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5[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_pink_panther_2.png]]
6[[caption-width-right:350:Think Pink!]]
7
8''The Pink Panther'' is an American comedy film multimedia franchise. In its original form, it totaled nine films over 30 years. The first of them were directed and co-written by Creator/BlakeEdwards and starred Creator/PeterSellers. Music/HenryMancini composed the soundtracks, including an [[https://youtu.be/lp6z3s1Gig0 iconic main theme]].
9
10[[AC:The Films]]
11[[index]]
12* ''Film/{{The Pink Panther|1963}}'' (1963): Sir Charles Lytton (Creator/DavidNiven) is a GentlemanThief who operates under the identity of "The Phantom". Inspector Jacques Clouseau (Sellers) is a French detective who is trying to track him down in Switzerland before he can steal the prized treasure of the kingdom of Lugash, the Pink Panther diamond (a large gem so named because of a pink, panther-shaped flaw), from a visiting princess. Alas, Clouseau is such a fool that he is easily outsmarted by way of the combined forces of the Phantom, his nephew, the princess herself, and the Phantom's key accomplice... Clouseau's own wife. While the thieves were the focus of this film, Clouseau was the character the subsequent films were based around, starting with...
13* ''Film/AShotInTheDark'' (1964): Clouseau, now single, is called to the aristocratic Ballon household to solve a murder. His judgment is immediately clouded by his infatuation with the prime suspect, Maria Gambrelli, even as more murders pile up around her. His bungling drives his boss, Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus (Creator/HerbertLom), to homicidal madness. In the meantime, we also meet Cato Fong (Burt Kwouk), Clouseau's Chinese manservant who - on Clouseau's orders - keeps springing surprise martial arts attacks on him.[[/index]]
14* ''Inspector Clouseau'' (1968): Sellers and Edwards opted out of this installment in which Clouseau, now played by Creator/AlanArkin, investigates a bank robbery in England, leading to him having to stop a gang and uncover TheMole in Scotland Yard. Lacking any other recurring characters, this one is [[CanonDiscontinuity generally disregarded]]. [[index]]
15* ''Film/TheReturnOfThePinkPanther'' (1975): The Pink Panther is stolen from a Lugash museum, and Clouseau is called upon to seek it out once more. The evidence suggests the Phantom is responsible, but in fact Sir Charles Lytton has been framed. The film follows the parallel plots of Clouseau trailing Sir Charles' wife to Switzerland, and Sir Charles' journey to Lugash to try and find out who actually did it. Dreyfus' attempts to kill Clouseau lands him in an institution at the end, leading directly into...
16* ''Film/ThePinkPantherStrikesAgain'' (1976): Three years later (though the film was only made one year after), Dreyfus is seemingly cured, but having to meet up with Clouseau before he can be released, the therapy is undone. Dreyfus escapes and organizes a criminal gang that kidnaps an inventor and his daughter. Forcing the former to build a DisintegratorRay, Dreyfus threatens to unleash it on the world unless Clouseau is killed, and many countries immediately send assassins after Clouseau as he sets out to stop Dreyfus himself.
17* ''Film/RevengeOfThePinkPanther'' (1978): Clouseau is now so famous that the head of the French mob, to prove his mettle to the American Mafia, puts out a hit on him - three actually, as Clouseau's luck saves him from death each time. The thing is, the third time ''appears'' to have been the charm to everyone else, leaving Clouseau to go undercover with Cato to figure out who wanted him dead. Oh, and Dreyfus is "cured" by the news of Clouseau's death, and set free again. [[/index]]
18* ''Romance of the Pink Panther'': Never made because Sellers DiedDuringProduction. Peter Sellers, who bought out the rights to the character after having a falling-out with Blake Edwards, wrote a script in which Clouseau falls in love with the ClassyCatBurglar he is chasing. Eight days after Sellers delivered the script to United Artists in 1980, he died. Nowadays one can find said script floating around the internet.
19* ''Film/TrailOfThePinkPanther'' (1982): Using mostly deleted scenes from ''Strikes Again'' and new footage with other regulars, Clouseau once again is called to Lugash to seek the stolen Pink Panther. When his plane vanishes, [=TV=] reporter Marie Jouvet (Creator/JoannaLumley) decides to investigate his disappearance by interviewing those who knew him well, turning the second half of the film into a ClipShow. The film was shot alongside...
