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Wouldn't I make a great ventriloquist? My lips never move.
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A character whose mouth is not depicted because they lack one or it is otherwise obscured. When used in same vein as obscured eyes, it can create an expressionless and enigmatic character. This can be compensated by fleshing out other aspects of the character, such as giving the character unique vocal inflections (i.e., a really good voice actor) or subtle physical animations other characters would not get. Sometimes this is done for artistic reasons to call attention to something in the background that would otherwise not pull attention.
More economically, it makes animation (and especially dubbing) much easier. Lately seen as a cheap and dated trick.
This is even occasionally a role with animal mascots where the more 'realistic' pet doesn't move their mouth when speaking; dialogue is hard to sync when your talker can't actually make proper faces.
If the character doesn't have any facial features, they're The Blank.
Does not always count in Superhero shows, as obscuring masks are canonically common accessories from comic book. Not to be confused with Wipe That Smile Off Your Face, which is much more Nightmare Fuel-y, nor with Harlan Ellison's story I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream. Contrast Too Many Mouths.
Anime and Manga[]
- Douma from Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba loses his mouth when he talks too much during the Upper Moons' meeting at the start of the Swordsmith Village Arc and Akaza loses his temper over it and punches him. Douma isn't fazed too much by his injury OR mouthlessness.
- Hotaru from Gakuen Alice tends to lose her mouth whenever she does her half lidded eyes stare at Mikan.
- Samurai Deeper Kyo has the anime-only White-Haired Pretty Boy Migeira, who wears a no-mouth mask all the time. Nobody knows why.
- Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha's character Arf, (a slightly goofy dog girl familiar), talked in dog form without moving her lips. When a similar but more serious familiar was introduced in the second season, they stopped doing this.
- Kakashi in Naruto keeps his mouth concealed behind a bandanna at all times, although being a ninja it isn't too odd(or at least it wouldn't be if he weren't literally the only character in the entire series[a series about ninjas] who does this).
- A lighter version of this is Shino, whose mouth is generally hidden behind the upturned collar of his jacket, save for one episode, "Shino Laughs".
- Also in the Third Hokage's funeral and the second Shippuden movie.
- And one panel of the manga.
- A lighter version of this is Shino, whose mouth is generally hidden behind the upturned collar of his jacket, save for one episode, "Shino Laughs".
- Dororo in Keroro Gunsou is similar, which unfortunately gives him very little facial expression, given the simplistic look of the alien frogs. Maybe that's why he's not popular...
- This is lampshaded in the dub, where the Interactive Narrator directly comments on how that makes dubbing into English much easier.
- Nova from Bleach does the same with a zippable mask which allows him to also conceal his eyes if he gets shy enough.
- Don't forget Tsubaki. He always wears a little Kakashiesque mask over the bottom half of his face, which makes him look very badass despite being six inches tall and having wings coming out of his butt.
- Sun-sun, one of Harribel's Fraccion, always hides her mouth behind one of her arms.
- There's one instance where her arm isn't covering her mouth, though, when she and her allies watch the Ichigo/Grimmjow battle from afar.
- Gendo Ikari from Neon Genesis Evangelion seems bound and determined to keep as much of his face obscured as possible — not only does he wear Scary Shiny Glasses, he's in the habit of folding his hands in front of his face whenever he sits at a table. Other characters have a strange compulsion to put clipboards or pieces of paper in front of their mouths whenever they speak.
- Don't forget about unnaturally long sips from beer cans.
- Noir usually obscures characters with whatever firearms they were using.
- Gali from Monster Rancher has a mouth, but is a part of the mask that represents the face and does not actually move when he talks.
- Satotsu, a minor character in Hunter X Hunter, has no mouth, even in the manga. He does, however, have a very nice moustache.
- In Fullmetal Alchemist Major Alex Louis Armstrong's mustache is so big that it covers his mouth.
- Except in the flashback to the Ishval massacre.
- Renamon's mouth was rarely visible, due to the angle of her head
- And in Digimon Adventure, Wizardmon's face is always covered except for about a second in a flash back and the film X-Evolution.
- Almost everyone in Desert Punk who fights has No Mouth because they're always wearing helmets. Lampshaded once when Kosuna told Rain Spider to watch his mouth and he replies "... my mouth's not shown."
- Nagato Yuki has a very small mouth. It's often invisible except when she's talking (which is very rare indeed). Makes it easier to show how she's an emotionally-repressed Artificial Human.
