...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
The Cowl
- 381 statements
- 72 feature instances
- 82 referencing feature instances
The Cowl | type |
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The Cowl | comment |
In the dead of night, an innocent's scream pierces through the darkness. The laughter of the wicked echoes through the streets, and with the click of a gun being cocked it seems that evil will take the life of yet another. But, all of a sudden, there is movement in the shadows. The alleys fill with smoke as the silhouette of a mysterious interloper rushes towards the would-be murderer. In a moment, the tides turn, as swift and severe punishment is meted out to the unjust. Suddenly finding their life saved, the grateful citizen looks to find their savior, only to find merely a passing shadow, gone just as quick as it appeared. Yet another tale of the night, a tale that leaves criminals looking over their shoulder in search of the shadowy phantom whose swift justice is as mysterious as it is indomitable. A hero who is always ahead of his quarry, and who never fails to arrive when help is needed, coming from the shadows, turning the monsters' own fears against them. The Cowl is The Cape with a dark twist and typically on the cynical side on the Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism. Instead of adventuring in the daylight and showing themselves for the glory of the protected, they stick to the shadows of the night where evil lurks and prey on the fears of their quarry. The Cowl tends to be a Non-Powered Costumed Hero, their greatest assets being wit and psychological tactics, but if they do have powers, they tend to be related to darkness, ghosts, or some kind of sufficiently-creepy animal, such as wolves, bats, corvids, snakes, spiders, or others. Basically, The Cape protects the innocent, while The Cowl punishes the wicked. See also Dark Is Not Evil and Anti-Hero. A common motif for the Proto-Superhero, particularly those originating in Depression-era pulp fiction. Compare and contrast with The Cape. Sub-trope of Terror Hero. Compare Batman Parody, which is a more direct parody of the Trope Codifier, Batman, and thus uses many elements of this trope. Example: |
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The Cowl | processingComment |
Dropped link to AceAttorneyInvestigations: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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The Cowl | processingUnknown |
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The Cowl | isPartOf |
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The Cowl / int_10b03dcf | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_10b03dcf | comment |
Batman: Arkham Asylum Taken further in the sequel Arkham City, particularly in the side mission which essentially allows you to do a variation of the trope description by swooping in to save innocent people being threatened by thugs and then swooping away again once the bad guy's been taken down. |
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The Cowl / int_10b03dcf | featureApplicability |
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Batman: Arkham Asylum (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_12300cc3 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_12300cc3 | comment |
Rorschach in Watchmen is a particularly brutal take on this, given the comic's Deconstructor Fleet nature. While he used to be part of a fairly stable team with Nite Owl, by the series' present he has no life outside crime-fighting, considers his mask to be his real face, and is known to have thrown a masochistic "supervillain" down an elevator shaft. | |
The Cowl / int_12300cc3 | featureApplicability |
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Watchmen (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_12b2b8a6 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_12b2b8a6 | comment |
David Dunn from Unbreakable is an example of this trope applied to a somewhat realistic setting. Though he does have superpowers, Dunn wears a cowl-like poncho as part of his "costume", uses violence to save innocents, and has difficult family issues to boot. | |
The Cowl / int_12b2b8a6 | featureApplicability |
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Unbreakable | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_1331990c | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_1331990c | comment |
Puella Magi Madoka Magica applies this to Magical Girls. This is especially true of Homura, whose mysteriousness and Stealth Hi/Bye antics make her Batman-esque even to other magical girls. While all the magical girls with the arguable exception of Madoka display this to varying extents, the most stark example is Sayaka, as she is the most clear-cut example of The Cape (with an actual cape) who slides towards this trope as the reality of her idealistic wish bears down on her soul. Then she slides past it into Fallen Hero when she becomes a Witch. The series spends the most amount of time on her journey. |
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The Cowl / int_1331990c | featureApplicability |
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Puella Magi Madoka Magica | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_154ec5c9 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_154ec5c9 | comment |
The Green Hornet, prowling the night of his home city, was even believed by all but a trusted few to be a member of the underworld himself. | |
The Cowl / int_154ec5c9 | featureApplicability |
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The Green Hornet (Radio) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_15d1f0fd | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_15d1f0fd | comment |