20* ''Film/CurseOfThePinkPanther'' (1983): One year after Clouseau's disappearance, Dreyfus sabotages the search for a great detective to seek him out. Instead, the world's ''worst'' detective, Clifton Sleigh of New York City (Ted Wass), is put on the case. The audience learns the ultimate fate of Clouseau and the diamond, but Sleigh...not so much.
21* ''Film/SonOfThePinkPanther'' (1993): Ten years after the previous film's events, a {{Revision}} of what happened in ''A Shot in the Dark'' reveals Clouseau sired a son, Jacques Gambrelli (Creator/RobertoBenigni). One day on his beat in the south of France, his path accidentally crosses with those of the kidnapped Princess Yasmin of Lugash ''and'' Dreyfus all at once. Then Dreyfus realizes, given the [[LikeFatherLikeSon father's track record,]] that it might not be such a bad idea to have this junior Clouseau track her down. This had the misfortune of being the final film of both Music/HenryMancini ''and'' Creator/BlakeEdwards.
22* ''Film/{{The Pink Panther|2006}}'' (2006): A reboot of the film franchise with Creator/SteveMartin as Clouseau and Creator/JeanReno as a new sidekick, Ponton. Aside from Clouseau, Dreyfus was the only character carried over from the original films.
23* ''Film/ThePinkPanther2'' (2009)
24* Untitled CGI Pink Panther film (TBA): Another reboot directed by Jeff Fowler (of ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020'' fame). For the first time ever, this film is planned to have the animated Pink Panther himself play an active role in the story, instead of being present in the opening and ending credits.[[/index]]
25
26
27Beyond the films, there are also a plethora of animated cartoons starring the animated Pink Panther present in the opening and ending credits.
28
29[[AC:The cartoons]]
30[[index]]
31* ''WesternAnimation/ThePinkPanther'' (1964-1978) – The original run of cartoon shorts animated by Creator/DepatieFrelengEnterprises.
32** ''WesternAnimation/ThePinkPhink'' (1964)
33** ''WesternAnimation/ThePinkBlueprint'' (1966)
34* ''WesternAnimation/TheInspector'' (1965-1969) – A series of animated shorts starring Inspector Clouseau.
35* ''The Pink Panther in: A Pink Christmas'' (1978)
36* ''The Pink Panther in: Olym-Pinks'' (1980)
37* ''The Pink Panther in: Pink at First Sight'' (1981)
38* ''Pink Panther and Sons'' (1984-1986)
39* ''The New Pink Panther Show'' (1991-1995)
40* ''WesternAnimation/PinkPantherAndPals'' (2010)
41* ''A Very Pink Christmas'' (2011)
42[[/index]]
43
44[[AC:Video Games]]
45[[index]]
46* ''Pink Panther'' (1988) Platform/{{Amiga}}, Platform/Commodore64, Platform/ZXSpectrum, Platform/AmstradCPC, Platform/AtariST, MSX
47* ''Pink Goes to Hollywood'' (1993) SNES, Genesis
48* ''VideoGame/PinkPantherPassportToPeril'' (1996) PC
49* ''VideoGame/PinkPantherHokusPokusPink'' (1998) PC, Sequel to ''Passport to Peril''
50* ''Pink Panther: Pinkadelic Pursuit'' (2002) Platform/PlayStation, Platform/GameBoyAdvance, PC
51* ''Pink Panther: Jewel Heist'' (2015) Arcade
52[[/index]]
53
54[[AC:Pinball]]
55[[index]]
56* ''Pinball/PinkPanther'' (1981)
57[[/index]]
58
59
60Now has a [[Characters/ThePinkPanther character sheet]]; there are loads and loads of them, so feel free to help it grow.
61
62The series also inspired a fan-made feature film known as ''[[https://odysee.com/@RidgwayFilms:a/ShadowOfThePinkPanther:2 Shadow of the Pink Panther]]''.
63
64In 2020, [[https://deadline.com/2020/11/mgm-pink-panther-sonic-the-hedgehogs-jeff-fowler-directing-1234618767/ another reboot]] was announced to be in production by MGM, this time being a live action/CGI hybrid focused on the Pink Panther character. The film is currently poised to be directed by Jeff Fowler of ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020'' fame and to be produced by not only film series creator Walter Mirisch but also Creator/JulieAndrews, the widow of Creator/BlakeEdwards.
