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5[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mixcollage_21_nov_2023_10_35_pm_2492.jpg]]
6[[caption-width-right:350:[[labelnote:Clockwise from top left]]''WesternAnimation/ZorroTheChronicles'' (game), ''WesternAnimation/ZorroGenerationZ'', ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro'', and ''Django/Zorro''.[[/labelnote]]]]
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8->''"Out of the night, when the full moon is bright, comes a horseman known as Zorro..."''
9
10Zorro is a mysterious masked and black-clad {{swashbuckl|er}}ing rider and swordsman who fights injustice in Spanish UsefulNotes/{{California}} in the early 19th century. He is the secret identity of Don Diego de la Vega, who pretends to be a timid UpperClassTwit to hide his true skills and nature.
11
12
13Perhaps the most iconic ProtoSuperhero of all, Zorro has inspired ''many'' other heroes, such as Franchise/{{Batman}}[[note]]for whom he is often an ''in-universe'' inspiration as well[[/note]], Roronoa Zoro of ''Manga/OnePiece'', and Puss in Boots from the ''Franchise/{{Shrek}}'' franchise.
14----
15!!Original work:
16* The serialized '''''Literature/{{Zorro}}''''' stories by Creator/{{Johnston McCulley}} that were published between 1919 and 1959, starting with ''[[https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61620 The Curse of Capistrano]]'' and followed by ''[[https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/72159 The Further Adventures of Zorro]]'', both of which are now in the public domain. All in all, there were six novels and 56 short stories (or five serial stories and 57 one-shot stories).
17
18!!Adaptations & derivative works of ''Zorro'':
19[[foldercontrol]]
20[[index]]
21[[folder:Anime]]
22* ''Anime/KaiketsuZorro'' (1996)
23[[/folder]]
24
25[[folder:Audio / Radio]]
26* ''The Adventures of Zorro'' (1957) -- Short-lived radio series based on the Disney [=TV=] series also featuring Guy Williams as Zorro.
27* ''The Mark of Zorro'' (1997) -- Full cast dramatized audio adaptaion of the original novel by Creator/{{BBC}} Radio featuring Mark Arden as Zorro. No known copies are available.
28* ''Zorro and the Pirate Raiders'' (2009) -- Full cast dramatized audio adaptation of D.J. Arneson's rewrite of ''The Further Adventures of Zorro'' by Colonial Radio Theatre on the Air featuring Kevin Cirron as Zorro.
29* ''Zorro Rides Again'' (2011) -- Full cast dramatized audio adaptaion of D.J. Arneson's rewrite of the third novel by Colonial Radio Theatre on the Air. Kevin Cirron returns as Zorro.
30* ''The Mark of Zorro'' (2011) -- Full cast dramatized audio adaptation of the original novel from Blackstone Audio and Hollywood Theater of the Ear featuring Creator/ValKilmer as Zorro.
31* ''The Adventures of Zorro: The Legend Begins'' (2018) -- Full cast dramatized audio miniseries from American Radio Theater featuring Greg Porter as Zorro.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Comic Books]]
35* ''Walt Disney Presents: Zorro'' -- Comics based on the 1950s live-action series, drawn by Alex Toth.
36* ''ComicBook/LadyRawhide'' (1992 onwards) -- The [[BadGirlComic Bad Girl]] BreakoutCharacter from Topps' 1992 ''Zorro'' series, Lady Rawhide starred in several miniseries which included appearance by Zorro.
37[[/index]]
38* ''Zorro'' -- Series written by [[Comicbook/{{Grendel}} Matt Wagner]] for Creator/DynamiteComics, and continued in spin-off titles, some by other authors. Covers Zorro's entire career [[spoiler:up to and beyond his death]].
39** ''Django/Zorro'' -- Limited series written by Wagner and Creator/QuentinTarantino. Django of ''Film/DjangoUnchained'' teams up with [[UpperClassTwit the unassuming old man]] Don Diego.
40* ''Don Vega'' -- [[FrancoBelgianComics French]] comic by Pierre Alary.
41* ''Zorro: Man of the Dead'' -- Miniseries by Sean Gordon Murphy.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
45[[index]]
46
47!!Feature films:
48
49* ''Film/{{The Mark of Zorro|1920}}'' (1920) -- Starring Creator/DouglasFairbanks.
50* ''Film/TheBoldCaballero'' (1936) -- Starring Robert Livingston.
51* ''Film/{{The Mark of Zorro|1940}}'' (1940) -- Starring Creator/TyronePower.[[/index]]
52* ''The Shadow of Zorro'' (1962) -- Starring Frank Latimore.
53* ''Samson and the Slave Queen'' (1963) -- Also known as ''[[CoolVersusAwesome Maciste vs Zorro]]''. Low budget Italian peplum starring Pierre Brice.