X-23 takes after her daddy, and was mostly this when she was first introduced into the main X-books. For an unknown amount of time she was quietly operating in rough neighborhoods killing thugs and pimps terrorizing the locals, which brought her to Wolverine's attention (maybe. The timeline is screwy) when the reports of "parallel knife wounds" implicated him in the killings. By the time she joined the New X-Men she even scared her own teammates. However Character Development has changed her methods significantly, and by the time of All-New Wolverine she's bordering on becoming The Cape, if she hasn't done so already. | |
The Cowl / int_15d1f0fd | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_15d1f0fd | featureConfidence |
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X-23 (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_1b56abaa | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_1b56abaa | comment |
Champions Online has the Night Avenger archetype, which is based largely on Nighthawk, the Champions-verse's resident Batman expy. | |
The Cowl / int_1b56abaa | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_1b56abaa | featureConfidence |
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Champions Online (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_1fbed42a | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_1fbed42a | comment |
Moon Knight, a rare version that wears all white, because, unlike most cowled heroes, he wants to be seen coming by his enemies. | |
The Cowl / int_1fbed42a | featureApplicability |
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Moon Knight / Comicbook | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_22147342 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_22147342 | comment |
Green Arrow in Arrow, too; this is more notable during crossovers with The Flash. In Season 4 Qliver makes a conscious effort to become The Cape, changing his costume slightly and presenting himself as the "Green Arrow", but his efforts to change his image aren't always successful. | |
The Cowl / int_22147342 | featureApplicability |
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Arrow | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_2232f584 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_2232f584 | comment |
The Shadow is the other candidate for Trope Codifier of the modern version of this trope. Man of mystery? Check. Creature of the night? Check. The Dreaded to criminals? Double check. (While he debuted on radio as a narrator of an anthology series, his career as a protagonist actually began in Pulp Magazine literature of the day.) | |
The Cowl / int_2232f584 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_2232f584 | featureConfidence |
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The Shadow | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_2232f584 | |
The Cowl / int_22a75349 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_22a75349 | comment |
The Spider was directly and almost immediately inspired by the Shadow. His usual disguise, a weird amalgam of the Shadow's nose, Dracula's fangs and Igor's hunchback, was enough to unnerve most criminals on its own. The fact that he was more bloodthirsty than the Shadow or possibly even Rorschach made him even more The Dreaded. | |
The Cowl / int_22a75349 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_22a75349 | featureConfidence |
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TheSpider | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_24e41891 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_24e41891 | comment |
An in-universe comic book cast the mysterious mass-murderer Dexter as one of these: The "Dark Defender". | |
The Cowl / int_24e41891 | featureApplicability |
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Dexter | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_24e41891 | |
The Cowl / int_25818ae2 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_25818ae2 | comment |
Sting has shades of this following his change from Malibu Sting to Crow Sting- the black clothing, billowing trenchcoat, sudden dramatic appearances (either suddenly after the arena lights go out, or descending from the rafters in Batman-like fashion) and general Dark Is Not Evil aesthetic definitely evoke this trope. | |
The Cowl / int_25818ae2 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_25818ae2 | featureConfidence |
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Sting (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_2e849915 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_2e849915 | comment |
The spinoff My Hero Academia: Vigilantes has Knuckle Duster, a non-powered vigilante whose outlaw status means that he operates from the shadows. | |
The Cowl / int_2e849915 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_2e849915 | featureConfidence |
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My Hero Academia: Vigilantes (Manga) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_2e849915 | |
The Cowl / int_3106477d | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_3106477d | comment |
When The Phantom (the name is telling) is after a group of bad guys, there will typically be someone around to tell them about the legend of the Ghost Who Walks, the Man Who Cannot Die. Just when they dismiss it as nonsense, they start noticing members of their group turn up knocked out or having been attacked and questioned by a mysterious masked figure, with an ominous skull symbol (of the Ghost Who Walks!) where they were punched. He always disappears when they go after him, but if they try to victimise an innocent, he will be sure to show up to whisk them away unseen or reveal himself and kick arse. By the time he reveals himself to the last or leading villains, they're liable to be a bunch of nerves. Most good guys he saves will be left wondering who the heck that was (but agreeing that he was awesome). | |
