvester Stallone, and Il Pipistrello, Rat-Man's mentor, is obviously Patrick Stewart. Even the Animated Adaptation is not immune: recurring character Dr. Schafausen is based upon Christopher Lee. Venerdì 12 also had one-time character Cicciola, the fairy of love, who was almost a carbon copy of the infamous Hungarian pornstar Ilona Staller AKA "Cicciolina".
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My Friends... and Zoidberg
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comment
My Friends... and Zoidberg: Mixed with Self-Deprecating Humor, the title of number 78: "The Greatest Heroes of the World! And Me." Also in number 88, "Il Grande Magazzi e il Principe Mezzo-rospo" (something like "The Great Wizardus and the Half-toad Prince"), Rat Man is randomly called Olaf, and has been attending a Wizardry School for a long, long time (without success). The headmaster begins his start of year speech with the words "My dear future wizards...*beat*...and Olaf."
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Diabolus ex Nihilo
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_13a499b8
comment
One early issue featured Galactus and Silver Surfer expies, with Rat-Man being turned into another Surfer expy and trying (and, of course, failing) to save the Earth from being devoured. As soon as the Galactus expy is breaking the Earth's crust to get to the core, hundreds of tentacles attached to something living in the abyss wrap around him and consume him in seconds. This is never explained or brought upon again in the comic.
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Big, Screwed-Up Family
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Big, Screwed-Up Family: While they are not particularly extended, the Valkers are royally screwed up.
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All There in the Manual
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
comment
All There in the Manual: If the story gets a bit too confusing and convoluted, there have been summaries of the plot so far added after the stories (in Rat-Man 35 and Rat-Man 70-75), which also explain details and things you may have missed because you were laughing too much.
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Sibling Rivalry
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_19209d54
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Sibling Rivalry: this may sum up the relationship between Joba and Janus Valker nicely.
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The Cameo
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1b65dfad
comment
The Cameo: In almost every episode a caricature of Andrea Plazzi, Leo's editor, appears. Caricatures of the production staff appear as well. Also Fry appears sometimes.
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End of an Age
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1bc2e445
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End of an Age: Issues #77-81 of the original Italian series feature a long story where Rat-Man visits New York City and meets the local superheroes, who are clearly based on Marvel Comics's classic characters. The saga ends with the American superheroes accepting that they have no place any more in the modern world and disappearing into the light. The story is an affectionate homage of the The Silver Age of Comic Books and a scathing parody of the more modern approach of The Dark Age of Comic Books.
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The Movie
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1bf94a24
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The Movie: Rat-Man: il segreto del supereroe.
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Papa Wolf
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1dfd19f9
comment
Papa Wolf: Janus Valker. Harm his son or granddaughter and he will kill you as soon as he can get his hands on you. The only exception are children-for them, he'll wait their 18th birthday and then shoot them in the head. Rat-Man himself: when Topin kidnapped his daughter he left him a broken wreck barely alive, and when Topin threatened to come back and kidnap her again he was this close from killing him in cold blood before Valker arrived and brutally finished him.
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Cruel and Unusual Death
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1e584efa
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Cruel and Unusual Death: See under "Janus Valker"...
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Breaking the Fourth Wall
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_1e7487cd
comment
Breaking the Fourth Wall: Often. Sometimes, it's more subtle, where the characters are aware that they are starring in a comic book (and they treat it as a job) and interact with panels and speech bubbles. Others, they make jabs at the artist, or comment on the nature of the comic (a favourite one is remarking on the bimonthly publication schedule.)
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Artificial Human
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comment
Thea Denam (see the Artificial Human example) is named after the Tea rose, the plant she was created from.
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Stand-In Portrait
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comment
Stand-In Portrait: Rat-Man tries to pass unnoticed by hiding among figures on a wallpaper. He fails... even if it is revealed that the pattern on the wallpaper looked exactly like him!
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Crapsack World
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Crapsack World: In Rat-Man's world, almost everybody is stupid, violent or insane. Sometimes all three at once...
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Black Comedy
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_222dc873
comment
Black Comedy: Sometimes literally, like when Rat-Man joked that Brakko's son was stillborn. Example from the first story: the Buffoon kidnapped an orphan and demanded a ransom from his parents. The "I Vendicatopi" story arc decided to establish Mr. Mouse's villainy with a whole issue filled with September 11, 2001 jokes, starting with him recreating the attack on the Twin Towers to try and murder Rat-Man. Yes, this series is Italian, not American, why do you ask? The 2015 stories parodying The Walking Dead feature a character who is a stillborn zombie. Enough said.
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Chekhov's Gag
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comment
Chekhov's Gag / Brick Joke: In spades. Expect minor jokes, throwaway lines, references and characters to return several times. It may be in the next page, at the end of the episode or even at the end of the story arc, several numbers later. At the beginning of a 2001: A Space Odyssey parody, a prehistoric monkey throws a bone in the air, and in the very last panel the bone falls down and hits Rat-Man in the head... followed by another brick joke from that issue, a sabretooth tiger that carries an unconscious Rat-Man away. In "Rat-Man's Escape", Rat-Man is evading Cinzia, who claims to have a gift for him. He rudely remarks that it's probably thirty centimetres long, but she chastises him, saying it's only a rose. He apologizes and admits that sometimes he's biased against her/him, only for him/her to reveal that she had it tattooed on her penis. When, at the end of the arc, three episodes later (which correspond to six months of real life between publications), Rat-Man and another character are about to have a horse race, Cinzia promises a rose to the winner, prompting him to shoot his horse to avoid competing...
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Go Through Me
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Go Through Me: Parodied.
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No-Holds-Barred Beatdown
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_25524784
comment
No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: It happens often to Rat-Man as Marvelmouse, while he was fighting many opponents in the Arena and getting destroyed in seconds by all of them. Once a member of the audience asked the Kenshiro parody to stop senselessly beating Marvelmouse, and another time Il Drago (see Take That! below) bashed him with a stone for so long that... the stone asked for mercy! It's all part of the humorous tone of the comics, but these fights also show how much of a determinator Rat-Man is.
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Death of a Child
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Death of a Child: Sometimes it is Rat-Man himself who causes the death of children, through incompetence or sheer malice.
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The Antichrist
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The Antichrist: It is Rat-Man. Not bad for a monkey-face guy who habitually wears a mask with mouse ears.
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Funny Background Event
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Funny Background Event: Often there will be one in order to cram more jokes or get through exposition.
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Birds of a Feather
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Birds of a Feather: All of Rat-Man's love interests are good people with jerkish attitudes just like him: Cinzia is a raging pervert but ultimately one of the most moral characters in the series (only Brakko and his son are nicer), Kimmy is rude and abrasive but also can't stop herself from helping people, and Aima can be as much of an asshole like Rat-Man (notably, they share the same cruel sense of humor) but is also a good mother and spent much of her life helping people.
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Dragon Ascendant
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Dragon Ascendant: Janus Valker is initially introduced as the head of the "Governativi" note Literally, "the government men"., the hit squad of a secret organization within the government.
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Lampshade Hanging
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_2a090d00
comment
This is lampshaded in one of the first stories, a parody of Space: 1999, where Rat-Man is deported to a detention facility on the Moon because of (among other things) his inappropriate sense of humor. The inmates wear uniforms which allow to identify the reason they were deported by the different color of their sleeves (Rat-Man gets the brown one, of course) and are subject to mandatory counseling:
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Beat Panel
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comment
Beat Panel: Leo is very fond of these. Many jokes and Overly Long Gags rely on them for maximum comedic value, and to stretch the scene to make sure that the action continues from the first panel of the next page. It's even (hilariously) Discussed as a comedy tool in the story "Comic School".