- Pictured above, Many characters from Requiem from the Darkness
- Ranma Half's Ryoga while in his cursed P-Chan form (a little black pig) his mouth isn't visible, except when he bites, eats, yawns, and sometimes when he screams.
Comic Books[]
- DC Comics' The Question deliberately invokes this, going so far as to wear a mask so that he doesn't even have a face.
- Rorschach, from Alan Moore's Watchmen, has his entire face obscured when in costume, under normal circumstances. However, he considers the Rorschach test mask to be his face.
- The mutant Jonothon Starsmore/Chamber communicates telepathically and has the lower part of his face covered because his mutant power, on manifestation, obliterated his body from below the nose to about the ribcage.
- In some of his earlier appearances Tintin was often drawn without a mouth. Even in later comics, his mouth is often no more than a small dot.
Films[]
- A short film on YouTube.
- The Thief and the Cobbler: Tack, the titular cobbler, has no actual drawn mouth, but it's represented by two nails he constantly holds in his mouth. The animators position them to use simple expressions like :>, :< and (using Forced Perspective) :o.
- Some of the background monsters from Monsters, Inc. don't have mouths.
Literature[]
- This is a distinguishing feature of Ax and the other Andalites from Animorphs. Also a major source of comic relief, given their natural inability to taste.
- Technically they have four mouths; they eat by absorbing sustenance through their hooves as they walk around (it's never clear whether their legs are hollow and they have an actual orifice there, or if they just sort of osmose nutrients out of whatever they're walking in). So you could say they're anti-this trope.
- Nom in the Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant has no mouth.
- Which is hilarious, given the name.
- Salamanders on the Discworld, which are small amphibians which don't actually need mouths because they feed on the octarine wavelengths in light; the other wavelengths are akin to poop and are stored away so as to blind attackers and make a getaway. In The Truth, Otto Chriek also experiments with some cave eels which feed on and excrete the light you get when you go out the other side of dark.
- Lampshaded in The Horrible Histories book Woeful WW 2. In one caricature, a crowd stands listening to Stalin making an epic speech. Then one of the listeners comments on how he lies every time he opens his mouth. Another one asks back, "How do you know?"
- I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream
Live-Action TV[]
- A puppet version, Mouthless Marvin, on The Funday Pawpet Show.
- If not for this, Power Rangers would have been nearly impossible to
makeuse stock footage.. - The neighbor, Wilson, from Home Improvement almost always had the lower half of his face hidden behind the fence. When, on rare occasions, his mouth was visible, the upper half of his face was always obscured.
- Should be noted that his mouth is obscured when not at the fence, best example is by examining a saw (when he appeared in the hardware store). This is a good example of a Running Gag taken to its limit.
- In one Halloween episode Wilson's face was "obscured" by the fake beard and mustache he was wearing as part of a Captain Hook costume. Doesn't really count, I feel.
- The worst one was when he was wearing a skeleton costume, and his face was only obscured by black and white paint.
- One point had him carrying a fence-on-a-stick.
- Should be noted that his mouth is obscured when not at the fence, best example is by examining a saw (when he appeared in the hardware store). This is a good example of a Running Gag taken to its limit.
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer had two examples. In "The Witch", one of the cheerleaders hit by Amy's spell has her mouth disappear. And then there are the telepathic, mouthless demons in "Earshot".
Music[]
- In a Billy Talent music video Devil In A Midnight Mass, a boy runs away from the two black smokes chasing him. In the basement, he finds a man with no mouth sitting on a chair. After trying to defend himself against the black smokes with an axe, he then runs to the alter (where the band has been playing) to find the mouthless alter boys, and he eventually becomes one of them.
- Lights' The Listening album cover.
Newspaper Comics[]
- In some comic strips, artists will usually only draw the mouth when a character is speaking or making a funny expression, such as Dilbert (who until very recently never had a mouth) and Peanuts.
- In the animated version of Dilbert he disconcertingly acquires a mouth whenever he needs to speak.
- Likewise, Calvin from Calvin and Hobbes does lose his mouth, but only when lost in thought or confused.
- The eponymous star of the old comic strip Henry. That he didn't talk implied he couldn't.
- He was featured in a National Lampoon gallery of realistically rendered comic strip characters. "Henry Kellog would be glad to eat his beets!" Brrr...
- Lio, of the newspaper comic of the same name. It does appear, but only when it's open. Fitting, as the strip is pantomime.
- Most animals in Pearls Before Swine appear without mouths, except when they're yelling or screaming.