54* ''The Avenger, Zorro'' (1972) -- Starring Fabio Testi.
55* ''The Galant Adventures of Zorro'' (1972) -- Starring Jean-Michel Dhermay.
56* ''The Mark of Zorro'' (1974) -- Starring Creator/FrankLangella.[[index]]
57* ''Film/{{Zorro|1975}}'' (1975) -- Starring Creator/AlainDelon.
58* ''Film/ZorroTheGayBlade'' (1981) -- A more comedic take starring Creator/GeorgeHamilton.
59* ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro'' (1998) -- A PassingTheTorch story starring Creator/AnthonyHopkins and Creator/AntonioBanderas.
60** ''Film/TheLegendOfZorro'' (2005) -- Sequel to the above, starring Banderas again.[[/index]]
61
62!![[FilmSerial Serial films:]]
63All from Creator/RepublicPictures.
64
65* ''Zorro Rides Again'' (1937) -- Starring John Carroll as James Vega, great-grandson of Diego
66* ''Zorro's Fighting Legion'' (1939) -- Starring Reed Hadley as Don Diego Vega
67* ''Zorro's Black Whip'' (1944) -- Starring Linda Stirling as Barbara Meredith, the Black Whip; despite the title "Zorro" is never said and the setting is Idaho
68* ''Son of Zorro'' (1947) -- Starring George Turner as Jeff Stewart, descendant of Diego
69* ''Ghost of Zorro'' (1949) -- Starring Clayton Moore as Ken Mason, grandson of Diego
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Literature (non-[=McCulley=])]]
73* [[index]]''Literature/{{Zorro|2005}}'' (2005), a novel written by Creator/IsabelAllende.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
77!!Zorro-centric series:
78* ''Series/{{Zorro|1957}}'' (1957-1959 series) -- Starring Creator/GuyWilliams.[[/index]]
79* ''Zorro and Son'' (1983 series, 5 episodes) -- Starring Henry Darrow as Don Diego and Paul Regina as his son Don Carlos.[[index]]
80* ''Series/{{Zorro|1990}}'' (1990-1993 series) -- Starring Duncan Regehr.[[/index]]
81* ''El Zorro: La espada y la rosa'' ("Zorro: The Sword and the Rose", 2007) -- {{Telenovela}}-[=style=] Colombian series starring Christian Meier.[[index]]
82* ''Series/{{Zorro|2009}}'' (2009) -- A Philippine soap opera starring Richard Gutierrez as the original Zorro's Filipino Mestizo nephew, with Jomari Yllana cameoing as Don Diego himself.[[/index]]
83* ''Zorro'' (2024) -- Spanish-made series, a Mediawan Rights and Creator/PrimeVideo original Spanish-language production starring Miguel Bernardeau.
84
85!!Puppet shows:
86* ''Series/LesMinikeums'', a French kids show with puppets, made a ''[[https://youtu.be/QkLNXXvuMXU Zorro]]'' ShortFilm around the release of ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro'' in 1998.
87
88!!Unrelated series:
89* ''Series/QueenOfSwords'' (2000), basically a SerialNumbersFiledOff GenderFlip version that was made by producers of the ''Highlander'' TV series in the wake of ''The Mask of Zorro''.
90* ''Series/OnceUponATime'' (2018) -- He was intended to appear as Lily's father in Season 5, but the plan fell through due to copyright issues. He was namechecked in the SeriesFinale.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Video Games]]
94[[index]]
95* ''VideoGame/{{Zorro|1985}}'' (1985)
96* ''VideoGame/{{Zorro|1995}}'' (1995)
97* ''The Shadow of Zorro'' (2001)
98* ''VideoGame/PulpAdventures'' (2016) includes a level where you play as Zorro[[note]]in context, it's part of a series of ShowWithinAShow levels representing the main protagonists reading books which contained clues about the villains' plan[[/note]].
99* ''VideoGame/Persona5'' (2016) -- one of the Personas in-game is Zorro himself.
100* ''Zorro: The Chronicles'' (2022) -- based on the 2015 animated series of the same name.
101* ''VideoGame/EnGuarde'' (2023) -- the protagonist, Adalia acts a lot like Zorro, only she is a female.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Western Animation]]
105* ''WesternAnimation/{{The New Adventures of Zorro|1981}}'' (1981)
106* ''WesternAnimation/{{The New Adventures of Zorro|1997}}'' (1997)
107* ''The Amazing Zorro'' (2002) -- feature-length, part of the ''WesternAnimation/DICMovieToons'' line
108* ''WesternAnimation/ZorroGenerationZ'' (2006)
109* ''WesternAnimation/ZorroTheChronicles'' (2015-2016)
110[[/folder]]
111[[/index]]
112
113----
114!!''Zorro'', in his various incarnations, provides examples of:
115
116* {{Acrofatic}}: Sergeant Garcia is often portrayed as this, being surprisingly agile and an accomplished swordsman despite his build.