65----
66!!The films feature examples of:
67
68* AbhorrentAdmirer: ''Inspector Clouseau'' has the title character drawing the attraction of the middle-aged extremely Scottish wife of Superintendent Weaver, much to Arkin's dismay. In the plane ride home, she reveals herself to Clouseau as the widow of Weaver (due to Mr. Weaver being clubbed to death) and at first Clouseau thinks she wants revenge... only to pull out some lingerie and say it's for their first night alone in Paris. Cue Clouseau bailing out of the plane with a parachute!
69* AllAsiansWearConicalStrawHats: When Clouseau goes to Hong Kong in the third act of ''Revenge'', he initially wears a stereotypical "Chinaman" disguise, conical straw hat and all.
70* AmusingInjuries: Dreyfus in particular is prone to these.
71* AnimatedCreditsOpening: A series tradition. Creator/DePatieFrelengEnterprises (later Marvel Productions, Ltd.) produced them for most of the films, although Creator/RichardWilliams' studio did the honors for ''Return'' and ''Strikes Again''. Kurtz and Friends produced the title sequence for the 2006 remake - and it's a great one!
72* AnimationBump: Creator/RichardWilliams' ''Return'' and ''Strikes Again'' title sequences are a spectacular example of this trope, with both sequences showcasing far smoother and fluid animation compared to the other sequences.
73* TheAnticipator: Parodied when the late Peter Sellers plays Inspector Clouseau. Clouseau has directed his manservant Cato to attack him at random to sharpen his defensive skills. Though he knows Cato has TheDeterminator perseverance, only inconceivably foolish counters and stupefying luck have thwarted all of Cato's attempts.
74** This running gag is reversed in the reboots, in them Clouseau is the one trying to attack his partner and Ponton is the one anticipating and effortlessly fending them off, though in his case it's simply because Ponton actually knows how to defend himself.
75* AntiHero: Clouseau. Also Dreyfus in ''A Shot in the Dark'' until his FaceHeelTurn, and again in the last four original-flavor films after two movies of straightforward villainy. He's strictly this in the reboot.
76* ArtifactTitle: ''Strikes Again'', ''Revenge'', and ''Son'' don't involve the Pink Panther diamond at all, but they had to work in the animated character somehow...
77* TheBadGuyWins: In ''Curse'' we have a case of "The Bad ''Girls'' Win," as Chandra [[spoiler:turns Clouseau to the dark side and gets him to become her consort]], and then [[spoiler:Lady Litton (Clouseau's ex-wife) steals the Pink Panther diamond, and this time the Littons apparently hang on to it permanently]].
78* BetaCouple: Maria Gambrelli and [[spoiler: Charles Dreyfus]] in ''Son''.
79* BigBad
80** Dreyfus in ''The Pink Panther Strikes Again'', while serving as a secondary villain in ''A Shot In The Dark'' and ''Return Of The Pink Panther'' and an [[AntiHero antihero]] in his six other appearances.
81** The French Connection in a three-film story arc, ''Revenge'', ''Trail'' and ''Curse''. Douvier is their boss in ''Revenge'' while Bruno Langlois is their boss in ''Trail'' and ''Curse.''
82* BlackComedy: Most of ''A Shot in the Dark'' and ''The Pink Panther Strikes Again'', owing to unusually high body counts. (''Son of'' has that too, owing to the nature of the villains and the climactic siege, but that's typical action movie background fodder.)
83* BreakoutCharacter: Clouseau might be film's most successful example, or at least a close second to [[Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean Captain Jack Sparrow]]. The Pink Panther animated character counts as well.
84* BrickJoke: In the opening title sequence for the original 1963 movie, the Pink Panther cartoon character walks up and prepares to conduct an invisible orchestra, only to be pulled off stage by a VaudevilleHook. In the 2006 reboot he returns and manages to conduct the ''actual paper notes''.
85* ButtMonkey: Several characters, but Dreyfus is the poster boy of the franchise, even when he becomes a BigBad in ''Strikes Again''.
86* TheCameo: Several over the original series, either unbilled or under a pseudonym.
87** In ''Curse'' [[spoiler:Roger Moore]], billed as "Turk Thrust II", [[spoiler: plays the post-MagicPlasticSurgery Clouseau.]]
88** In ''Son'', [[spoiler: Nicoletta Braschi, Roberto Benigni's wife and frequent costar]] turns up at the end as [[spoiler: Jacques's twin sister]].