- Slylock Fox and his sidekick Max are usually mouthless, unless speaking or emoting.
- R.J. in Over the Hedge, aside from a few shouting occasions in the comic's first year.
- Agnes and her aunt. Other characters' mouths are just barely visible.
Tabletop Games[]
- The Mind Flayers in Dungeons and Dragons appear to lack a mouth, instead absorbing living brains through their acid-secreting tentacles.
- Illithids are actually said to have lamprey-like mouths (like this). Which are nonetheless hidden by the four tentacles on their octopus-like head.
- This troper always assumed they had a cephalopod-style beak (example from a squid) which would be hidden in a 'mouth', in turn hidden by the tentacles. That lamprey mouth picture is much more appropriate as Nightmare Fuel though.
Toys[]
- Kitty White, the mascot of the Hello Kitty franchise, has no mouth, and a bizarre memetic website has been dedicated to this fact for 10 years now... This is actually zig-zagged, since she has been portrayed mouthless for some medias and with a mouth for others, such as Hello Kitty and Friends, Hello Kitty's Paradise (although her mouth doesn't appear in the intro), Hello Kitty: Stump Village (although her mouth vanishes for many scenes), and Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theatre.
- Bionicle has practically all its characters in masks - with some exceptions like the Piraka, known for their Slasher Smiles. The figures do have mouths under their masks, but having the masks attach by plugging into their mouths meant that talking would always be a problem with them...
- Averted in the movies, where masks don't cover mouths, except in some cases (mostly female characters and the Turaga) where a sort of "ventilation grill" is where the mouth should be.
- Problem solved by introducing a new kind of beings that wear helmets, not masks, that plug into the top of their head. Hero Factory made this a standard design aspect, and the characters can now retract their faceplates to show their mouths.
Video Games[]
- This is inverted in Cuphead where the Honorable Wise Judge in the Downloadable Content campaign, titled The Delicious Last Course, has a second mouth under his beak in one shot. Another instance happens during the battle with the Moonshine Mob, where the Anteater who works with this criminal gang has a second mouth at the base of his trunk (and therefore looks more like an aardvark).
- Bomberman. Really, most of the characters' faces show no features besides eyes.
- Much of the time in Final Fantasy X, Auron's mouth is hidden behind his collar. It does, however, appear on occasion.
- Arguably for the better, as it gave Auron's voice actor free range to do what he wanted and not be limited by lip-synching.
- Medabots didn't have mouths for the titular machines either.
- The Pyro class in Team Fortress 2 is the only class whose mouth is not visible, obscured as it is by his(?) full-body flamesuit. This also muffles all of his speech beyond recognition.
- The Protoss of Starcraft have no mouth, speaking by telepathy instead. It makes it somewhat weird as their back story mentions that they evolved from a hunter-gatherer culture who was already telepathic - meaning they lost the mouth pretty damn fast, probably due to Xel'Naga intervention.
- The prequel novels say that they eat sunlight and water vapor through their skin, and were only hunter-gatherers for building materials and defense.
- For some reason, at the end of Sonic Adventure 2, everyone starts obscuring their mouths(it's pretty clear that they no longer have any).
- Raziel of the Legacy of Kain series wears what's left of his cape over the lower half of his face, mostly because his jaw burned off when he was tossed into the Abyss. When asked how he manages to talk despite this, Amy Hennig variously joked, "It's all in the uvula," and "Supple throat muscles."
- Kirby has the Waddle Dees. They'd look almost like a repainted Kirby otherwise. The mouthlessness is Lampshaded in the anime, where the Waddle Dees absorb the food into a spot between their Blush Sticker-studded cheeks. However, Elline draws the Bandana Waddle Dee with a mouth.
- Most characters in Okami have no mouths, due to the distinctive art style.
- Mephiles from Sonic the Hedgehog 2006 has no mouth. He also loses his nose in his crystalline form. Also in this form, his muzzle will 'flex' when he is talking. This gets absolutely ridiculous considering one of his cutscenes is titled "Mephiles' Smile". All he really does is leer at the camera.
- Everyone else's mouths seem to disappear until they actually need them.
- While several of the more humanoid characters in Yume Nikki lack mouths due to the simple sprite style, there is some debate as to whether or not Seccom Masada is actually supposed to have a mouth. Some of the fanart which depicts the human characters (such as Madotsuki or Poniko) more realistically still portrays Masada as having no mouth or nose.