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Psycho for Hire
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comment
Psycho for Hire: Reegar is a government killer nicknamed "The Bride". When he is given the task of killing someone, he falls in love with the victim and starts to plan the wedding (with the victim's collaboration). When he comes to you with a wedding dress, you know he's about to kill you. Oh, and he has changed his sex at least three times and is a cannibal.
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Hidden Depths
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_2dc0d2bf
comment
Hidden Depths: Neither Rat-Man nor Brakko aren't as stupid as people think they are. Case in point, Rat-Man can come up with surprisingly intelligent plans at times, and Brakko, contrary to what almost everyone thinks, is perfectly aware that his wife cheats on him and Cinzia is a transexual, he just loves Clara too much and doesn't think that Cinzia being born with a man's body makes Cinzia's less of a woman.
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Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work
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Rat-Man himself: when Topin kidnapped his daughter he left him a broken wreck barely alive, and when Topin threatened to come back and kidnap her again he was this close from killing him in cold blood before Valker arrived and brutally finished him.
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Mad Scientist
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Mad Scientist: There are many, most notably Dr. Denam.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3517000d
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3517000d
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_351b8442
type
Disney Owns This Trope
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_351b8442
comment
Disney Owns This Trope: Parodied with Mr. Mouse, a Shallow Parody of Mickey Mouse, who has created countless superheroes and their villains to make money selling comic books about them.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_351b8442
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_351b8442
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_38326b11
type
Clone Degeneration
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_38326b11
comment
Clone Degeneration: The eventual fate of Rat-Man's clones in the mentioned story arc.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_38326b11
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_38326b11
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_386257bf
type
Hitchhiker's Leg
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_386257bf
comment
Hitchhiker's Leg: Hilariously parodied with Cinzia Otherside. She was in need of a lift and did this to stop a truck, but we only see the aftermath... Cinzia in a bar, and behind her the wrecked truck, upside-down and burning!
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_386257bf
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_386257bf
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_396e1c2a
type
Face Death with Dignity
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_396e1c2a
comment
Face Death with Dignity: Subverted in the final issue, when Janus Valker is severely wounded and is lying in a nameless alley during the final fight with the Shadow’s horde. Everything plays straight according to this trope. He has a chance to speak with his granddaughter, saying that he is happy because he never thought that he would become a grandfather and he always believed that he would have died alone in a nameless alley some day. Finally, he sends her away saying that he has fought all his life and is a bit tired now; so he needs a moment to catch his breath. When she departs, a huge crowd of monsters slowly approaches and he quietly asks them: “So… Does any of you bastards know how this alley is called?� But he is back at the end to kill the Shadow once and for all (maybe), also stating the name of that alley.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3a1c2171
type
The Man Behind the Man
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3a1c2171
comment
The Man Behind the Man: During the events of the six-part story about Rat-Man's origins (known among fans as "The Hexalogy"), a mysterious cloaked man appears in various places without ever saying or doing anything, but it is mentioned that he knows about Rat-Man's fate and will control it. Characters acknowledge his presence, but rarely interact with him (an exception is, for example, the Jack Kirby expy) and Rat-Man is afraid of him. The very last page reveals that the cloaked man was Leo Ortolani himself, and thus the story doubled as Leo's real-life issues in creating the Rat-Man character and his influences (Jack Kirby above all). From the story arc starting with issue #94, Mr. Mouse. Who, in issue #97, is revealed being responsible for creating every single superhero and every single supervillain, including Cosmicus, the Devourer of Worlds. It's also implied that there's someone behind him too, namely The Shadow, even if he doesn't know.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3a1c2171
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3b99a9e0
type
Reality Warper
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3b99a9e0
comment
Reality Warper: Leo Ortolani can change the world with his drawings. Justified as he's the author.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3b99a9e0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3b99a9e0
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb1d38d
type
Bad Boss
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb1d38d
comment
Bad Boss: Janus Valker could well be the epitome of this trope. Among the most frightening examples: When Jorgesson is introduced in the Comic Book for the first time, he is calling his boss over the phone to inform him that something happened in the lab. We do not see Jorgesson at first, just Valker angrily commenting that he'd better not having touched Valker's keypad, as the last time. Cut to an American Shot of Jorgesson that reveals that he is a one-armed man, the implication being that the last time Valker cut the poor guy's arm. In another story, Valker comments that - while one of his plans unfolds - he is able to spend many pleasant hours with the help of a good espresso. He then pours the coffee on his shirt and proceeds to berate one of his assistants:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb1d38d
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb68bd3
type
Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb68bd3
comment
Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: Janus Valker with Topin, literally and very, very effectively.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb68bd3
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3cb68bd3
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3d2249c5
type
Heart in the Wrong Place
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3d2249c5
comment
Heart in the Wrong Place: Averted. Janus Valker, being a very clever scientist and an unstoppable killing machine, knows very well where your heart is.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_3d2249c5
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_400b9d22
type
Sunglasses at Night
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_400b9d22
comment
Sunglasses at Night: Valker and Joba never remove their sunglasses. They do this to hide their real demonic/possessed nature: the sunglasses also act as some sort of Power Limiter, and when they remove them, they can unleash terrible powers in the form of living shadows.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_400b9d22
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_415b3315
type
Stylistic Suck
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_415b3315
comment
Stylistic Suck: The "Comic School" story is an interesting example of this. Basically, in the "Comic School" story, Rat-Man and other characters attend a school for future comic artists, but he and the others represent the real people behind those characters, and so each one of them is drawn in the style of those people wanting to be artists, but not having the abilities to do that. The majority of them are little more than doodles.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_415b3315
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_48f0ca7f
type
PostModernism
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_48f0ca7f
comment
Postmodernism: The more this comic is running, the more its humour becomes post-modern: characters are aware of being in a comic book, or are just actors playing a part; one story arc eventually revolved around the fact that Rat-Man (the series) had won a prize (in real life) and Rat-Man was supposed to take it... and then discovered it was all a plan devised by an evil publisher who used Rat as a means to capture and publish God! And it was "God" who rigged the awards with the help of new toons so that Rat-man would try to run away from the editor, which would eventually lead the evil publisher to enter the toon world and be killed by a long-missing toon . Obviously both Rat-man and Brakko don't understand what happened even after Brakko himself explains the convoluted plan.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_48f0ca7f
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_48f0ca7f
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_49b3ebe5
type
Special Effect Failure
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_49b3ebe5
comment
Nick Fury is now "Furio", with a blatant white space left after his name showing that a longer name was here before.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_49b3ebe5
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4b0a723c
type
Think of the Censors!