117* AlternateCompanyEquivalent:
118** Franchise/{{Batman}}. In addition to the basic similarities, some stories have established that the movie the Waynes went to see on the night they were murdered was 1940's ''Film/{{The Mark of Zorro|1940}}'' (with {{setting update}}s in some cases, such as in ''Film/{{Joker|2019}}'' where they go to see ''Film/ZorroTheGayBlade'' instead).
119** Franchise/TheLoneRanger, another masked vigilante in TheWestern, too. They even had [[https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cYek2RdUqhQ/VhXVVd90I4I/AAAAAAAAB68/3iP6ABhdM9Y/s1600/vol1.jpg simultaneous cartoons]] in the 80s and [[https://i.pinimg.com/originals/ea/a3/a5/eaa3a513898afa74bf5b4c9de44c3d48.jpg comics]] [[https://www.dynamite.com/images/TNDeathZorro04CovFrancavilla.jpg crossovers]].
120* AnimalMotifs: In name only, while his name means "fox" he never utilizes foxes visually.
121** ''Literature/KaiketsuZorori'', the Japanese children's book character loosely based on Zorro, is literally a fox.
122* AnimalThemedSuperbeing: Zorro is Spanish for fox. He would be type II in that he has no animal-based powers, weapons, or even an animalistic costume but he does assume the name of an animal.
123* AnimatedAdaptation:
124** ''[[WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfZorro1981 The New Adventures of Zorro]]'', a 1981 series from Creator/{{Filmation}} and Tokyo Movie Shinsha (now known as Creator/TMSEntertainment), and ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfZorro1997'', a 1997 series from Creator/WarnerBros
125** A 1996 Japanese anime complete with TransformationSequence and a theme song by Masaki Endo. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yc6RPXiftM&feature=related Observe.]]
126** Also worth mentioning is the TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture adaptation ''WesternAnimation/ZorroGenerationZ''.
127** There's also ''WesternAnimation/ZorroTheChronicles'', the first CGI-animated series in the franchise.
128** One of Creator/DICEntertainment's final projects before it was acquired by other companies was ''The Amazing Zorro'' in 2002, one of several made-for-TV movies.
129* AntagonisticGovernor: The Mayor (''Alcalde Mayor'', or just ''Alcalde'' for short) of Los Angeles in California. A rich and powerful tyrant that Zorro squares off with time and time again. Some adaptations such as ''The Mask of Zorro'' upgrade this to the actual Governor of California.
130* BadassNative:
131** The Native American warrior Moonstalker in the Topps comic book.
132** Isabel Allende's novel made Zorro himself part-Native American through his Badass Native mother, therefore a ''mestizo'' (mixed blood) instead of the traditional ''criollo'' (pure Spanish but colonial-born). This detail has sometimes been carried over in later versions. This also meant that Diego got Native American training from his mother's tribe added to his origin backstory.
133** Bernardo, in most incarnations, is this as well.
134** Nah-Lin in Prime Video's ''Zorro'' (2024), who appoints herself the new Zorro.
135* BerserkButton: Hinting that Senorita Lolita (heroine and love interest in the original novel) has morals that are at all questionable is a good way to get your ass kicked by El Zorro.
136* BigEater: Sergeant Garcia usually is portrayed as one. Y'know, [[DontExplainTheJoke because he's fat]].
137* BilingualBonus:
138** The DIC series was set in and around the town of El Pueblo. Yes, the town of "The Town".
139** "Zorro" is Spanish for "fox", which is mentioned in the opening theme of the 1950's TV series.
140* ButtMonkey:
141** Poor Sergeant Garcia...
142** Corporal Reyes takes this a step further, being Garcia's personal butt monkey.
143* CallingCard: Zorro's trademark "Z".
144* CattlePunk: The 2005 movie ''The Legend of Zorro'' had a more anachronistic take on the period than its sequel.
145* CanonImmigrant: The Zorro we know with his small hat, cowl, and preference for using a sword is from the Douglas Fairbanks 1920 film and the pulp series was changed to reflect it. See EarlyInstallmentWeirdness below for more details.
146* ClarkKenting: Zorro manages to pull off his secret identity despite his costume usually leaving much of his face still exposed, with the bulk of the work going into his foppish act as the harmless Don Diego. In the Dynamite Comics series by Matt Wagner, Don Diego has a moustache while Zorro is clean-shaven, because the moustache is fake.
147* ClothesMakeTheLegend: Even the parody ''Film/ZorroTheGayBlade'' just changed the color of the costume.