The Cowl / int_3106477d | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_3106477d | featureConfidence |
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The Phantom (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_3106477d | |
The Cowl / int_34d050c6 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_34d050c6 | comment |
As the page quote shows, Darkwing Duck qualifies. He's kind of a variant, though, being a teensy bit of a Glory Hound in addition to the required traits of being shadowy and mysterious. Then again, he's an Affectionate Parody of this concept anyway. | |
The Cowl / int_34d050c6 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_34d050c6 | featureConfidence |
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Darkwing Duck | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_34d050c6 | |
The Cowl / int_40d22fb4 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_40d22fb4 | comment |
The Mutant Underground setting for Heroes Unlimited has Warhawk, a nocturnal vigilante who keeps the streets of his territory safe by terrorizing and beating up criminals and anti-mutant bigots. Evildoers in the region fearfully dub him the Demon of the Night and attribute all sorts of powers to him that he doesn't actually possess. While he isn't a typical Non-Powered Costumed Hero, he primarily Fights Like a Normal and has a Batman-esque arsenal of gadgets tucked away in various parts of his costume. | |
The Cowl / int_40d22fb4 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_40d22fb4 | featureConfidence |
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Heroes Unlimited (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_40d22fb4 | |
The Cowl / int_453a04b0 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_453a04b0 | comment |
"Catman" in The Fairly Oddparents is another obvious parody. They even hired Adam West to do the voice. | |
The Cowl / int_453a04b0 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_453a04b0 | featureConfidence |
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The Fairly OddParents! | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_453a04b0 | |
The Cowl / int_4661316a | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_4661316a | comment |
Spanish TV show �guila Roja (Red Eagle) set in 17th century Spain. | |
The Cowl / int_4661316a | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_4661316a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Águila Roja | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_4661316a | |
The Cowl / int_46f0352c | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_46f0352c | comment |
Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows! | |
The Cowl / int_46f0352c | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_46f0352c | featureConfidence |
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The Shadow (Radio) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_46f0352c | |
The Cowl / int_533d613f | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_533d613f | comment |
There's also the Mistress of Mystery, who's a character in the Silver Shroud plays. In Fallout 76, it's shown that her actress actually donned the persona herself after the bombs fell to become a vigilante using all the skills she learned for the role, and soon started a militia of women with similar skills and training. | |
The Cowl / int_533d613f | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_533d613f | featureConfidence |
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Fallout 76 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_533d613f | |
The Cowl / int_56d5d9cc | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_56d5d9cc | comment |
Black Lightning (2009): When inside Black Lightning, Dima dons a black hoodie to hide his identity. | |
The Cowl / int_56d5d9cc | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_56d5d9cc | featureConfidence |
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Black Lightning (2009) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_56d5d9cc | |
The Cowl / int_59bc4ced | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_59bc4ced | comment |
Zorro, the masked swashbuckler who fights for the indigenous peoples of his land against tyrannical officials and other villains, whose first appearance in 1919 makes him one of the longest-running examples of this trope. He is thought of as much more of a swashbuckler, especially in the Disney series, but in the original novels, he is much more The Cowl, especially to his opponents: a black-clad night-prowling outlaw with the boldness (and skill) to carve his initial into the property and, occasionally, persons of his opponents tended to inspire a certain amount of uneasiness. | |
The Cowl / int_59bc4ced | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_59bc4ced | featureConfidence |
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Zorro | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_59bc4ced | |
The Cowl / int_5ae0b268 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_5ae0b268 | comment |
Suicide dresses in full-body spandex, appears out of nowhere to save people with violence, goes on and on about his dark and mysterious past... despite not being billed as a Super Hero, he's(they're) probably the purest example of The Cowl in wrestling history. | |
The Cowl / int_5ae0b268 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_5ae0b268 | featureConfidence |