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4b0a723c
comment
Think of the Censors! / Think of the Children!: Parodied:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4b0a723c
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4b0a723c
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: "The Darkest Hour" ends this way. Rat-Man realizes that Thea, his true love, is really dead. Janus Valker dies in an hospital (he eventually gets better), making Jorgesson's sacrifice to free him from the Shadow pointless. Brakko is fired by the police department and is hunted down as a criminal by his former colleagues. The Shadow possesses Rat-Man and throws the world into chaos. It can't get darker than that. Except that it does.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e3d253b
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7c4536
type
Wham Line
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: What was written in Abbard's letter.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7c4536
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7c4536
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7f703c
type
Wham Shot
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7f703c
comment
Wham Shot: At the end of the Spider Trilogy, a panel set in the past of the main timeline showed Thea's cloning chamber and a woman looking exactly like her telling professor Denam (her father) to name her Thea.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4e7f703c
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4f76852c
type
Badass on Paper
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4f76852c
comment
Badass on Paper: Rat-Man is a superhero whose achievements include defeating an apparently invincible robot designed to kill superheroes and a Goku Expy, and being the greatest enemy of the Shadow. He's also too stupid to operate a car's seatbelt.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4f76852c
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_4f76852c
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_55232afa
type
Politically Incorrect Hero
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_55232afa
comment
Politically Incorrect Hero: Where to begin? There is probably not a single issue or minority group, which is usually addressed with careful tact nowadays, from sexual orientation (mainly with Cynthia and his friend Tamara, two transgender prostitutes) to pedophilia, from the homeless to senior citizens, which has not been mercilessly mocked by Rat-Man, sometimes in the most inappropriate way. This may count both as values dissonance as political correctness is widely despised as hypocritical in Italy and as an author tract, as Leo Ortolani’s notion of humor is that of “the old schoolmate whom you can’t help to find funny, even if he sometimes cracks outrageous jokes�. However, it must be said that he takes great pains to drive home the point that Rat-Man is a complete moron and (especially as the series progresses) that he can be an unlikeable and selfish character. This is lampshaded in one of the first stories, a parody of Space: 1999, where Rat-Man is deported to a detention facility on the Moon because of (among other things) his inappropriate sense of humor. The inmates wear uniforms which allow to identify the reason they were deported by the different color of their sleeves (Rat-Man gets the brown one, of course) and are subject to mandatory counseling: And very bluntly in a more recent story:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_55232afa
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_553cbdc2
type
Eyeless Face
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_553cbdc2
comment
Eyeless Face: One-time character Mr. Tristazzi from the "Comic School" story has spectacles... but no eyes underneath.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_553cbdc2
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5a4aa505
type
Government Conspiracy
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5a4aa505
comment
Government Conspiracy: A main theme of the first story arc dealing with Rat-Man’s convoluted past. In the 30s a group of masked crimefighters joined together to form a so-called “Secret Squad� of superheroes. Some years later, they convened a press conference to denounce an attempt to bring them under the control of a secretive cabal inside the institutions and revealed their secret identities. Unsurprisingly, they were (almost) all killed shortly thereafter and the government decided to create a “Second Secret Squad� of superheroes to replace the first. A young Rat-Man (who went by the name “Rat-Boy�) became a member of the Second Squad.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5a4aa505
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5a4aa505
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5d6e6919
type
Magicians Are Wizards
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5d6e6919
comment
Magicians Are Wizards: Spoofed in an issue that was a parody of Conan the Barbarian: the seemingly all-powerful wizard our "heroine" met fought with playing cards, a rabbit and spells from... a bunch of Magic: The Gathering cards! Later we get a two-issue spoof of Harry Potter... Where wizards liberally combine Potterverse-like magic and stage magic tricks. We're even treated to pulling rabbits out of hats for use as projectiles and a giant top hat used as a siege cannon.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5d6e6919
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5d6e6919
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5f76977a
type
Fake Crossover
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5f76977a
comment
Fake Crossover / Covers Always Lie: One cover of the comic depicts Rat-Man being terrified by Aldo, the hideous main character of Venerdì; 12, a series that shared space with Rat-Man in the comic books. The two characters have never met in the actual comics.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5f76977a
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_5f76977a
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_603f1a80
type
Pragmatic Adaptation
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_603f1a80
comment
Pragmatic Adaptation: Some plotlines, characters and jokes are recycled from the comic, usually simplified to compress it in a ten-minute cartoon and not let the complex mythology lock out those who do not know the source material. For example, the movie is based on the cloning arc (Rat-Man 12-14) with several details changed to make it a stand-alone story.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_603f1a80
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_617f0563
type
Heel–Face Turn
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_617f0563
comment
Heel–Face Turn: Janus Valker, in the latest instalments of the saga. Sort of.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_617f0563
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6293c185
type
Sequel Hook
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6293c185
comment
Sequel Hook: As the series was slated to end with issue #100, issue #99 has one when Rat-Man finally opens the letter that reveals his real identity: he is Janus Valker's son not just by adoption but also by blood, taken from the mother as a fetus, and as Valker's son he's fated to become the avatar of The Shadow in 2014. Ortolani had either lied or changed his mind about that, so the hook was followed on starting with issue 101. Then the series ended for good... But the last panel is a shot of the cryo chamber where Rat-Man's last surviving clone sleeps.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6293c185
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_62c1f9a9
type
Evil Versus Oblivion
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_62c1f9a9
comment
Evil Versus Oblivion: Kalissa's group is a bunch of mad scientists who forcibly separate Rat-Man and his (pregnant) true love only to guarantee that Rat-Man remains a superhero, but all of these is done in order to avoid that the Shadow consume all reality.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_62c1f9a9
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_636355c8
type
Are These Wires Important?
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_636355c8
comment
Are These Wires Important?: Parodied in an issue where, to stop a conspiracy of evil geologists (don't ask), Rat-Man infiltrates their base, finds a control room and smashes every piece of machinery he can put his hands on. This has the effect of shorting out the conspiracy's vending machine.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_636355c8
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_63d861f8
type
Even Evil Has Loved Ones
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_63d861f8
comment
Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Janus Valker with his son, who will eventually become Rat-Man, and to a lesser extent with his wife, Kalissa.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_63d861f8
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6627695f
type
Author Appeal
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6627695f
comment
Author Appeal: Geology. Ortolani has a degree in that field, and it shows when the usually dumb Rat-Man becomes knowledgeable about rocks. There are also many gags involving geology during the comic, including an entire story, which is also a James Bond parody on top of that! "Author Not-Appeal": Rat-Man has an extreme hatred of cats, and it is implied that Leo hates them too.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6627695f
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66755d29
type
Author Avatar
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66755d29
comment
Author Avatar: Ortolani loves this trope. Not only his avatar, but also those of his editor, of his childhood friends and of his wife (who is usually depicted as the only sane woman of the group) regularly appear in the comic, both as background characters and as main ones. His publisher (who has a double name, relatively uncommon in Italy) even gets two of them (one for each name).
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66755d29
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66a4e100
type
Parody Names
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66a4e100
comment
Parody Names: Averted. The parodies usually give to the characters names with no relation to the original ones. Try to get which character's parody is supposed to be Professor Richlady without reading the story where he appears. note It's Severus Snape, if you're wondering.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66a4e100
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66cdb21b
type
Gag Penis
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66cdb21b
comment
Gag Penis: Transgender Cinzia Otherside's defining feature.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_66cdb21b
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Scream Discretion Shot
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_677c65ea
comment
Scream Discretion Shot: Played for Laughs in the "Yellow" storyline. Rat-Man asks Rat-Girl to give him back her engagement ring, but she laughs and answers that her cat ate it. Cue to Rat-Man holding the engagement ring in an hand and a pair of nail scissors in the other. The horrified looks from the rest of the cast imply that he has just eviscerated the poor animal.
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Clumsy Copyright Censorship
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_681bcd81
comment
Clumsy Copyright Censorship: Many earlier stories had Rat-Man meeting various Marvel heroes. Since the bonds between Panini (the Italian owner of Marvel comic rights, and Rat-Man's publisher too) and Marvel became looser in the years, the recent reprints of these stories have been altered turning the various heroes into expies. More in detail: Spider-Man became "The Human Spider", and the web pattern on his suit was altered. Victor Von Doom's cape lacks the classic golden buttons, and his mask now looks like a japanese Oni's face (similar to the one Guilty wears) The Punisher is now "The Polisher" and the skull insignia on his suit is replaced with a smiley face. Wolverine, now "Hunter", haves extendable fingernails instead of his classic claws. The big "A" on Captain America's mask is now a star, and his name is now "American Star". Nick Fury is now "Furio", with a blatant white space left after his name showing that a longer name was here before.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6bd689ca
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Meaningful Echo
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6bd689ca
comment
Meaningful Echo: "The Shadow is deceit".