148* ClothingDamage: A favorite trick of Zorro's, especially in the television series, where carving the flesh of his opponents would have violated broadcast standards. Or, in the case of the movie with Catherine Zeta-Jones, pure {{Fanservice}}.
149* CoatHatMask: A classic example, often complemented by a cape or cloak.
150** The Prime Video series had Diego eventually don a BadassLongcoat with no cape after his first costume was lost.
151* CollectiveIdentity:
152** In Isabel Allende's novel Diego has a second Zorro outfit and sword made for Bernardo to throw villains for a loop, and Isabel de Romeu butts in with Bernardo's Zorro costume when the villain is smart enough to have both Diego imprisoned and his men keep an eye on Bernardo in case he donned the Zorro outfit. The epilogue makes clear that in the end Diego is the main Zorro, but both Bernardo and Isabel would wear his costume if needed and can kick just as much ass as him.
153** In ''Film/ZorroTheGayBlade'', Don Diego and his brother Ramon both are Zorro. The brothers' father was too, although he's deceased at the time of the movie.
154** In ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro'', Anthony Hopkins plays the original Zorro (Don Diego de la Vega) and Antonio Banderas is his trainee [[spoiler:and later son-in-law]], Alejandro.
155** In the 1997 animated series Diego de la Vega was not the first Zorro, but the original was unknown and shrouded in legend.
156** The brief TV Series ''Zorro and Son'' was actually ''about'' an older Don Diego training his son, Don Carlos, to take his place.
157** In one of the animated series episodes a soldier is about to be executed upon suspicion of being Zorro, when Zorro himself intervenes and frees him. The soldier in gratitude ''also'' assumes the identity of Zorro in another part of old California, so in this continuity there ends up being ''two Zorros'' at work in different places, thus reinforcing the secret identity of both.
158** In the anime version, Bernardo also wears the Zorro costume. But in this continuity he is much younger than Don Diego, so he is called by the other name ''Little Zorro'', and plays the role of KidSidekick rather than a fake Zorro.
159** The Philippine version centers on Don Diego's long-lost nephew who he trains to be the Zorro of his homeland.
160** In the 2015 animated series, Bernardo again assumes the identity to defer suspicion away from Diego. Diego's sister Ines also dons costume, when she thinks her brother isn't being pro-active enough.
161** In the 2024 live-action series on Amazon Prime Video, Zorro is an identity originated by the local Native American tribe, several have worn the mask over the years, and Diego is mystically chosen to be the next one despite being an outsider. But he gains a female native rival who also claims the Zorro identity for herself.
162** In the French graphic novel ''Don Vega'', Zorro is a folk legend that a whole bunch of villagers try to imitate one at a time while resisting the local warlord and his thugs. [[spoiler:Then Don Diego, the son of the original Zorro, shows up.]]
163* ComicBookFantasyCasting: The MookLieutenant in ''Zorro: Man of the Dead'' is drawn to look like actor Creator/DannyTrejo and even directly named Trejo.
164* CoolHorse: Tornado, Zorro's black horse. First named by the 1950s TV series. The 1980s Filmation cartoon called him "Tempest" instead. The 1990s TV series rendered his name as "Toronado" presumably to make it more Spanish, though the word tornado already directly comes from Spanish.
165* CoolMask: And how. Most often it's a wraparound bandanna with eye-holes so he can still look cool without his hat, or rarely just a domino mask but [[ClarkKenting this doesn't compromise his identity]] even if he's hatless. Some versions hide more of his face, like his nose in the 1974 TV movie, giving his mask more of a menacing executioner-style look.
166** A minor point in the comic ''Don Vega'' is that Zorro wears improvised outfits with full-faced masks or rather hoods [[spoiler:until the end where Diego receives the proper mask of his father.]]
167** The Prime Video series had several variations of the suit with a simple bandanna mask and later a bandanna to cover the head and a separate domino mask, occasionally with an additional kerchief to hide the face.
168* CostumeCopycat: One of the hazards of having a SecretIdentity. Although Zorro himself has used it for his benefit...
169** In the Prime Video series, Nah-Lin outright steals Diego's first costume from Bernardo and never gives it back, modifying it to suit her Native identity. [[spoiler:By the end, once they work out who's the "real" Zorro she switches to a maroon costume.]]
170* CostumeDrama: Penchants for fashion in (Imperial Spanish) UsefulNotes/LosAngeles are OlderThanTheyThink.
171* CrazySurvivalist: Buck Wylde from the Topps comic book series.
172* CunningLikeAFox: The 1950's TV series theme song mentions "Zorro, the fox so cunning and free...", which is especially meaningful since "zorro" is Spanish for "fox".
173* CuteMute: Diego's servant, Bernardo.
174* DancingIsSeriousBusiness: Both in ''The Mark of Zorro'' (1940) and ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro''.
175* DarkIsNotEvil: Very obviously.