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TNA | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_5ae0b268 | |
The Cowl / int_5f89c8b8 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_5f89c8b8 | comment |
The Revenant in PS238 is a Non-Powered Costumed Hero with the mask, the gadgets, the ominous reputation, the rich background and a kid sidekick (Muggle Born of Mages Tyler) he puts in embarrassing amounts of danger. In fact, he turns out to be a minor deconstruction: The Revenant's methods has left him branded a rogue hero with an arrest warrant, and he is not recognized as an 'official' superhero by the U.S. government. This is because he's not a metahuman and has Views on 'traditional' superherodom, especially the part where certain metahumans are claiming monopoly on the role as humanity's protectors and look down on baseline humans solving the world's problems. | |
The Cowl / int_5f89c8b8 | featureApplicability |
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PS238 (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_5f89c8b8 | |
The Cowl / int_68237790 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_68237790 | comment |
Pathfinder has an entire class, called the Vigilante, that's designed to emulate this trope, along with a handful of archetypes for other types of superheros. The iconic Vigilante, the Red Raven, seems to be a cross between Batman and Zorro. | |
The Cowl / int_68237790 | featureApplicability |
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Pathfinder (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_68237790 | |
The Cowl / int_69fa7496 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_69fa7496 | comment |
Disney Ducks Comic Universe: Donald Duck in his super-hero alter-ego, Paperinik. Sometimes played straight (especially in Paperinik New Adventures), sometimes as an Affectionate Parody, sometimes Played for Laughs, and sometimes all of the above-such as the time he visited a criminal from another town who planned to come to Duckburg and showed him a film with what he had done to some of his friends that had moved to Duckburg. | |
The Cowl / int_69fa7496 | featureApplicability |
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Disney Ducks Comic Universe (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_69fa7496 | |
The Cowl / int_6abf16c2 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_6abf16c2 | comment |
In the Big Finish audioplay Night of the Whisper, the titular vigilante prowls the streets of 23rd century New Vegas, meting out deadly justice, while whispering "Justice will be served!" He also wasn't particular about making sure no innocents get hurt and kills anyone in his way. The Whisper's main target is Cyrus Wolfsbane, the mafioso running most of New Vegas (who also happens to be a wolfman), who is untouched by the law due to deep-set corruption in the New Vegas government and police. The Whisper is covered in a cloak head to toe, and his hands pulse with a powerful energy that he uses to kill. He also uses a grappling hook to get around the city. The Whisper then starts attacking people for minor offenses, such as spray painting a wall. The Doctor eventually discovers the true identity of the Whisper: the combined corpses of the daughter of a cop named James McNeil (killed when she confronted Wolfsbane about her boyfriend's death) and a cybernetic Star Marshal, whose ship crashed near the city. The combined zombie-cyborg person became a justice-obsessed vigilante. | |
The Cowl / int_6abf16c2 | featureApplicability |
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Big Finish Doctor Who (Audio Play) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_6abf16c2 | |
The Cowl / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Multiple editions of Dungeons & Dragons have offered The Cowl-flavored character kits, prestige classes, and other PC-builds, most often for the thief/rogue or ranger classes. | |
The Cowl / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
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Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_6ac55ec7 | |
The Cowl / int_6c6b89db | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_6c6b89db | comment |
Ironically, Supergirl -who is one of the classic examples of The Cape and cousin of THE Cape- used to be like this back in the Silver Age. Before Superman revealed her existence to the world she secretly patrolled the small town of Midvale at night, trying not to get caught while she stopped crimes and saved people. Midvale locals rumored that they were protected by a "guardian angel". | |
The Cowl / int_6c6b89db | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_6c6b89db | featureConfidence |
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Supergirl / Comicbook | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_6c6b89db | |
The Cowl / int_6f734712 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_6f734712 | comment |
In Smallville, Green Arrow is the Cowl to Clark's Cape. In the episode "Vengeance", Andrea Rojas aka "the Angel of Vengeance". Unlike Green Arrow, who was a recurring character before becoming a main character, she only appeared in one episode. |
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The Cowl / int_6f734712 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_6f734712 | featureConfidence |
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Smallville | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_6f734712 | |
The Cowl / int_7291539d | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7291539d | comment |