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6bd689ca
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6bda9a30
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Meaningful Name
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_6bda9a30
comment
Meaningful Name: Rat-Man's real name is revealed as being "Deboroh La Roccia". "La Roccia" in Italian means "The rock", a nod to Ortolani's degree in Geology. "Deboroh" is just a silly name, as it's a male version of Deborah, commonly used in Italy for vapid hot girls. Cinzia Otherside is trans. What a shock, uh? Thea Denam (see the Artificial Human example) is named after the Tea rose, the plant she was created from.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_71bd62b9
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Calling Your Attacks
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_71bd62b9
comment
Calling Your Attacks: In the story "Il Grande Ratzinga!", Rat-Man became the pilot of a giant Super Robot, and naturally used this trope. The story was mostly a parody of the Super Robot and anime tropes.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_71bd62b9
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_733e007a
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Unwitting Pawn
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_733e007a
comment
From the story arc starting with issue #94, Mr. Mouse. Who, in issue #97, is revealed being responsible for creating every single superhero and every single supervillain, including Cosmicus, the Devourer of Worlds. It's also implied that there's someone behind him too, namely The Shadow, even if he doesn't know.
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Two Girls to a Team
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Two Girls to a Team: The second Secret Squad is eventually revealed to be this.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_779c9d25
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The Trope without a Title
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_779c9d25
comment
The Trope without a Title: Almost every setting in the series has a name like this, such as "La Città Senza Nome" (City Without a Name), "La Città Molto Grande" (Very Big City) and so on.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_779c9d25
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Super-Empowering
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_78418ebb
comment
Super-Empowering: Mr. Mouse' shtick, both through his own lab and those of others (the most prominent is August Abbard by virtue of handling the Second Secret Squad, Rat-Man included). At first he simply equipped people who wanted to be supeheroes inspired by Sorro (in-universe stand in for the Superman comic book), but by the time of the Second Secret Squad at least some of the interventions included kidnapping and genetically altering fetuses. Mr. Mouse also created their villains, up to and including an alien invasion and a Planet Eater.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_786d6cf6
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You Wouldn't Shoot Me
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_786d6cf6
comment
You Wouldn't Shoot Me: Janus Valker divides superheroes in two categories: the ones who think they can catch his bullets, and the ones who think he won't shoot. Magnificently executed when he tried it on Rat-Man, who had earlier grabbed him by his clothes and told him he was finished. Valker asked him which of those two kinds of superhero Rat-Man was, Rat-Man replied "I'm the kind you can't shoot", Valker reached for his gun... And that's when Valker found out that Rat-Man stole his gun. Later one of the Endings says this to Rat-Man, because he knows Rat-Man is a superhero and superheroes don't shoot anyone. Turns out, Rat-Man isn't exactly considering himself a superhero anymore and pulls the trigger. The Wolf to the Spectre. He's right, because he knows something of her that we don't.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_79ba6777
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Pocket Protector
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_79ba6777
comment
Pocket Protector: With a hamster. Also parodied with his encounter with the Punisher and gets shot eight times: the bullet to the heart is stopped by a Bible, the one to the stomach by a Quran, the one to the liver by a copy of Das Kapital, one of The Betrothed stops another...
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_7c48b272
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Summon Bigger Fish
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comment
Summon Bigger Fish: In one story, Rat-Man revealed he never managed to read a book because as soon as he opens one Chuck Norris appears and takes him on an adventure. Later, threatened by an invincible killer robot, Rat-Man opened a book, causing Chuck Norris to pull a DynamicEntry on the robot.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_7c48b272
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_7cbe4363
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Brown Bag Mask
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_7cbe4363
comment
Brown Bag Mask: Rat-Man as a young kid in an orphanarium used one to pass unnoticed to the bully who had previously threatened him. Unfortunately, he forgot to remove it during the classes...
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_7cbe4363
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_803e3201
type
Satanic Archetype
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_803e3201
comment
Satanic Archetype: From its first appearance, the Shadow is strongly implied to be Rat-Man's world equivalent of the devil and the analogy only grows stronger with time. It is an all-powerful entity who rules on a dimension where the standard rules of physics of our world do not apply through an army of monstrous creatures who can change into the appearance of human beings to act in our world incognito. He lures good people to help him with its schemes through lies and deceit. Its preferred modus operandi is to possess a human being and transform him into an Eldritch Abomination, granting him immense power in the process. Its victims are imprisoned into a living wall where they are confronted with their sins and mistakes for all eternity. Finally, in the final story arc it unleashes The End of the World as We Know It.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_83445b04
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Pun
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_83445b04
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Pun: There are some: for example the plot-wise very important labs are called "Altrove", which means "Somewhere else":
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_83445b04
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Throwing Your Shield Always Works
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_83be25f6
comment
Throwing Your Shield Always Works: Captain America's take on this is parodied twice: In a fanzine-era story, the actual Cap (transformed in a Lawyer-Friendly Cameo in later reprints) shows up to teach Rat-Man, and when he does it the shield does a lot of things among bounces, including cleaning with the vacuum. But he wasn't always that good, as Nick Fury's missing eye can testify. Rat-Man is obviously a disaster with it, and nearly hits Fury's remaining eye during training. Then, when he's the last hope against Hydra's take over of the world, he has an Imagine Spot in which he finally succeeds (and also hits a cat. He hates cats), then he actually launches... And then cut to old Rat-Man, who once again didn't end the story of his adventure with Cap and the blind colonel, and then salutes them with "Heil Hydra". In a later story, Valker muses on the many superheroes he killed, all of which either believed themselves bulletproof or believed he wouldn't shoot. Then he remembers the one who carried a shield... And wonders why the hell he threw it (Valker shot him, and then took the Captain America-like shield as a trophy).
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_83be25f6
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_851dda8f
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Humanoid Abomination
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_851dda8f
comment
Humanoid Abomination: Possibly Janus Valker and Joba, since they are possessed by l'Ombra (The Shadow).
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_851dda8f
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_863fa679
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What Happened to the Mouse?
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: Fittingly, this happens to Tòpin The Wonder Mouse, Rat-Man's former sidekick and a parody of Robin the Boy Wonder. However, it is implied that Valker may have killed him. The question was answered in issue #94: Tòpin asked him to teach him how to be evil, and Valker accepted.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_863fa679
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_86b21114
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Badass Boast
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_86b21114
comment
Magnificently executed when he tried it on Rat-Man, who had earlier grabbed him by his clothes and told him he was finished. Valker asked him which of those two kinds of superhero Rat-Man was, Rat-Man replied "I'm the kind you can't shoot", Valker reached for his gun... And that's when Valker found out that Rat-Man stole his gun.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8774fb47
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Eldritch Abomination
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8774fb47
comment
Eldritch Abomination: La Gatta, which looks like a beautiful woman, but whose true form is a demonic being from another dimension that feeds on humanity's lust and desires. One early issue featured Galactus and Silver Surfer expies, with Rat-Man being turned into another Surfer expy and trying (and, of course, failing) to save the Earth from being devoured. As soon as the Galactus expy is breaking the Earth's crust to get to the core, hundreds of tentacles attached to something living in the abyss wrap around him and consume him in seconds. This is never explained or brought upon again in the comic. The character of War in the "Rat" storyline is strongly implied to actually be the most feared horseman of the apocalypse. The Shadow.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8774fb47
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Abhorrent Admirer
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_88cee6e2
comment
Abhorrent Admirer: Cinzia the transgender hooker, a former male postman who fell in love with Rat-Man (or rather, his civilian identity before he became a hero). He never realized who she was despite some blatant evidence, and the fact she involuntarily helped him to become Rat-Man in the first place (in short, he subscribed to Mickey Mouse comic books and the postman sent him those comics every week, then he decided to wear a rat costume...).