- Due to graphical limitations, the Goombas from the original Super Mario Bros are literally drawn without mouths, despite the fact that in the game's official artwork (and in all their game sprites from Super Mario Bros 3 onwards), they are all drawn with frowns on their faces.
- Lumas from the Super Mario Galaxy games lack mouths too, with the only exceptions being the Hungry Luma, Lumalee Lumabop, and Lubba.
- The Theets from Princess Peach: Showtime! lack mouths, though this doesn't hamper their speech capabilities, and they are also still able to eat and breathe. To convey emotions, the Theets use their noses to flash lights of a certain colour, with red indicating rage, yellow indicating joy, and blue indicating sadness and/or depression.
- There are several Pokémon that lack a mouth or seem to lack one: Hitmonlee, Dratini, Dragonair, Beldum, Unown, Sigilyph, and Deoxys (who lacks facial features in general except for eyes).
- Rockman: Some robot masters lack mouths:
- Fire Man has no mouth in the first game. However, his Megamix incarnation sometimes gets a mouth.
- Rockman 2: The Secret of Doctor Wily!!: Metal Man and Bubble Man lack mouths. Air Man also counts unless the fan on his chest is his mouth.
- Rockman 3: The End of Doctor Wily!?: Needle Man and Magnet Man. Spark Man also loses his mouth for the Mega Man cartoon.
- Rockman 4: A New Evil Ambition!!: Drill Man, Pharaoh Man, and Ring Man. Toad Man is a subversion in that two of his eyes are in his mouth, and Skull Man has a mouth formed from the upper half of a humanlike face and his lower jaw, also subverting the trope. Dust Man also has a mouth, but placed above his eyes (and he doesn't even speak through it)!!
- Rockman 5: Blues' Trap!?: Wave Man, Gyro Man, Napalm Man, and Crystal Man. Stone Man may or may not count due to his white lower jaw.
- Rockman 6: The Greatest Battle of All Time!!: Blizzard Man, Flame Man, Knight Man, Wind Man, and Yamato Man.
- Rockman World V: The Stardroid Uranus. Venus does not count due to her chevron-shaped mouth having humanlike eyes. Jupiter doesn't count either due to his mouth containing his eyes.
- Rockman 7: Showdown of Destiny!!: Freeze Man, Burst Man, Cloud Man, Spring Man, and Turbo Man.
- Rockman 8: Metal Heroes!!: Tengu Man, Search Man, Frost Man, Grenade Man, and Aqua Man. Astro Man may or may not be an example due to his helmet hiding his face.
- Rockman 9: The Ambition's Revival!!: Concrete Man, Magma Man, and Galaxy Man.
- As for the scrapped Robot Masters: Cement Man, Weather Man, Plasma Man, Sting Man, and Space Man.
- Rockman 10: Threat From Outer Space!!: Blade Man, Commando Man, Sheep Man, Strike Man, Nitro Man, and Solar Man.
- Rockman 11: Gears of Fate!!: Block Man has no mouth in his small form. Acid Man, Tundra Man, Torch Man, and Bounce Man also definitely lack mouths. Pile Man subverts this slightly with his "mouth" being a grate-covered vent.
- Ashtar in Ninja Gaiden 2 (NES).
Web Animation[]
- Coach Z and Pom Pom (as well as their 1936 and "20X6" counterparts) from Homestar Runner literally don't have mouths (they don't have noses or ears either). However, they wouldn't raise eyebrows in their universe, as the title character (and several others) don't even have arms.
- All the squirrels in Neurotically Yours.
Webcomics[]
- Reynardine from Gunnerkrigg Court loses his mouth in his full-sized wolf form. This contributes to him being far more majestic and dignified in this form.
- Except when he's angry, or trying to be threatening.
- For a good portion of El Goonish Shive, Tedd was drawn without a mouth unless yelling or grinning or something, only gaining a mouth shortly before the second major Story Arc. This was lampshaded in this comic.
- A lot of the characters from 1/0 do not have mouths, such as Manny/Ghanny, Max, Marcus. They comment on this (as is their nature to)
- Several of the characters in General Protection Fault, including protagonist Nick. When Dwayne buys everyone pupils (another feature some of them lack) for an April Fools strip, Nick points out that he has them underneath his glasses, and requests a mouth instead.
- None of the main characters in Rice Boy have mouths, although they can eat, drink, talk, and smoke cigarettes as if they did. This makes it slightly disturbing when the Tree Keeper has full, red lips and the White Formless have tiny human faces.