Taken further in the sequel Arkham City, particularly in the side mission which essentially allows you to do a variation of the trope description by swooping in to save innocent people being threatened by thugs and then swooping away again once the bad guy's been taken down. | |
The Cowl / int_7291539d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_7291539d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman: Arkham City (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7291539d | |
The Cowl / int_7668653a | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7668653a | comment |
Garrus Vakarian in Mass Effect 2, who in the two years between the games has become his universe's equivalent of Batman, as a vigilante on Omega known as "Archangel". Paragon Shepard can curb the more extreme tendencies he's picked up, during his loyalty mission, pointing out that Garrus is very close to becoming one the monsters he's fighting. | |
The Cowl / int_7668653a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_7668653a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Mass Effect 2 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7668653a | |
The Cowl / int_76c01b30 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_76c01b30 | comment |
V is an especially antiheroic version of one of these, fighting a fascist government that has taken over Britain using quite terroristic methods himself, such as bombs. He rocks the fedora and Guy Fawkes mask, and does the swishy black cape thing quite well. | |
The Cowl / int_76c01b30 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_76c01b30 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
V for Vendetta (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_76c01b30 | |
The Cowl / int_7cf0865 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7cf0865 | comment |
On The Flash (1990), Nightshade is a retired ex-Cowl from the 1950s. He helps the Flash confront a villain from his era who'd cryogenically frozen himself for forty years. | |
The Cowl / int_7cf0865 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_7cf0865 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Flash (1990) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7cf0865 | |
The Cowl / int_7d7fbcc | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7d7fbcc | comment |
Daredevil, who is in many ways the closest Marvel analogue to Batman. Matt Murdock even Fights Like a Normal because his main superpower is basically a compensation for the sight that he lost. | |
The Cowl / int_7d7fbcc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_7d7fbcc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Daredevil / Comicbook | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7d7fbcc | |
The Cowl / int_7ea098dd | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7ea098dd | comment |
In The Glass Scientists, this is what fellow Society members believe Hyde to be. | |
The Cowl / int_7ea098dd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_7ea098dd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Glass Scientists (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7ea098dd | |
The Cowl / int_7f5bc680 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_7f5bc680 | comment |
The Silver Shroud from the Fallout universe, who is an expy of the Shadow. In Fallout 4, the Sole Survivor can take on the role of the Shroud and mete out deadly justice to several of Goodneighbor's scumbags, ultimately culminating in taking down a vicious raider leader in an abandoned hospital. There's also the Mistress of Mystery, who's a character in the Silver Shroud plays. In Fallout 76, it's shown that her actress actually donned the persona herself after the bombs fell to become a vigilante using all the skills she learned for the role, and soon started a militia of women with similar skills and training. |
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Fallout | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_7f5bc680 | |
The Cowl / int_8125b468 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_8125b468 | comment |
Both DC and Marvel have released role playing and table top games based off their comics, so yes, it is possible to play as Batman. | |
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The Cowl / int_841c3312 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_841c3312 | comment |
The Avenger, Richard Benson, was a 30's and 40's pulp hero brought to you by the same folks who published The Shadow and Doc Savage. The latter were, respectively, The Cowl and The Cape of their label. Mr. Benson was somewhere between the two; in terms of cynicism and aversion to killing, much closer to Doc, but in terms of method very much closer to the Shadow. | |
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The Avenger | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_87cf8985 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_87cf8985 | comment |
Champions has the Dark Champions setting with extensive rules and suggestions for building street-level super heroes. | |
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Champions (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_87cf8985 | |
The Cowl / int_89f4bc45 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_89f4bc45 | comment |
The Undertaker can have shades of this, as a face at least. Normally when he does save someone it's because he's feuding with the other wrestler. He can appear suddenly after the lights in the arena go black for a few seconds and come back on again to the sound of his gong. | |
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The Undertaker (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_89f4bc45 | |
The Cowl / int_8a95c055 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_8a95c055 | comment |