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Back from the Dead
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8967e17f
comment
Back from the Dead: In one issue Rat-Man dies and goes to Hell, but a very powerful demon (which is an obvious Shout-Out to Spawn) helps him on his way back to life. At the end of the issue, it is revealed that the demon is really major antagonist Janus Valker's soul, and he helped Rat-Man because every time he performed a good deed his punishment would be a little less harsh. Janus Valker
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Bilingual Dialogue
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8a800d36
comment
Bilingual Dialogue: Played for Laughs in an out-of-continuity parody of Franchise/Star Wars}}, where Rat-Man plays a character who is a combination of Episode I's Anakin and of the original trilogy's Luke Skywalker and Brakko is the equivalent of Han Solo. The story parodies the famous bilingual dialogue of the Star Wars universe by having Rat-Man pretending to understand the language of his droid (a parody of R2-D2 resembling a Shop-Vac). Of course, this backfires spectacularly when the droid must perform a critical task that requires good communication between him and Rat-Man (which is something that happens quite frequently in the story):
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8a800d36
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The Television Talks Back
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8c30ad0
comment
The Television Talks Back: Used in a story parodying The Ring. Bizarrely, it wasn't even a real cursed tape, just a prank by the owner of the store Rat-Man rented the tape from.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8cbd311b
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Good Angel, Bad Angel
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8cbd311b
comment
Good Angel, Bad Angel: Parodied. Rat-Man once met the well-endowed starlet Gessica Lovebol, and had the chance to undress her. Both the devil and the angel on his shoulders asked him to remove her bathing suit!
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8cbd311b
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8d0785d5
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Didn't Think This Through
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8d0785d5
comment
The very first story sets the tone for both Rat-Man's idiocy and badassery. When The Buffoon kidnapped an orphaned child and demanded ransom from his parents, Rat-Man tracked him and stormed his hideout: after an embarrassing false start, Rat-Man curbstomped the Buffoon's gang in the purest Batman style save for pulling a gun on the last one (he had produced a knife), but when he confronted the Buffoon (who was terrified and possibly crapping in his pants) he just paid the ransom. After Rat-Man left with the child, the Buffoon was still there holding the case of the ransom, too dumbstruck by what had just happened to even move.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8e20979
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Wham Episode
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8e20979
comment
Wham Episode: Many, especially when the Myth Arc is concerned. Wham Line: What was written in Abbard's letter. Wham Shot: At the end of the Spider Trilogy, a panel set in the past of the main timeline showed Thea's cloning chamber and a woman looking exactly like her telling professor Denam (her father) to name her Thea.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8e92e125
type
Lawyer-Friendly Cameo
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8e92e125
comment
In a fanzine-era story, the actual Cap (transformed in a Lawyer-Friendly Cameo in later reprints) shows up to teach Rat-Man, and when he does it the shield does a lot of things among bounces, including cleaning with the vacuum. But he wasn't always that good, as Nick Fury's missing eye can testify. Rat-Man is obviously a disaster with it, and nearly hits Fury's remaining eye during training. Then, when he's the last hope against Hydra's take over of the world, he has an Imagine Spot in which he finally succeeds (and also hits a cat. He hates cats), then he actually launches... And then cut to old Rat-Man, who once again didn't end the story of his adventure with Cap and the blind colonel, and then salutes them with "Heil Hydra".
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8ee710e7
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Better Manhandle the Murder Weapon
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8ee710e7
comment
Better Manhandle the Murder Weapon: Rat-Man does it in a Marvel crossover... twice. First by "securing" the weapon used to kill an old Punisher's relative, just in time for the latter to see him. After several pages of dodging bullets, he manages to escape only to "secure" a metal pipe used to beat a certain "Mrs May". Seconds before Spider-Man enters the scene.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8f00b02a
type
Always Identical Twins
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_8f00b02a
comment
Always Identical Twins: In the "Marvelmouse" story arc Rat-Man meets Marcus and Marcellus, two nasty and cynical twins who arrange the fights between heroes in the Arena. They wear a T-shirt with "Io sono l'altro" (I'm The Other One) written on it, because nobody can tell them apart. In their final appearance Marcus incredibly manages to mistake his own brother for himself. And, as stated in Author Avatar below, both of them are the avatar of Leo's publisher.
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_912b24c4
type
Art Shift
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_912b24c4
comment
Art Shift: In some issues, such as the "Yellow" trilogy which spoofs/homages Anime and Manga.
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Patricide
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93399c3c
comment
Patricide: it is implied that Joba Valker ordered the murder of his father Boda so that he could claim the power of the Shadow for himself. This bites him in the ass when the Shadow chooses his brother Janus instead.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93399c3c
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93399c3c
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93e07cc3
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Bowdlerised
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93e07cc3
comment
Bowdlerised
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93e07cc3
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_93e07cc3
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_945dd99a
type
Cape Busters
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_945dd99a
comment
Cape Busters: Valker's job for the government in a nutshell. He's frightenghly effective at it thanks to his talent at killing people in general, sheer pragmatism, and his utter lack of fear and respect for superheroes (he divides superheroes in ones who think he won't shoot and ones who think they can stop bullets with their hands, and keeps a collection of superheroes masks and gloves with bullet holes in them). In fact, the only superhero who survived a confrontation with him without Valker being recalled was Rat-Man, who, being Valker's amnesiac son, had the sense of stealing his gun before Valker decided to kill him. On the plus side, he's the one who finishes off Topin and the Shadow with him, as Rat-Man, being a superhero, couldn't kill him without stopping being one.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_945dd99a
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_945dd99a
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_961c6c22
type
Cutaway Gag
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_961c6c22
comment
When Jorgesson is introduced in the Comic Book for the first time, he is calling his boss over the phone to inform him that something happened in the lab. We do not see Jorgesson at first, just Valker angrily commenting that he'd better not having touched Valker's keypad, as the last time. Cut to an American Shot of Jorgesson that reveals that he is a one-armed man, the implication being that the last time Valker cut the poor guy's arm.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_961c6c22
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_961c6c22
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_970c790a
comment
On the plus side, he's the one who finishes off Topin and the Shadow with him, as Rat-Man, being a superhero, couldn't kill him without stopping being one.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_970c790a
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9788e2b1
type
Black Dude Dies First
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9788e2b1
comment
Black Dude Dies First: Set up in the parody of The Expendables, where there is a character known only as (even by that character himself) "Muscly Black Dude Who Dies a Gruesome Death", and whose purpose is only to say "You're totally mad, bro!" and "You said it, dude!". He frequently Lampshades this behaviour, and even explains how a family photo is the way they chose to give depth to his character. Eventually averted, because the first one to die is Dolph Lundgren's character. Fully averted: as a bid to save their lives, Chat Morris (a not-too-subtle tweaking of Chuck Norris), cornered and taunted by Bel Pupone (a thinly disguised parody of Jean-Claude Van Damme) in calling someone's help, he calls for the defeated, broken Black Dude, who earlier claimed that, owing to his useless, Red Shirt status, was literally unable to outlive his lack of usefulness. As soon as Black Dude is made aware that Chat Morris, calling him "Toby", gave him a name, a backstory and a purpose, he takes a level in badass, dispatches Bel Pupone and forces him into a fistfight with Chat. And at the end he dies in a car crash.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9788e2b1
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9788e2b1
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9b76b81
type
Evolutionary Levels
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9b76b81
comment
Evolutionary Levels: In the 2001 homage/parody, a scientist uses on himself the power of the monolith and suddenly evolves into various lifeforms (including Pikachu), before ascending to a higher plane of existence and short-circuiting the monolith.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9b76b81
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9b76b81
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9c4003a1
type
One True Love
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9c4003a1
comment
One True Love: Thea Denam. Or, rather, Aima, if Denam and Kalissa hadn't wiped their memories and replaced her with a clone.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9c4003a1
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9c4003a1
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9d6e002e
type
Whole Episode Flashback
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9d6e002e
comment
Whole Episode Flashback: more precisely "Whole Story Arcs Flashback". Rat-Man's backstory is recounted in three long story arcs (in issues #3-4, #17-20# and #29-#34 of the original Italian series), two of whom are entirely composed by episodes happening in the past. Something similar is made in issues #91-93 for the backstory of the main antagonist, Janus Valker.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9d6e002e
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9d6e002e
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9dab0a6e
type
Continuity Nod
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9dab0a6e
comment
Continuity Nod: In his Rat-Cave, Rat-Man has a picture of the Second Secret Squad, the Guardian and the Cat's calendar.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9dab0a6e
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9dab0a6e
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9def1a92
type
Reformed, but Not Tamed
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9def1a92
comment
Reformed, but Not Tamed: Valker after his Heel–Face Turn: he's just as efficiently murderous as ever, he just turned his tendencies on the Shadow's minions out of paternal love.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9def1a92
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_9def1a92
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a08199ec
type
The Dog Was the Mastermind
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a08199ec
comment
The Dog Was the Mastermind: All the events of the "Comic School" story (see Stylistic Suck below) are revealed as the plot of Graziello, a doodle-boy with an Annoying Laugh appearing throughout the issue (scribbled on walls, papers etc.), who never had the opportunity to be published, and so hijacked Rat-Man's story to finally be printed and appearing in a comic book!