176* DashingHispanic: Zorro himself, and some of his enemies, especially TheDragon of any given story.
177* DatingCatwoman: Zorro and ComicBook/LadyRawhide in the Topps comic series.
178* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
179** In his first appearance Zorro wore a sombrero and a poncho, his mask covered his whole face and he used a saber instead of a rapier but mainly threatened people with a pistol.
180** Originally the titular character's name was Don Diego Vega, only to morph in later adaptations (apparently starting with the 1950s TV series) into the more aristocratic sounding Don Diego ''de la'' Vega, which would become the default for the character.
181* ElaborateUndergroundBase: In the comics written by Don [=McGregor=] (for Topps and Dynamite), Zorro has an elaborate underground base that rivals the Batcave. The [[WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfZorro1981 Filmation series]] likewise gave him an underground lair accessed by a hidden passage in his hacienda.
182* EvenEvilHasStandards:
183** In the 1940 movie, Diego Vega comments on a sergeant's big bullwhip, saying that he commiserates his poor horse. The sergeant is shocked and reassures him: He would ''never'' whip his dear horse, the whip is just for peones who don't cough up their taxes quickly enough.
184** In the anime adaptation Raymund clamps down on [[TheDragon Gabriel]]'s [[StalkerWithACrush obsession for Lolita]] as soon as he's made aware that he broke an arsonist out of jail to blackmail her into marrying him and then kidnapped her, all but stating the only reason he's not having him tried and executed is that the entire garrison (including him) would be dishonoured if that got out. He's also quick to stop anyone whose thefts prevent someone from paying their taxes, and conveniently ignores that one of those people is paying them with money ''Zorro stole in his presence from the thief''.
185* ExpressiveMask: In the comic book versions.
186* {{Expy}}: In terms of the broader franchise, the supporting characters regardless of continuity easily fall into certain types mostly derived from [=McCulley's=] characters:
187** The BigBad official (Mayor or sometimes Governor)
188** TheDragon[=/=]NumberTwo of the official, a military man capable of matching Zorro in combat (often a Lieutenant or Captain); if the two are combined into the military official in charge, he will be a Commandant
189** The MookLieutenant Sergeant, often a big or fat guy, tends to be more sympathetic than his superiors
190** The town priest, who tends to know Zorro's identity and covertly helps him
191*** Eugene Palette's "Fray Felipe" in the Tyrone Power version is suspiciously similar to his Friar Tuck in ''Film/TheAdventuresOfRobinHood''.
192* FatIdiot: More often than not, Sergeant Garcia is portrayed as this.
193* FeudalOverlord: Even though the setting of the story is in colonial rather than medieval times, the villains often fit this trope.
194* FailedPilotEpisode: The 1974 remake of ''The Mark of Zorro'' with Frank Langella as Don Diego was made for TV and was supposed to lead into a series. On its own, it's now just a TV movie.
195* FightDracula: Zorro clashes within the ''Dracula vs. Zorro'' mini-series from Topps Comics.
196* {{Flynning}}: In (almost) every film, stage, and TV version. Averted in the 1940 remake ''The Mark of Zorro'' -- Creator/TyronePower and Creator/BasilRathbone were both highly skilled fencers and it shows.
197* FolkHero: He's an iconic character for Latin America. Without a doubt, Zorro is ''the'' best-known fictional Hispanic hero in the World.
198* ForHalloweenIAmGoingAsMyself: Used in [[Film/ZorroTheGayBlade The Gay Blade]], where ''all'' the civilian men dress up like Zorro so the real deal blends in.
199* GenderFlip: Female [[{{Expy}} expies]] of Zorro include the Black Whip (Barbara Meredith) from 1944 and the Queen of Swords (Doña María Teresa "Tessa" Alvarado) from 2000. And the Prime Video series has a female Zorro outright as a rival to Don Diego's Zorro, named Nah-Lin.
200* GratuitousSpanish: Any English-language adaptation is likely to be full of this.
201** The 1990 series takes it a step further by referring to the evil mayor as the "alcalde" and the town the series takes place in as the "pueblo".
202* GuileHero: He calls himself "[[CunningLikeAFox Mr. Fox]]" for a reason, you know...
203* HeelFaceTurn: Used nigh-literally at the end of Film/ZorroTheGayBlade: The entire town has revolted, and the bad guys are reduced to the governor, his wife, and a single squad of soldiers protecting them from the surrounding mob. The captain of the squad, seeing which way the wind is blowing, orders, "About FACE!"... and the soldiers are now pointing their guns at the governor. (They thus turned on their heels for an [[VisualPun about-face turn]].)
204** In anime version, Sergeant Gonzales (equivalent of Garcia, but with more likable and humorous personality) changes sides and starts to fight for Zorro in the final story arc.
205* HookHand: Lucien Machete in the Topps comic.