Blackwolf in Soon I Will Be Invincible is a combination of Wolverine and Batman. Boasts that he can beat pretty much any super-powered hero or villain, and many agree that he can. He's on the autism spectrum, which is why he's so meticulous. | |
The Cowl / int_8a95c055 | featureApplicability |
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The Cowl / int_8a95c055 | |
The Cowl / int_917970a2 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_917970a2 | comment |
From Stormwatch and The Authority, Midnighter, who is so rarely seen out of his cowl that no two artists have ever been able to agree on what colour his hair is (which is explained away by admitting that he likes to dye his hair). His husband and crime-fighting partner Apollo very much plays The Cape, though he can be just as ruthless as Midnighter. | |
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Stormwatch (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_917970a2 | |
The Cowl / int_960062b7 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_960062b7 | comment |
Shota Aizawa, the homeroom teacher of Class 1-A from My Hero Academia, is also known as "Eraser Head", an underground hero that operates at night and generally avoids the press. Unfortunately, the Cowl method means he ends up not being as well-known as most professional heroes. The spinoff My Hero Academia: Vigilantes has Knuckle Duster, a non-powered vigilante whose outlaw status means that he operates from the shadows. |
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The Cowl / int_998cbda3 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_998cbda3 | comment |
Even more than in the comics, Daredevil (2015) embodies this trope in the Netflix series. His first media tag, "The Devil of Hell's Kitchen," is inspired by the mystery, violence, and outright fear surrounding his exploits. | |
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Daredevil (2015) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_998cbda3 | |
The Cowl / int_acb05906 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_acb05906 | comment |
The Leopard from Lime Street strangely falls into this role despite being a thirteen year old boy and a Spider-Man Send-Up based in the UK. He's a Terror Hero with a Superpowered Evil Side who uses ambush tactics against criminals at night while occasionally being mistaken for some sort of leopard monster due to his costume and abilities. | |
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The Cowl / int_acb05906 | |
The Cowl / int_adfba5c8 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_adfba5c8 | comment |
Stealth from Ex-Heroes is am Expy of Batman. | |
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The Cowl / int_adfba5c8 | |
The Cowl / int_b1cacc28 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_b1cacc28 | comment |
Part of the plot of Glass (2019), the distant sequel, is that Dunn's mentor Elijah is unhappy that Dunn chose to be The Cowl instead of The Cape. Elijah wants to prove to the world that superheroes are real, so he puts his Diabolical Mastermind skills to use and teams up with the Horde to force Dunn into a very public superpowered showdown. | |
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Glass (2019) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_b1cacc28 | |
The Cowl / int_b2165525 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_b2165525 | comment |
Blade (1998): In the rave sequence at the nightclub, blood rains down from the ceiling, and it's revealed that everyone except the poor innocent human lured to the dance is a bestial vampire. The lone human flees in panic — and runs smack into the film's titular silent, stoic, hate-filled, murderous vigilante. Thankfully, he's a good vampire. | |
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Blade (1998) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_b2165525 | |
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The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_b8c4fbbc | comment |
in Tales of an Mazing Girl: NightHawk, The Flame and Knife Girl are all this — and all seem to be very different examples of this from a Street Level Bruiser, to a Masked Avenger, to a Demonic Presence. | |
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The Cowl / int_bcadd7cb | comment |
Warhammer 40,000: Primarchs Corvus Corax ended up leading the the slave miners of his homeworld in an insurgency against their overlords, and passed on those skills of stealth and asymmetrical warfare when he was given command of the Raven Guard legion, resulting in an army of uncannily sneaky hulking armored Super Soldiers. Konrad Kurze, aka the Night Haunter, is a darker take on Batman - he turned his Wretched Hive home planet into a law-abiding community by personally hunting down and butchering every criminal on it, uniting the populace in mortal terror. His legion went renegade, and today the Night Lords are among the most dreaded foes the Imperium faces. Unfortunately, when he left the planet went right back to its old ways, and realizing this is part of why he fell in the first place. |
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The Cowl / int_bcadd7cb | |
The Cowl / int_bcea8f7c | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_bcea8f7c | comment |
The Freedom City setting for Mutants & Masterminds has The Raven, and his daughter, Raven II, homages to Batman and The Huntress, respectively. And Graywing (Golden Age Batman), Black Wing I (Silver Age Batman) and Black Wing II (Modern Age Batman/Nightwing) in the Halt Evil Doer!! setting for same. |
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The Cowl / int_bcea8f7c | |
The Cowl / int_c0f8022c | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_c0f8022c | comment |