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a08199ec
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a08199ec
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a0f3c6a0
type
Succubi and Incubi
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a0f3c6a0
comment
Succubi and Incubi: La Gatta ("The Cat") is implied to be some type of succubus, given she's a supernatural embodiment of Lust.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a0f3c6a0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a0f3c6a0
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a18d407b
type
Samus Is a Girl
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a18d407b
comment
The Wolf to the Spectre. He's right, because he knows something of her that we don't.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a18d407b
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a18d407b
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a65288e2
type
Ascended Extra
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a65288e2
comment
Ascended Extra: Cynthia Otherside. In the first story she was just a male mailman who is mentioned becoming a transgender hooker as part of a throwaway gag, but acquired a larger role in following stories, and it was discovered she was already in love with him before the throwaway gag of the first story.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a65288e2
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a65288e2
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a698ad42
type
City with No Name
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a698ad42
comment
City with No Name: Again, la Città Senza Nome, as you might have guessed. Another city in the Rat-Man universe is called La Città Molto Grande ("The Very Large City").
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a698ad42
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a698ad42
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a7382a73
type
Imagine Spot
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a7382a73
comment
Rat-Man is obviously a disaster with it, and nearly hits Fury's remaining eye during training. Then, when he's the last hope against Hydra's take over of the world, he has an Imagine Spot in which he finally succeeds (and also hits a cat. He hates cats), then he actually launches... And then cut to old Rat-Man, who once again didn't end the story of his adventure with Cap and the blind colonel, and then salutes them with "Heil Hydra".
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a7382a73
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9de87d2
type
Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9de87d2
comment
Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Rat-Man is a moron, but sometimes he'll do things like making a fool of an Expy of Son Goku (showing more resistance to pain than the rock Goku's expy was hitting him with in the process) or jump the Villain of the Week while forced on a wheelchair. And he still remains a moron. The very first story sets the tone for both Rat-Man's idiocy and badassery. When The Buffoon kidnapped an orphaned child and demanded ransom from his parents, Rat-Man tracked him and stormed his hideout: after an embarrassing false start, Rat-Man curbstomped the Buffoon's gang in the purest Batman style save for pulling a gun on the last one (he had produced a knife), but when he confronted the Buffoon (who was terrified and possibly crapping in his pants) he just paid the ransom. After Rat-Man left with the child, the Buffoon was still there holding the case of the ransom, too dumbstruck by what had just happened to even move.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9de87d2
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9de87d2
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9f2e259
type
Mole in Charge
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9f2e259
comment
Mole in Charge: The Wolf is the head of the Second Secret Squad and an agent of the Government Conspiracy that killed the First Squad.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9f2e259
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_a9f2e259
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_adfd3165
type
For the Evulz
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_adfd3165
comment
In another story, Valker comments that - while one of his plans unfolds - he is able to spend many pleasant hours with the help of a good espresso. He then pours the coffee on his shirt and proceeds to berate one of his assistants:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_adfd3165
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b01abe4f
type
Catchphrase
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b01abe4f
comment
Catchphrase: "Fletto i muscoli e sono nel vuoto!" ("I flex my muscles and I'm in the air!")
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b01abe4f
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b01abe4f
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b11ac9f5
type
Abusive Parents
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b11ac9f5
comment
Abusive Parents: Played straight with Boda Valker, who was an horrible father for his son Janus. The desire to gain his love and respect was one of the factors that drove Janus to evil. Averted with Janus Valker himself, who - while being very strict and even harsh with his son - clearly loves him dearly. Ironically, this is another decisive factor in his descent into evil, as he decides to surrender to the Shadow to save him from Joba.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b11ac9f5
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b11ac9f5
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b408c009
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City of Adventure
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b408c009
comment
City of Adventure: La Città Senza Nome ("The City with No Name")
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b408c009
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b4b811ac
type
Super Zeroes
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b4b811ac
comment
Super Zeroes: Rat-Man is an almost totally useless cretin and coward, whose attempts at being a superhero tend to end with his total humiliation. Keyword: almost. Once in a while he'll pull something worth of actual superheroes, like jumping on the head of a Shadow-possessed villain while being forced on an electric wheelchair (apparently there's the right sequence of commands for that) or summoning freakin' Chuck Norris on a killer robot designed specifically to kill superheroes. Also, Valker treats him with (grudging) respect since he managed to be the only superhero to survive a hostile encounter with him: most heroes think he won't shoot or that they can catch bullets with their hands and get killed, but Rat-Man stole his gun.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b4b811ac
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Many to be found, especially against anime and manga, which Leo isn't too fond of. Most notably the battle between Rat-Man and Il Drago, a transparent parody of Dragon Ball's Son Goku.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b53077b3
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b58b4e3c
type
Too Dumb to Live
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b58b4e3c
comment
Too Dumb to Live: Most of the characters behave like this one time or another, usually for comedic effect. The first price goes to an American tourist who is lynched by an angry mob in the Third World country of Eutanésia: he apparently started yelling "here I am!" when somebody asked if any Americans were present during an anti-American riot. Brakko (described by the author as "Even stupider than Rat-Man, if it's even possible") proved to be the worst, and literally graduated to this, in issue #104. Previously in the issue his friend and subordinate police officer Jordan had told him that if he were ordered to arrest a friend he'd tell him to run and count to 20 before giving chase, knowing that, having trouble remembering what comes after 12, he'd give him a huge headstart. Later, we have this situation:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b58b4e3c
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b99bed67
type
No-Nonsense Nemesis
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b99bed67
comment
No-Nonsense Nemesis: Valker. If he feels you're a threat or otherwise need to be dealt with he will kill you, the fastest and most effective way possible.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_b99bed67
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_ba3454a7
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Future Me Scares Me
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_ba3454a7
comment
Future Me Scares Me: Averted. Rat-Man meets his future self, but he looks and acts just like him... only fatter.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_ba3454a7
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_ba3454a7
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bb5e187b
type
Captured Super-Entity
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bb5e187b
comment
Captured Super-Entity: Averted in one of most surreal stories. It featured an evil comic book publisher who gave Rat-Man (the character and the series) an award as part of his plan to capture God (represented as a humongous hand over the horizon) and turn Him into another of his characters. In the end it was all part of God's plan to trick the publisher into crossing over to the comic book world and let him meet his end at the hands of a forgotten comic book character. It Makes Sense in Context, sort of.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bb5e187b
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bb5e187b
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Do. Not. Threaten. Or. Harm. Janus Valker’s son. Seriously, even if you are an all-powerful demonic entity bound on conquering and destroying the Earth. Even if you have suicide tendencies and even if this may be one of the most effective suicide methods in history, there are more pleasant ways to die. Believe us. And faster. Definitively faster.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bc74ef27
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bc74ef27
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bce68547
type
Hollywood Jehovah's Witness
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bce68547
comment
Hollywood Jehovah's Witness: Rat-Man got a bad karma from how he scares them away.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bce68547
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1.0
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bce68547
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bce68547
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb91a53
type
Mad Scientist's Beautiful Daughter
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb91a53
comment
Mad Scientist's Beautiful Daughter: Thea Denam, who really was an Artificial Human and his most advanced experiment ever. Also, Aima, of whom Thea is a clone and a replacemnt love interest for Rat-Man.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb91a53
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb9a361
type
Anti-Hero
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb9a361
comment
Anti-Hero: Rat-Man is a Type 1.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb9a361
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_beb9a361
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bef696dd
type
Mind Screw
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bef696dd
comment
Mind Screw: The story called "The R-Files", a parody of The X-Files, but a very twisted story on its own, full of Breaking the Fourth Wall moments and Doubly subverted tropes. For examples, the Mulder and Scully parodies find the real Rat-Man, but then he is revealed as being Leo Ortolani, the creator of the (real and in-story) series. Moments later, Ortolani accidentally spills ink all over his panels and he disappears into blackness, revealing they were characters in a comic all along... It Makes Sense in Context. Or maybe not.