206* HorsebackHeroism: It's not Zorro without him on his rearing horse.
207* HotDrinkCure: Exploited in the comic story "The Return of Zorro", when Zorro tells the woman he's helping to ask for some hot milk to quiet her nerves, which will enable him to slip out when the door is opened.
208* HotterAndSexier: The Hispanic SoapOpera and the Creator/IsabelAllende book.
209* HunterTrapper: Buck Wylde from the Topps comic book series.
210* IconicOutfit: Despite having many different adaptations with minor variations between them (sometimes within the same work, as in ''Mask of Zorro''), the classic black Zorro outfit has a basic template and is always immediately recognizable. The sword and whip are big clues too.
211* IdenticalGrandson: In the 1925 film ''Don Q, Son of Zorro'', the title character is played by Creator/DouglasFairbanks, who had played Zorro himself five years earlier.
212* ImplausibleFencingPowers:
213** Being able to carve a "Z" in an opponent's cheek with one fluid movement of his sword certainly counts.
214** The 1990 TV series has Zorro somehow ''picking the lock on a trunk with the tip of his sword''.
215** The 1940 version also includes the famous bit in which Don Diego slashes a candle -- with no apparent result -- until he lifts the candle to reveal he has ''sliced it in two.''
216*** In the 1957 TV show, Comandante Monastario (himself a sort-of {{Expy}} of the villain from the 1940 film) gets a moment of this; he slashes at a candle and seemingly misses, only to demonstrate to the Licenciado that he has indeed cut it in half before blowing it out.
217*** Itself hilariously parodied in ''Film/TheCourtJester'', in which "Giacomo" ''blows'' on the candles, and they fall apart.
218*** ''Zorro the Gay Blade'' also parodied this by having Diego slash at a candle, apparently missing, but as soon as the Aldante turns his back Diego picks up the severed candle and [[CouldntFindALighter uses it to light his cigarette before]] discreetly putting it back.
219*** [[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072448/?ref_=fn_tt_tt_15 In a Mexican Zorro film from 1975]], Zorro slashes at a candelabra horizontally and then again vertically. All the candles fall off, and the one in the center splits in two.
220* InstantKnots: Used in conjunction with his whip.
221* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:Don Diego]] in ''The Mask of Zorro'', and also in the Dynamite Comics continuity, in a crossover with its version of Franchise/TheLoneRanger. Unlike ''Mask'' which is about PassingTheTorch, the Dynamite storyline emphasizes an EndOfAnAge with the changing times. Tellingly, [[spoiler:Zorro dies by gunshot in both,]] but in the movie [[spoiler:he takes it in the front and is able to kill his enemy before he dies some minutes later in his daughter's and successor's arms]], while in the comic, [[spoiler:he's unceremoniously shot InTheBack, dies alone and it's up to the Lone Ranger to avenge him]].
222* LampshadeHanging: At one point in the '50s live-action series, Don Diego tells the villain of the week that Zorro would be around his age, build, height and social class.
223* TheLancer: Corporal Reyes to Sergeant Garcia. Bonus points because because he actually is one of the lancers (a type of soldier) who answer to Sergeant Garcia.
224* LegacyCharacter: Several of the adaptations have featured Zorro's descendants or an unrelated person taking up the sword to fight for justice. Sometimes Diego is not even the original Zorro, thus a legacy character himself.
225** The most famous example being Alejandro Murrieta in ''Film/TheMaskOfZorro'', trained by Don Diego himself. In its sequel ''Film/TheLegendOfZorro'', Alejandro is now known as Don Alejandro de la Vega for unexplained reasons. In an alternate ending and deleted scene for the latter, after a TimeSkip Alejandro watches his son ride off as the new Zorro in turn.
226** The female expy the Black Whip also succeeds the original Black Whip, her brother who's killed in action. Similarly, Nah-Lin from the Prime Video series is the younger sister of the previous Zorro before Diego, and after her brother's death she swears to avenge him, claiming the Zorro identity for herself in opposition to Diego.
227** The miniseries ''Zorro: Man of the Dead'' is described as "''Literature/DonQuixote'' meets ''Series/{{Narcos}}''", set in the present day. Zorro is a folkloric character who supposedly lived 200 years ago, and young Diego witnesses his father, who's dressed as Zorro for a town festival, get murdered by gangsters in front of everyone. Diego grows up to assume the identity of Zorro himself with all the anachronism it entails, and goes up against them regardless of their automatic firearms and stuff.
228* MagicalNativeAmerican:
229** White Owl, Zorro's maternal grandmother in the Isabel Allende novel, is a shaman who trains him. It's why he adopts the fox as his symbol, as it's his spirit animal. A version of White Owl also appears in ''The New Adventures'' (as Grey Owl, and not stated to be his grandmother), ''Generation Z'' (as an unnamed SpiritAdvisor who appears as a young girl) and ''The Chronicles'' (as Zorro and his sister Ines's grandmother Tainah, who is training her granddaughter).