One episode of Disney's Hercules: The Animated Series featured Theseus as The Cowl, in contrast with Herc being The Cape. | |
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Hercules: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_c0f8022c | |
The Cowl / int_c25176c5 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_c25176c5 | comment |
Gary Karkofsky in The Supervillainy Saga is a Bunny-Ears Lawyer version of this, being a Ringwraith-looking sorcerer with a quirky sense of humor. He inherited his magical cloak from a more traditional one called the Nightwalker. His wife, Mandy, also becomes one of these after she becomes a vampire. It also fits the two Nightwalkers who are the setting's versions of Batman. | |
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The Supervillainy Saga | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_c25176c5 | |
The Cowl / int_c36031ac | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_c36031ac | comment |
Level Up Hero has Crow-Man who is like Batman but he has shadow crows and more emotional than the usually logical Batman. | |
The Cowl / int_c36031ac | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Cowl / int_c36031ac | featureConfidence |
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Level Up Hero | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_c36031ac | |
The Cowl / int_c75d67d | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_c75d67d | comment |
John Reese of Person of Interest fulfills this role, at least from the perspective of those he rescues. In actuality, he receives the social security number of a person about to be involved in a violent crime, and so it is a bit more premeditated than it appears. | |
The Cowl / int_c75d67d | featureApplicability |
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Person of Interest | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_c75d67d | |
The Cowl / int_ca3f8762 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_ca3f8762 | comment |
The Pulp Magazines threw up some crucial early examples: The Shadow is the other candidate for Trope Codifier of the modern version of this trope. Man of mystery? Check. Creature of the night? Check. The Dreaded to criminals? Double check. (While he debuted on radio as a narrator of an anthology series, his career as a protagonist actually began in Pulp Magazine literature of the day.) The Spider was directly and almost immediately inspired by the Shadow. His usual disguise, a weird amalgam of the Shadow's nose, Dracula's fangs and Igor's hunchback, was enough to unnerve most criminals on its own. The fact that he was more bloodthirsty than the Shadow or possibly even Rorschach made him even more The Dreaded. The Avenger, Richard Benson, was a 30's and 40's pulp hero brought to you by the same folks who published The Shadow and Doc Savage. The latter were, respectively, The Cowl and The Cape of their label. Mr. Benson was somewhere between the two; in terms of cynicism and aversion to killing, much closer to Doc, but in terms of method very much closer to the Shadow. |
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Pulp Magazine | hasFeature |
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The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_cf3e7a82 | comment |
Even more surprisingly, Superman himself started out like this back in the Golden Age before his later evolution into the definitive Cape: he was a feared urban legend and a vigilante who mercilessly beat thugs, crooks and wife abusers and cowed corrupt politicians and businessmen. He was pragmatic and harsh, he caught criminals by surprise and left as soon as he solved the situation. | |
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Superman (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_d294048 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_d294048 | comment |
Red Panda Adventures: The Red Panda, homage of radio-era heroes like the Shadow and Green Hornet, is a Cowl that manages to retain a sense of idealism described by creator and voice actor Gregg Taylor as a cross between Orson Welles and Adam West's Batman. When not pretending to be a clueless rich guy, the Red Panda, alongside his sidekick, later partner, later wife the Flying Squirrel, patrols the dark and shadowy places of Toronto, bringing terror to the hearts of criminals who would prey on people during the Depression. While not inherently superpowered, the Red Panda is a master hypnotist and Gadgeteer Genius who uses those skills and more to great effect to seem as a phantom to the city's criminal underworld. | |
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Red Panda Adventures (Podcast) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_d69208d2 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_d69208d2 | comment |
After having to retire from the Kids Next Door due to a technicality, Tommy begins to dress like The Shadow and attempts to reinvent himself as one of these. | |
The Cowl / int_d69208d2 | featureApplicability |
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Codename: Kids Next Door | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_d69208d2 | |
The Cowl / int_d9c602eb | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_d9c602eb | comment |
South Park spoofed this in an episode where Eric Cartman becomes a vigilante called The Coon but no one pays attention to anything he does and in later episodes he straight-up becomes a Villain Protagonist. Played semi-straight with The Coon's rival, Mysterion (AKA Kenny McCormick). | |
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South Park | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_ddad77ae | comment |
