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* In Harvey Dent's case, the name Two-Face is used exactly once, in reference to an old, derisive nickname given to him by the corrupt cops he used to investigate.

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* In Harvey Dent's case, the name Two-Face Comicbook/TwoFace is used exactly once, in reference to an old, derisive nickname given to him by the corrupt cops he used to investigate.
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* The Scarecrow is almost exclusively referred to by his last name Crane. The only times you ever hear the word "scarecrow" are 1) when one of Crane's victims, a delirious Carmine Falcone, utters the word over and over again, and 2) when Crane briefly calls himself "Scarecrow" while under the influence of his own gas.

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* The Scarecrow Comicbook/TheScarecrow is almost exclusively referred to by his last name Crane. The only times you ever hear the word "scarecrow" are 1) when one of Crane's victims, a delirious Carmine Falcone, utters the word over and over again, and 2) when Crane briefly calls himself "Scarecrow" while under the influence of his own gas.
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* Creator/{{Anne Hathaway}}'s portrayal of Selina Kyle is never once even referred to as ComicBook/{{Catwoman}}, and out-of-universe, even early press releases only referred to her as "Selina Kyle," fueling speculation that she would not be using a costumed identity at all in the film. The only time "Catwoman" is ever close to being mentioned is a newspaper headline reading "The Cat Burglar Strikes Again" when Bruce is showing Alfred the background information he's pulled up on her. This may have become the best-known and most prominent example of the trope, to the point that various bloggers and reviews go out of their way to refer to the character as "Selina Kyle" and not "Catwoman". This makes sense when you consider [[Film/{{Catwoman}} the last time the character was referred to as "Catwoman" on screen]], and how hard it flopped.

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* Creator/{{Anne Hathaway}}'s portrayal of Selina Kyle is never once even referred to as ComicBook/{{Catwoman}}, and out-of-universe, even early press releases only referred to her as "Selina Kyle," fueling speculation that she would not be using a costumed identity at all in the film. The only time "Catwoman" is ever close to being mentioned is a newspaper headline reading "The Cat Burglar Strikes Again" when Bruce is showing Alfred the background information he's pulled up on her. This may have become the best-known and most prominent example of the trope, to the point that various bloggers and reviews go out of their way to refer to the character as "Selina Kyle" and not "Catwoman". This makes sense when you consider [[Film/{{Catwoman}} [[Film/Catwoman2004 the last time the character was referred to as "Catwoman" on screen]], and how hard it flopped.

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Those ARE their actual names (and they don't really have codenames), so it's not an example of this trope.


* Batman and Comicbook/RasAlGhul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia, at least when her identity is revealed.]]
** In Batman's case, the film uses a mix of "Batman" and "''the'' bat-man" to refer to him. The latter is generally less used in popular culture these days, but it sounds a tad bit less outlandish and treats the word "Batman" as less of a guy's nickname and more of a thing or a creature like "the snowman" or "the boogeyman," which fits in line with the whole angle of being a scary monster that terrorizes criminals.

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* Batman and Comicbook/RasAlGhul are is commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia, at least when her identity is revealed.]]
** In Batman's case, the
such. The film uses a mix of "Batman" and "''the'' bat-man" to refer to him. The latter is generally less used in popular culture these days, but it sounds a tad bit less outlandish and treats the word "Batman" as less of a guy's nickname and more of a thing or a creature like "the snowman" or "the boogeyman," which fits in line with the whole angle of being a scary monster that terrorizes criminals.
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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia, at least when her identity is revealed.]]

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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul Comicbook/RasAlGhul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia, at least when her identity is revealed.]]
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* Batman's vehicle, the Tumbler, is never referred to as the Batmobile, either the black version shown in the first two films or the unpainted Tumblers driven by Bane's mercenaries in the third. (This was also true in the 1989 film, when Batman tersely refers to the Batmobile as simply "the car"; the more famous title wasn't used until ''BatmanReturns'' three years later.) However, his motorcycle and flying craft both receive bat monikers: the Batpod and the Bat (as opposed to the usual comics names of Batplane or Batwing), respectively. If "sounding less silly" was the objective here, names like "Batpod" and "Tumbler" are a lateral move at best.