89* CantGetInTroubleForNuthin
90* CelebrityParadox: It's never outright stated -- but obvious to the audience -- in ''Curse'' that the reason Clifton Sleigh doesn't realize that [[spoiler: Clouseau had Magic Plastic Surgery]] is because [[spoiler: he now looks, and is played by, Roger Moore, and Moore and the James Bond movies exist in this universe]].
91* CharacterOutlivesActor: ''Trail of the Pink Panther'' was made after the death of Creator/PeterSellers. Rather than having the character of Inspector Clouseau die in the film, he is instead shown to be alive and well on a deserted island after surviving a plane crash; the subsequent film ''Curse of...'' reveals [[spoiler: he got MagicPlasticSurgery to look like Roger Moore, and did a FaceHeelTurn to settle down with a jewel thief countess]].
92* ClassyCatBurglar: [[spoiler: Claudine in ''Return'' and Simone in ''Curse''.]] The unmade ''Romance of the Pink Panther'' had one of these as the film's antagonist, and would have ended with [[spoiler: Clouseau making a FaceHeelTurn out of love for her]].
93* CluelessDetective: Clouseau might be the best-known example.
94* ColorCharacter
95* TheComicallySerious: Creator/GeorgeSanders as Benjamin Ballon, though ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEcq4tuBzn4 footage]]'' of him (and most of the other actors who worked with Sellers) corpsing has surfaced.
96* ContinuitySnarl: Chief Inspector Dreyfus ''himself'' is the only, but ''big'' one in the whole series, which otherwise seems pretty consistent with itself. Starting from the ending of the second movie, Dreyfus ''always'' eventually turns mad, tries to murder Clouseau and is ''always'' taken to an insane Asylum… The movie following the first time this happened included the idea that he was supposedly cured (though meeting Clouseau again makes him turn mad again), and subsequently released; however, at the end of this movie, he gets killed off. In the next, he's back at the insane asylum for no particular reason, and once again thought cured, and once again released. And it's not that the previous movie is not canon to the others — there are [[ContinuityNod references]] to it made in later movies. In the ''next'' movies, he's just back as chief inspector with no explanation ''at all''. Apparently, nobody remembers that 1° he was previously disintegrated and 2° he had destroyed the U.N. building and sabotaged a satellite before that.
97* CoolAndUnusualPunishment: In ''Strikes Again'', the method [[BigBad Dreyfus]] uses to torture the professor's daughter is by [[NailsOnABlackboard scratching a chalkboard]] [[BaitAndSwitch while wearing meat-packer's gloves]].
98* DaChief: Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus is a comedic example. From ''Strikes Again'' onward, Clouseau himself takes over this position (though he is more gentle to his subordinates in comparison to Dreyfus), and Dreyfus resents this when he finds out.
99* DatingCatwoman: Provides the premise of the unmade ''Romance of the Pink Panther''. The Russian Spy in ''Strikes Again'' counts as well.
100* DepthDeception: A faked alien invasion in an episode of the animated series.
101* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: In ''A Shot in the Dark'', Cato only wears his signature black outfit the first time we see him, and has a bunch of other outfits he wears throughout the film. In all the films that follow he sticks to his black outfit, outside of the odd disguise in ''Revenge''.
102** ''The Pink Panther'' is an even bigger example. Let's see: No Chief Dreyfus, no Cato. Clouseau isn't the main focus, with ''David Niven'' appearing in far more scenes! It's also the longest ''Pink Panther'' film, clocking in at almost two hours. And while there is still a little slapstick comedy present, it's nowhere near the levels of the sequels, with most of the humor being ''very'' dry. Needless to say, it's a jarring experience if you've seen any of the sequels first.
103* EnsembleDarkHorse: Clouseau was just a supporting character in the original movie.
104* FakeShemp:
105** Any time you can't clearly see Clouseau's face in any of the three '70s sequels, odds are he's being played by Peter Sellers' stunt double, Joe Dunne. Peter Sellers' health was rapidly declining in these years from the heart disease that eventually killed him in 1980.
106** ''Trail'' is built around this concept, though flashbacks to his youth near the end have him played by younger actors in a variant on TheOtherDarrin.
107* FilmingForEasyDub: The later entries with Sellers used this with his stuntmen; ''Trail'' does this with a stand-in to tie the deleted scenes together.
108* FriendsRentControl: It's hard to imagine how Clouseau could afford that huge apartment overlooking the Seine on an Inspector's salary, especially when you consider the fact that he and Cato wreck the place every movie.