230** Cuervo Nocturno in Prime Video's ''Zorro'' (2024), the local Native tribe's shaman who advises Diego and "chooses" him as the next Zorro, acting as the mouthpiece of a fox spirit who's seen onscreen as well.
231* MasqueradeBall: Always a great place to hide a masked man.
232* MasterSwordsman: Obviously.
233* MeaningfulEcho: In the 1940 movie: "to raise fat children and watch the vineyards grow" accompanied by the hurling of the sword so it sticks in a beam in the ceiling.
234* MinionWithAnFInEvil: Sergeant Garcia, at his most sympathetic. On his defense, he never is truly evil, he just follows his superior's orders. When the evil governor isn't around and the town is under García's control, life is ''much'' easier for everyone. On one occasion he even [[DressingAsTheEnemy dresses as Zorro]] to try to free some unjust prisoners ''from his own jail!''
235* MountainMan: Joe Crane from the Disney TV series.
236* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Zorro meaning "fox".
237* NonPoweredCostumedHero: One of the earliest "superheroes".
238* ObfuscatingDisability: Bernardo is mute, but often pretends to be deaf as well.
239* ObfuscatingStupidity: Except in the Disney version, where Don Diego is an open crusader for justice, but supposedly inept at combat instead.
240* OpeningNarration: From the [[Creator/{{Filmation}} Filmation]] [[WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfZorro1981 animated series]].
241--> "As Don Diego, I pretend to be afraid. But with a mask as my disguise, I ride into the night, and raise my sword in the name of justice! For I am... Zorro!"
242* OutsideContextProblem: The comic book "Zorro: Swords of Hell" sets Zorro against a ZombieApocalypse.
243* PirateGirl:
244** Scarlet Fever from the second ''ComicBook/LadyRawhide'' miniseries from Topps Comics.
245** As well as Lucia the Pirate from the Filmation cartoon.
246* PopculturalOsmosis: Thanks to countless bits of derivative media ranging from parodies to Christmas tree ornaments, most people who've never read or watched an actual Zorro story can still name him on sight.
247* PowderTrail
248* PresidentEvil: The evil governor of California.
249* ProtoSuperhero: Inspired Batman and countless others directly or indirectly. According to scholars, Zorro was probably himself inspired by Literature/TheScarletPimpernel, perhaps the UrExample of the masked hero with an UpperClassTwit ObfuscatingStupidity act.
250* PublicDomainCharacter: It's complicated. With 1919 being the year of the character's first publication, he is public domain in the US, but [[http://www.zorro.com/about/ Zorro Productions Inc.]] claims to "control the worldwide trademarks and copyrights in the name visual likeness and the character of Zorro." While this isn't strictly true, Zorro Productions Inc. has litigated in spite of court decisions and disputed and even disregarded rulings that the character is in the public domain. In other words, while there's no copyright (at least in the US or Canada), they will still likely sue people for using the character. It's all enough of a headache to navigate that in at least one instance of change-through-homage, Creator/{{Nintendo}} made the female Mexican sniper "The Fox" in ''VideoGame/CodeNameSteam'' as a vaguely defined daughter of Zorro instead of just using the man himself.
251** The character of Zorro is public domain in Canada for a different reason—in that country, the standard copyright term is the author's life plus 50 years. Since Johnston [=McCulley=] died in 1958, Zorro and all other characters in the literary series became PD in that country in 2009.
252** However, Zorro is still under copyright in the EU and Australia. Both entities changed to "life plus 70 years" terms within 50 years of [=McCulley's=] death.
253** ''Series/QueenOfSwords'' got hit by a lawsuit by Zorro Productions over copyright, and Zorro being public domain was the show's defense. It didn't quite work out for both sides, since the courts ruled Zorro was public domain but the show got ScrewedByTheLawyers and had its TV airing CutShort over other issues anyway.
254* PublicExecution: Two of these are attempted in ''Zorro's Fighting Legion'', one by firing squad, and the other by hanging. The Legion manages to save both potential victims.
255* RearingHorse: The classic victory pose for Zorro is his black horse rearing up while Zorro thrusts his sword in the air.
256* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Sergeant Garcia, full stop. Once the horrible Captain Monasterio is defeated, Garcia takes his place and things immediately become ''way'' nicer than before. [[spoiler:It's too good to last, as [[ArcVillain The Eagle]] soon arrives...]]
257* TheRemnant: Colonel Augustus Barton and his renegede Confederate bushwhackers in ''Franchise/TheLoneRanger and Zorro: The Death of Zorro'' from Dynamite Comics.