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* Batman's vehicle, the Tumbler, is never referred to as the Batmobile, either the black version shown in the first two films or the unpainted Tumblers driven by Bane's mercenaries in the third. (This was also true in the 1989 film, when Batman tersely refers to the Batmobile as simply "the car"; the more famous title wasn't used until ''BatmanReturns'' ''Film/BatmanReturns'' three years later.) However, his motorcycle and flying craft both receive bat monikers: the Batpod and the Bat (as opposed to the usual comics names of Batplane or Batwing), respectively. If "sounding less silly" was the objective here, names like "Batpod" and "Tumbler" are a lateral move at best.
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--->'''Gordon:''' Nothing. No matches on prints, DNA, dental. Clothing is custom, no labels. Nothing in his pockets but knives and lint. No name, no other alias.

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--->'''Gordon:''' -->'''Gordon:''' Nothing. No matches on prints, DNA, dental. Clothing is custom, no labels. Nothing in his pockets but knives and lint. No name, no other alias.
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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia.]]

to:

* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia.Talia, at least when her identity is revealed.]]
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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such.

to:

* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. [[spoiler:Same goes for Talia.]]
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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. Oddly enough, in the comics, Ra's al Ghul is essentially the character's real name (it's complicated) but in the movie [[spoiler:his real name is Henri Ducard]].

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* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. Oddly enough, in the comics, Ra's al Ghul is essentially the character's real name (it's complicated) but in the movie [[spoiler:his real name is Henri Ducard]].
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* "SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker" has ''no'' known identity other than his codename.

to:

* "SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker" "ComicBook/TheJoker" has ''no'' known identity other than his codename.
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With the series angling for a less outlandish and more "grounded" depiction of the Batman mythos, the films naturally use this trope extensively:

* The Scarecrow is almost exclusively referred to by his last name Crane. The only times you ever hear the word "scarecrow" are 1) when one of Crane's victims, a delirious Carmine Falcone, utters the word over and over again, and 2) when Crane briefly calls himself "Scarecrow" while under the influence of his own gas.
* In Harvey Dent's case, the name Two-Face is used exactly once, in reference to an old, derisive nickname given to him by the corrupt cops he used to investigate.
* Creator/{{Anne Hathaway}}'s portrayal of Selina Kyle is never once even referred to as ComicBook/{{Catwoman}}, and out-of-universe, even early press releases only referred to her as "Selina Kyle," fueling speculation that she would not be using a costumed identity at all in the film. The only time "Catwoman" is ever close to being mentioned is a newspaper headline reading "The Cat Burglar Strikes Again" when Bruce is showing Alfred the background information he's pulled up on her. This may have become the best-known and most prominent example of the trope, to the point that various bloggers and reviews go out of their way to refer to the character as "Selina Kyle" and not "Catwoman". This makes sense when you consider [[Film/{{Catwoman}} the last time the character was referred to as "Catwoman" on screen]], and how hard it flopped.
-->[[http://www.mdjonline.com/view/full_story/19463316/article-REVIEW--Batman-saga-ends-with-%E2%80%98The-Dark-Knight-Rises%E2%80%99?instance=special%20_coverage_right_column "...cat burglar Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway)...She is essentially Catwoman, but is never addressed as such."]]
* Batman's vehicle, the Tumbler, is never referred to as the Batmobile, either the black version shown in the first two films or the unpainted Tumblers driven by Bane's mercenaries in the third. (This was also true in the 1989 film, when Batman tersely refers to the Batmobile as simply "the car"; the more famous title wasn't used until ''BatmanReturns'' three years later.) However, his motorcycle and flying craft both receive bat monikers: the Batpod and the Bat (as opposed to the usual comics names of Batplane or Batwing), respectively. If "sounding less silly" was the objective here, names like "Batpod" and "Tumbler" are a lateral move at best.

The aversions in the series, meanwhile, are as follows:

* Batman and Ra's al Ghul are commonly referred to as such. Oddly enough, in the comics, Ra's al Ghul is essentially the character's real name (it's complicated) but in the movie [[spoiler:his real name is Henri Ducard]].
** In Batman's case, the film uses a mix of "Batman" and "''the'' bat-man" to refer to him. The latter is generally less used in popular culture these days, but it sounds a tad bit less outlandish and treats the word "Batman" as less of a guy's nickname and more of a thing or a creature like "the snowman" or "the boogeyman," which fits in line with the whole angle of being a scary monster that terrorizes criminals.
* "SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker" has ''no'' known identity other than his codename.
--->'''Gordon:''' Nothing. No matches on prints, DNA, dental. Clothing is custom, no labels. Nothing in his pockets but knives and lint. No name, no other alias.
* Like the Joker, Bane never has his true name revealed in ''The Dark Knight Rises'', and he goes by "Bane" exclusively, an element which is also true to the comics. It helps that, compared to names like "Mr. Freeze" or "the Mad Hatter", it's probably one of the easier names to use without raising too many eyebrows.
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