![]() ![]() Outlaw: What, did you reckon that they just grew all of us out on a perfect body farm somewhere? Outlaw: Well.hate to tell you this, cowboy, but.Īlex: AAAAAARRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Please limit examples to justifications, lampshades, and Played for Laughs.Īlex: A wig? *points to boobs* Are.are those real? Might extend to a Boob-Based Gag if done for comedy.įor tropes related to actual common superpowers, see Stock Superpowers Index. See also Top-Heavy Guy (a male exaggerated torso). Compare Boobs of Steel, Buxom Beauty Standard, Cleavage Window, Form-Fitting Wardrobe, Hidden Buxom, I Have Boobs, You Must Obey!, Stripperiffic, World of Buxom. (And yes, to the extent this is true, there is a Double Standard at work here that males aren't depicted as super-manly men nearly as frequently.)Ī Sub-Trope of Heroic Build. Heroes are supposed to look dynamic and impressive, villains look evil and shady, and thus women are sometimes drawn to accentuate any womanly features far more heavily than a realistic style would. ![]() One theory behind this phenomenon in comics that American superheroes are drawn in a "larger than life" artstyle. Naturally, this means that women in live-action adaptations won't have the same figures as the source material.Ĭommon because of the Buxom Beauty Standard and that Most Artists Are Male, of course, which is why this rarely involves My Eyes Are Up Here. They are not only large, but remarkably self-supporting and perky for their size. This most common of metahuman attributes seems to range from a D-cup size upward for any character just past the onset of puberty (a time when many comic-book characters start to manifest superpowers). Whether the superheroine/villainess is a mutant, an amazon princess or a Human Alien, if she's female, she is straining against the bonds of gravity. ![]()
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