258* RoyalRapier: His signature weapon in adaptations (he used a cavalry sword in the original novel), along with a whip.
259* SceneryPorn: While every set of Spanish California in every incarnation may qualify, the one for the Disney TV series is arguably the most prominent.
260* SecretKeeper: Many, depending on the story. Most often, Don Diego's mute manservant Bernardo.
261* SettingUpdate: A few works go past the late colonial swashbuckler "classic" setting and go straight into a Western setting, where the Zorro character (usually a descendant) doesn't use a sword anymore and is more of a cowboy gunslinger wearing all black, but still using a whip. Then ''Zorro: Generation Z'' is Zorro meets ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'', set in the future of [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture 2015]], so Diego (namesake descendant of the original) uses an energy sword-whip-blaster thing and rides a special motorcycle.
262* SequelSeries: ''Zorro and Son'' was a loose one to the Disney TV show, and it used the same theme song but with lyrics adjusted to be about the horse''men'' known as Zorro.
263* SignatureHeadgear: Zorro's iconic black Cordobés.
264* SpoilerTitle: Guess what happens in the comic miniseries ''The Lone Ranger and Zorro: The Death of Zorro''. [[spoiler:Even one of the covers had the Ranger brooding at his fresh grave.]]
265* StabTheSky: When his horse rears.
266* StopOrIShootMyself: Doña Lolita, the heroine of the original Zorro novel, does this with a dagger forcing the Alcalde's guards to let her escape.
267* StoryArc: Disney's ''Zorro'' is especially notable for being a show that used arcs in the 1950s, when most other television was strictly episodic.
268* {{Stripperiffic}}: ComicBook/LadyRawhide from the Topps Comics series.
269* SwallowTheKey: The television series with Duncan Regehr twisted this -- at the end of one episode, he chained up the alcade in the town square and forced the alcade to swallow the key.
270* {{Swashbuckler}}: The most shining example coming from America in the genre.
271* SwissArmyWeapon: Lucien Machete's HookHand in the Topps comic.
272* SwordFight: Every Zorro story has at least one.
273* TallDarkAndHandsome: Zorro himself. Except for the anime version who is [[AdaptationDyeJob blondish instead of dark-haired]].
274* TransformationSequence:
275** The ''Kaiketsu Zorro'' anime had one. Technically, it was just Diego putting on his costume really fast, kind of like [[Anime/SailorMoon Tuxedo Mask]].
276** The Filmation version also had one.
277* UtilityBelt: Albeit an example that doesn't involve an actual belt. On most occasions, Zorro is armed -- at minimum -- with a sword, a knife, a pistol, a bolo, a lariat, and a set of lock-picking equipment. He often also carries a rope and graple-hook. Sometimes he'll have even more weapons and equipment than that. In the pulp stories, Zorro has a pistol as a backup weapon, but with the technology limitations of the time, seldom relies on it.
278* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Zig-zagged with Commander Raymond in the Kaiketsu Zorro anime. The Spanish army and its commander were clearly hated by the populace but Raymond proved adept at manipulating public opinion, always positioning himself at the right time and place to make himself look more generous than he really was. A notable instance was where Zorro had implicated the army and a corrupt merchant named Diaz in stealing grain from the people. As soon as he was exposed, Raymond acted quickly, shooting Diaz and then promising the people that they could have their grain back while allowing Zorro to leave unharmed as a gesture of good will for "helping" the army uncover Diaz's corruption, thereby avoiding an angry riot and looking like a ReasonableAuthorityFigure. So while Raymond didn't have a one hundred percent approval rating, he was still smart enough to know how to make himself look reasonable enough in the public eye to avoid outright rioting.
279* {{Weredragon}}: In the ''Series/OnceUponATime'' multiverse, the local Zorro was capable of shapeshifting into a dragon. In this form, he fathered a child on a similarly transformed [[WesternAnimation/SleepingBeauty Maleficent]].
280* YouFightLikeACow: Usually against lesser opponents. You can tell when an opponent is actually challenging Zorro, because he is too busy to quip.
281* ZorroMark: [[TropeNamer Well, duh]]. Largely bloodless in lighter fare like the 1950s series where he cuts into clothes but vividly bloody in ''The Mask of Zorro'' where he cuts into flesh (RevisitingTheRoots).
282** In the Prime Video series Diego even carves a Z into ''his own chest'' to hide his identity, moments after the captain and his soldiers tail Zorro to his house. He claims Zorro did it after he refused to hide him, and the ruse works. The scar stays for the rest of the show, so he's walking around with his own symbol on his chest like Superman etc. whenever he's shirtless.
283** Sometimes the Z is also found marked on walls, and as a giant flaming Z lit out in the plains, sort of a reverse Bat-Signal to proclaim that Zorro is afoot. The latter originates in the Republic serials.

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