Astro City The Confessor is the most famous example, being an Expy for Batman who easily surpasses him in all major skills — he fights off crowds of thugs without effort, avoids gunfire at point-blank range, intimidates everyone with his piercing gaze, is never seen in daylight hours, and has such mastery of the Stealth Hi/Bye that he's never been caught on film or camera. That's because he's a vampire. Implied with Black Rapier; he appears to be Batman with fencing, or perhaps a Captain Ersatz Zorro. Other characters have referred to him as a detective. During his Darker and Edgier phase, the Street Angel adopted this role, stalking the criminals of the night and fighting them with steel-core halos and throwing knives. |
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Astro City (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_ddad77ae | |
The Cowl / int_de397872 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_de397872 | comment |
NightHaunt, in In Hero Years, I'm Dead. Too bad, he's also the big bad | |
The Cowl / int_de397872 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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In Hero Years, I'm Dead | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_de397872 | |
The Cowl / int_dfe1eef5 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_dfe1eef5 | comment |
Anita and Edward from Anita Blake can make all minor and most moderate supernaturals shit bricks by simple introduction. Well, they have probably the highest body count of all kill..., ergh, executioners of preternatural criminals. | |
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Anita Blake | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_dfe1eef5 | |
The Cowl / int_e7410020 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_e7410020 | comment |
Maidman from Empowered, an expy/ loving parody of Batman, epitomises this trope perfectly except for one thing: he fights crime while wearing a skimpy French maid's outfit, complete with frilly panties. As a consequence, he is particularly feared by bad guys, both for his sheer badassery and because he is often believed to be a sexual deviant. He comments that dressing in frilly women's clothes is a lot less perverse than going around dressed as a giant bat. | |
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The Cowl / int_e7410020 | |
The Cowl / int_e8f01abf | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_e8f01abf | comment |
Spawn is one of the ultimate examples of the Cowl aside from Batman himself, a commando and assassin who is brought back to serve The Legions of Hell, but pulls a Faustian Rebellion to save the people he loves. You better believe his "necroflesh" body suit is intimidating as hell to any bad guys he faces. | |
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The Cowl / int_e8f01abf | |
The Cowl / int_e936047a | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_e936047a | comment |
Monkey Man in Hey Arnold! is a comedic example of this. | |
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Hey Arnold! | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_e936047a | |
The Cowl / int_f3368832 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_f3368832 | comment |
Buffyverse: Angel in early episodes of Buffy and his own series. At least in spirit since his wardrobe is more of a Badass Longcoat Subverted in the final season, when he becomes CEO of Wolfram and Hart, and they tried to turn this sort of heroism into photo opportunities. He didn't try again. Subverted on other occasions as well. At one point, he leapt heroically into the wrong car. ("City Of...") |
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Buffyverse | hasFeature |
The Cowl / int_f3368832 | |
The Cowl / int_f7d93e4a | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_f7d93e4a | comment |
Both Altaïr and Ezio from the Assassin's Creed games have elements of this, albeit in a period setting. While primarily assassins (albeit, ones with heroic motivations and objectives), both are also acute sufferers of Chronic Hero Syndrome, and have no problem dealing with city guards assaulting young women/psycho's threatening to slice up the local prostitutes, etc. Both even wear cowls as part of their costumes. Later protagonists Connor and Edward Kenway have some of the same elements (both are cowl-clad heroes who use stealthy tactics), but don't really match the trope completely due to their adventures generally not taking place in the sort of shadowy urban setting typical of The Cowl. Connor in particular has very Cape-like characteristics, being less concerned with the classic cloak and dagger operations of past assassins, and especially in his interactions with the Homestead. |
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The Cowl / int_f7d93e4a | |
The Cowl / int_fa5e90fd | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_fa5e90fd | comment |
You can play this character archetype in City of Heroes. Through playing as a Vigilante, especially one of the Stalker Archetype. One of these beating a basic mob in the progress of robbing a civilian is practically a re-hash of the Cold Open above. |
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City of Heroes (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The Cowl / int_fa738078 | type |
The Cowl | |
The Cowl / int_fa738078 | comment |
Tuxedo Mask in Sailor Moon begins as such, often popping out of the shadows to save Sailor Moon from an attack, then disappearing back into the shadows after she defeats the enemy. As his character progresses he starts gaining more aspects of The Cape as well. | |
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The Cowl / int_fa738078 |
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