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bef696dd
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf1255fa
type
Really Gets Around
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf1255fa
comment
Really Gets Around: Clara, Brakko's wife, has slept with almost every man in town (and, it's implied, her dog), but Brakko is apparently completely oblivious to this. He actually knows, he just loves her too much to say anything. During the final battle she arrives with all her lovers, and there's enough of them to turn back the Shadow's horde of monsters.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf1255fa
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf1255fa
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
type
Non-Human Sidekick
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_bf927e82
comment
Non-Human Sidekick: Piccettino (something like Li'l One), Rat-Man's old, small, worn-out teddy bear. He's just a regular teddy bear (maybe), but Rat-Man thinks it can speak and do things. Then again, it's stated many times that Rat-Man is mentally retarded.
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type
Dogs Are Dumb
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c24fa49e
comment
Dogs Are Dumb: Svarz, Brakko's "guard" dog. Though it's hard to tell if he's dumber than his master...
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c24fa49e
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type
Big "NO!"
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c2cedc1c
comment
Big "NO!": done by Darth Vader when he is dumped by the philosophal woman in the Harry Potter/Twilight parody.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c2cedc1c
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1.0
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c3c18143
type
Hope Spot
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c3c18143
comment
Hope Spot: at the end of the "Darkest Hour", Rat-Man has apparently defeated the Shadow, saved his father and, on the top of that, he has also discovered that Thea is alive. Wait a minute. Didn't the Shadow just said:
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type
Bestiality Is Depraved
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c3fbac64
comment
Bestiality Is Depraved: When Rat-Man was young, the papers ruined the career of a superhero revealing that he had sex with a sheep. Then they ruined the sheep's career by revealing she had sex with Rat-Man.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c3fbac64
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type
Couch Gag
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c4d09d24
comment
Couch Gag: At the end of the credits something different happens to Rat-Man every time. One of these even directly referenced The Simpsons, the Trope Maker. Like this giant foot?
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c4d09d24
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: Again, lots and lots.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c868a42a
type
Freudian Excuse
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c868a42a
comment
Played straight with Boda Valker, who was an horrible father for his son Janus. The desire to gain his love and respect was one of the factors that drove Janus to evil.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c868a42a
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type
Self-Deprecation
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c9597a03
comment
Self-Deprecation: Leo Ortolani himself appears as a minor or semi-minor character, usually as a pathetic little man (whom even Rat-Man makes fun of sometimes!) who sometimes gets killed. He frequently makes fun of of his "useless" degree in Geology. But sometimes, like when Rat-Man succeeds in finding out a secret hideout by moving a rock that shouldn't be in that environment, it's surprisingly useful.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c9597a03
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_c9597a03
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cc4b45f6
type
Word of God
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cc4b45f6
comment
Brakko (described by the author as "Even stupider than Rat-Man, if it's even possible") proved to be the worst, and literally graduated to this, in issue #104. Previously in the issue his friend and subordinate police officer Jordan had told him that if he were ordered to arrest a friend he'd tell him to run and count to 20 before giving chase, knowing that, having trouble remembering what comes after 12, he'd give him a huge headstart. Later, we have this situation:
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cc4b45f6
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1.0
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cc4b45f6
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cfdb9e17
type
Cerebus Syndrome
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cfdb9e17
comment
Cerebus Syndrome: A comic book originally published in a small fanzine? Check. As a parody of a beloved Comic Book genre of its time? Check. With a (sort of) anthropomorphic animal as the protagonist? Check. That continued as a self-published independent comic book? Check. With a limited lifespan, as the author has decided to limit its run to a predetermined number of issues? Check. That progressively becomes Darker and Edgier, with huge retcons of previous storylines? Check. Transforming into a very personal (and surprisingly deep) reflection of his author on the Comic Book industry and contemporary life? Check. With strong religious overtones? Check. Let’s face it. Rat-Man could be the long lost Italian brother of the Trope Namer. Well, were it not for the fact that Ortolani accepted to publish the character with the Italian subsidiary of a mainstream publishing company, that he decided to continue to write Rat-Man’s stories after the original deadline, as he believed that he had not exhausted the potential of the character, that he resorted to his country’s Roman Catholicism instead of inventing his own religion and, of course, that he apparently did not drive himself mad in the process, as the Trope-Namer's author.
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_cfdb9e17
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d32b5dde
type
Hope Bringer
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d32b5dde
comment
Hope Bringer: If Rat-Man has one redeeming quality which makes him worthy of being considered a true Super Hero is that he never gives up on hope, no matter how outclassed he is or how desperate the battle may seem (and, Rat-Man being Rat-Man, he is usually seriously outclassed and pretty much all of his battles are desperate). And this makes the end of the "Darkest Hour" storyline even more heartwrenching, as the Shadow leads him to realize that: According to Valker and Topin, the ability to never give up on hope and even inspire it in other is what makes a true superhero. The absence of this ability is why the costumed and sometimes superpowered vigilantes that appeared after the death of the First Secret Squad are dismissively called "Men in Tights" rather than superheroes.