- For nearly twelve years, readers of Sluggy Freelance only saw Bun-Bun's a couple of times and to no major effect. Then a certain Wham! Episode came along....
- In early Living with Insanity strips, the main character didn't have a mouth.
- In Homestuck, a recurring trait of the kids' guardians is that they only have one facial feature, and it's never the same - Dad has a nose, Mom has a mouth, Bro has eyes (under the shades) and Bec has a snout. Dad also sports a traditional pipe hovering where a mouth would be. (It is hypothesised that they have normal appearances but their kids envision them like this.)
- The number of times WV's mouth has been seen can be counted on one hand. Likewise, the rest of the Exiles.
- Andrew Hussie is also drawn without a mouth save for a brief sequence where he's eating, which is strange given how well-known he is for his Gag Lips.
- For the longest, the titular character of Jix was depicted without a mouth, even though she had one. This was because her long snout kind of obscured it. The comic often joked about her lack of mouth. Later she was given a mouth to help convey her emotions better.
- Her androids, Dyonus and Dyona, do not have mouths at all. Mostly because the speech comes from speakers built into their heads and because they do not consume.
- Other of her species (Ambis) were drawn without mouths, except for her brother Romulos, but when she got a mouth, so did everyone else.
- Liz from The Dreadful. We can assume she has one, because she constantly has a cigarette drooping from it, but given the Fantasy Kitchen Sink setting, it's possible the cigarette is actually part of her face.
- Thanatos of Bigger Than Cheeses apparently used to have a mouth, but lost it in a tragic milkshake accident, or something like that. As far as speaking, breathing, and not dying of starvation go, it doesn't seem to have slowed him down.
Western Animation[]
- Gromit from Wallace and Gromit is the mouthless and voiceless hero.
- Gromit was originally designed with a mouth, but the first scene in which he was animated just showed him reacting mouthlessly to a situation and the animators realized he worked better that way.
- Many of the original Transformers lacked mouths, but as robots this doesn't seem to pose a problem. All those that don't have mouths would have some substitute speech animation, like a moving faceplate, or flashing lights.
- Spoofed in, of all places, Takara's Masterpiece Convoy (aka 20th Anniversary Optimus Prime) while the face plate isn't meant to be removed (and doing so may damage the toy) removing it will reveal WHY Optimus keeps his mouth covered.
- In the Henkei! Henkei! comics, Optimus loses his mouthplate and he turns out to be rather Bishonen-ish.
- And subverted in Transformers Prime where Optimus has a mouth.
- He also has a mouth in Transformers Animated. Really, it's more common for Optimus to have a retractable faceplate, especially since the Galaxy Force/Cybertron.
- Spoofed in, of all places, Takara's Masterpiece Convoy (aka 20th Anniversary Optimus Prime) while the face plate isn't meant to be removed (and doing so may damage the toy) removing it will reveal WHY Optimus keeps his mouth covered.
- The Looney Tunes character Marvin the Martian basically has a black ball with eyes for a head.
- Duck Dodgers reveals that while all the males of his species look like that, the females (such as the Queen) are somewhat more anthropomorphic, possessing noses, chins, eyebrows... but still no mouths.
- One episode of Super Mario Bros Super Show featured an Indiana Jones parody named Indiana Joe, who had no face at all, though his head did move when he talked.
- Kenny from South Park has his entire face obscured by his parka at all times.
- In a Peanuts Mayflower story William Bradford was drawn with a huge handlebar mustache that covered his mouth and it moved when he talked.
- Ferb from Phineas and Ferb is often mouthless. But then, he doesn't talk much. When he does talk, sometimes his mouth will be obscured, sometimes not.
- We could see his upper lip, though.
- The title character of Johnny Bravo is often drawn without a mouth when he doesn't talk.
- Zim of Invader Zim will often lose his mouth when he's thinking.
- In Sam and Max Freelance Police Max's mouth will disappear when he doesn't talk or thinking.
- Ed Edd and Eddy: During Ed's nightmare in Rock A Bye Ed, his mouth is removed when he yells too much.
Other[]
- The "Venus of Brassempouy", a 25,000 year old ivory figurine.
Real Life[]
- Tube worms that live around hydrothermal vents have no mouths, subsisting on nutrients generated by the symbiotic bacteria in their gills.
- Male rotifers lack mouths and digestive systems, as they spend their few hours of life seeking females at breakneck speeds, leaving them no opportunity to eat.