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d32b5dde
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type
Un-person
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d558b013
comment
Unperson: Played for Laughs. Rat-Man as Marvel Mouse once fought a character called Il Drago (a parody of Son Goku and the Saiyan from Dragon Ball), who had a special move which, according to Rat-Man, sent the opponents in a dimension so far away that nobody would have remembered their existence. Il Drago was stopped by a superhero called "L'uomo con il costume da Ragno'' (a Spider Man expy) who reversed the effect of the move and sent them both in the other dimension. Later, Rat-Man saw a poster of his fight with Il Drago and wondered who the latter one was.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d558b013
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d558b013
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d71d51fd
type
The End of the World as We Know It
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d71d51fd
comment
The End of the World as We Know It: The final story arc is basically the story of the Apocalypse set in Rat-Man's world.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d71d51fd
featureApplicability
1.0
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_d71d51fd
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_da0eeab5
type
Breakout Character
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_da0eeab5
comment
Breakout Character: Corn Man, a giant humanoid ear of corn, was an enemy of Rat-Man who appeared in the comics for a grand total of one panel. In the cartoon he becomes the villain of an entire episode.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_da0eeab5
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_da0eeab5
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_dcbe8a6e
type
Chekhov's Gunman
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_dcbe8a6e
comment
Chekhov's Gunman: The Incredible Ik, Aima, and the woman that looked like Thea who called Denam "father" and suggested him Thea's name, only appeared briefly, but the final story arc brings them back and reveal the truth: Aima is the mysterious woman, Denam's real daughter and Rat-Man's real One True Love, but their memories of each other were wiped out by Denam and Kalissa to set up a weapon against the Shadow for when it would possess Rat-Man, and Ik is the personification of Rat-Man's love for Aima who emerged after the memory wipe.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_dcbe8a6e
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1.0
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_dcbe8a6e
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e01c3d03
type
Black Comedy Animal Cruelty
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e01c3d03
comment
Black Comedy Animal Cruelty: In the "Yellow" storyline we discover that Rat-Man's stress relieving activities include throwing chicks against a wall with a tennis racket and beating pandas with a baseball bat.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e01c3d03
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e01c3d03
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e16fb8ca
type
Hero Killer
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e16fb8ca
comment
In a later story, Valker muses on the many superheroes he killed, all of which either believed themselves bulletproof or believed he wouldn't shoot. Then he remembers the one who carried a shield... And wonders why the hell he threw it (Valker shot him, and then took the Captain America-like shield as a trophy).
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e16fb8ca
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e16fb8ca
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e34400ab
type
Ambiguously Gay
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e34400ab
comment
Ambiguously Gay: Jorgensson, Janus Valker’s right-hand man. He is eventually revealed as being gay and deeply in love with his boss, to the point of sacrificing his life to save him from Hell. As Ortolani would say, even in Rat-Man’s world, All Girls Want Bad Boys…
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e34400ab
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e34400ab
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e39638a1
type
Turncoat
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e39638a1
comment
Turn Coat: At some point in time, The Wolf, one of the members of the “First Secret Squad�, joined the Government Conspiracy that wanted to replace the Secret Squad with another under their control. It is also implied that it is him who actually killed the other members.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e39638a1
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e39638a1
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5120d
type
The Igor
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5120d
comment
The Igor: Janus Valker's assistant, Jorgesson, is a faithful and competent scientist who serves his boss with loyalty and abnegation. It is stated several times that he is one of the few people Valker cares for, and the only one he tolerates after embracing the shadow.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5120d
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5120d
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5421161
type
Expy
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5421161
comment
Expy: During his adventures Rat-Man meets many transparent expies of superheroes, such as "L'uomo con il costume da ragno" ("The Man in the Spider Outfit"). Justified by the fact that the times of real superheroes are over, and those are people without powers inspired by the heroes of times past. It is maybe something of an homage to the Golden and Silver eras of superheroes, it's not really that clear. Aldo of Jason, in Venerdì 12. But only in his appearance. The "New Superheroes" arc features Ironcrash Wallclimber, Zoth, Captain Battle, the DNA-Men, and others.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5421161
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e5421161
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e563bf09
type
Insistent Terminology
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e563bf09
comment
Insistent Terminology: Valker does not like to be called "granpa".
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e563bf09
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1.0
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e563bf09
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e563bf09
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e567510d
type
Determinator
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e567510d
comment
Determinator: For God's sake, if you are between Janus Valker and whatever he may want, JUST STEP ASIDE! Even Rat-Man can be one sometimes: as the saying goes, like father, like son
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e567510d
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1.0
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_e567510d
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_eb7c34cf
type
Crossover
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_eb7c34cf
comment
Crossover: Back when Rat-Man was still little more than a fanzine, Rat-Man met various well-known characters such as Spider-Man and Doctor Doom (who he drove into madness, supervillainy and believing it was all Richards' fault). Later, he started to meet only expies of comic book heroes, but there were some cross-overs with Italian characters such as Erinni and Lazarus Ledd.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_eb7c34cf
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type
Hidden Buxom
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f0e0e894
comment
Hidden Buxom: Parodied in a story with the top model Jessica Lovebol: she has some visibly large breasts, but when she loses her bikini bra they're revealed as large as the entire beach.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f0e0e894
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f0e0e894
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f1d6144a
type
War Is Hell
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f1d6144a
comment
War Is Hell: Played surprisingly straight in the "Rat" storyline, a ferocious satire of the developed countries' indifference to the plight of people living in war-torn Third-World countries. Rat-Man and his friends buy a package holiday to visit Eutanésia, a developing country ravaged by a terrible civil war (the civil war being the main tourist attraction of the country!). Naturally, as soon as they get there, their own stupidity and ignorance of the local situation get them in horrible trouble. Meanwhile, in a parallel universe, Rat-Man has become a sociopathic mercenary, who is starting to question his life choices. And the two stories seem strangely to converge...
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f1d6144a
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f7f82197
type
Comically Missing the Point
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f7f82197
comment
Comically Missingthe Point: Lots of. The most hilarious ones usually involve Brakko and the fact that he is completely oblivious to his wife's blatant infidelity and unbelievable promiscuity, even if she is sleeping with one (or more) of her many lovers when he is in the same home or even when he is in the SAME BED. And even "his" 2-years old son seems to know the truth, as he regularly refers to the postman as "daddy".
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f7f82197
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f91d1d4f
type
Darkest Hour
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f91d1d4f
comment
Darkest Hour: You probably may take a hint from the fact that there is a storyline with this very name...
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f91d1d4f
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: There are some, such as Cinzia Otherside's desire to marry Rat-Man and the Chuck Norris Facts being treated as reality.
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book) / int_f9f2c33
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Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Ratman1989
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 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Comic Books of the 1980s / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Cringe Comedy / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Cuckold Horns / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Dogfaces / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Faceship / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Failure Hero / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Go Through Me / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Heart in the Wrong Place / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Hidden Buxom / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Historical Character Confusion / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Hitchhiker's Leg / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Hollywood Jehovah's Witness / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Hope Bringer / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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HULK MASH!-Up / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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I Ate WHAT?! / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Jerkass Has a Point / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Knocking on Heathens' Door / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Latex Perfection / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Let No Crisis Go to Waste / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Magicians Are Wizards / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Mama's Baby, Papa's Maybe / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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N-Word Privileges / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Planet Eater / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Pocket Protector / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Politically Incorrect Hero / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Practically Joker / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Precision-Guided Boomerang / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Racist Grandma / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Rape, Pillage, and Burn / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Revenge Is a Dish Best Served / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Screw the Rules, I'm Beautiful! / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Seven Minute Lull / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Shoot the Dog / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Slower Than a Snail / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Spider-Man Send-Up / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Summon Bigger Fish / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Super Zeroes / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Superhuman Transfusion / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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The Antichrist / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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The Burlesque of Venus / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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The Dog Was the Mastermind / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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The Monolith / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Think of the Censors! / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Think of the Children! / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Throwing Your Shield Always Works / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Toilet Paper Substitute / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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Vagina Dentata / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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War Is Hell / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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What Do You Mean, It's for Kids? / int_e92b62ba
 Rat-Man (1989) (Comic Book)
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You Wouldn't Shoot Me / int_e92b62ba