109* FromBadToWorse: The opinions of critics and viewers alike on the films after Peter Sellers died.
110* FunnyForeigner: Clouseau; his disguises incorporate other nationalities in the same manner.
111* GayParee: With occasional detours to Italy, Germany, Hong Kong, etc.
112* GentlemanThief: Sir Charles Lytton and his associates. The boredom motivation is key to the plot of ''Return''.
113* GirlOfTheWeek: ''Shot'', ''Strikes Again'', and ''Revenge'' all have these. The first was given a {{Revision}} for ''Son''.
114* GoingForTheBigScoop: Marie in ''Trail'', especially as it becomes clear that there are a lot of people who would prefer Clouseau gone forever.
115* HalfIdenticalTwins: In ''Son'', [[spoiler: Jacques and ''Jacqueline'' Gambrelli]].
116* HalfwayPlotSwitch: ''Trail'', which starts as a typical Clouseau misadventure and makes the switch when he goes missing, turning the protagonist role over to Marie as she investigates the disappearance.
117* HeelFaceRevolvingDoor: Dreyfus goes from antihero to villain in ''A Shot in the Dark'', remains a villain in ''The Return of the Pink Panther'', appears to have recovered his sanity at the beginning of ''The Pink Panther Strikes Again'' but ends up becoming the film's main villain, and seems to have, for the most part, reformed in the subsequent films.
118* HeroInsurance: One has to wonder who would be stupid enough to provide Clouseau with homeowner's insurance given how frequently his flat gets trashed.
119* HollowSoundingHead: In ''Son'' Jacques Gambrelli accidentally knocks on his mother's forehead (he'd been knocking on a door she'd suddenly opened) producing a loud empty sound.
120* {{Homage}}: Sellers' portrayal of Clouseau is more than a little evocative of Creator/JacquesTati's Hulot character (even the names are similar), while the {{slapstick}} physical comedy in the series owes a great deal to Creator/CharlieChaplin, Creator/BusterKeaton, Creator/LaurelAndHardy, etc.
121* HypercompetentSidekick: Cato Fong in the original series, Ponton in the Reboot.
122* HypocriticalHumor: When Clouseau first meets Yuri, he mocks his Russian accent:
123-->'''Clouseau''': I'll be honest with you. I - I find your accent quite funny. Where are you "fvam"?\
124'''Yuri''': From Russia. Gluant recruited me from the Russian military gym.\
125'''Clouseau''' [''mocks Yuri'']: Do-do-do-ba-ba-loo. You need to work on your accent.
126* IconicSequelCharacter: Cato and Dreyfus didn't appear until the second film.
127* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: From ''Return'' onward, all of the titles (and credits) involve the Pink Panther phrase and animated character even if the diamond is not part of the plot.
128** The Pink Panther animated shorts all have the word "pink" in the title, and most of the Inspector shorts are puns on French words or phrases.
129* IdiotHero: TropeCodifier.
130* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: Some of the '70s films have Edwards' name as part of the full onscreen title, i.e. ''Creator/BlakeEdwards' The Return of the Pink Panther''.
131** The cartoons have the title "Creator/BlakeEdwards' Pink Panther" when he appears.
132* IncrediblyObviousBomb: ''Plenty'' from ''Return'' onwards.
133* InsistentTerminology: CHIEF Inspector Clouseau (from ''Strikes Again'' onwards) frequently reminds us of his full title.
134* InspectorOblivious: Clouseau's opening scene in ''Return'' hinges on him getting distracted from a bank robbery. Moreover he's dim enough to accept bombs - the Incredibly Obvious kind, mind you - from suspicious persons without a thought, only realizing what they are just before it's too late. (''Revenge'': "Special delivery, a bomb! Were you expecting one?")
135* InstrumentalThemeTune: One of the catchiest ever, courtesy of Music/HenryMancini.
136* JugglingLoadedGuns: Chief Inspector Dreyfus keeps in his office desk both a real gun and a lighter that ''looks just like'' said gun. HilarityEnsues with predictably violent results, such as when his assistant Francois, hearing a gunshot, bursts in the office to see the top half of Dreyfus' face looking up at him from behind his desk:
137--> '''Dreyfus:''' Don't just stand there, idiot — call a doctor. ''And then help me find my nose!''
138* KarmaHoudini:
139** Lytton and his accomplices; as the trope entry points out, they are ''never'' caught in any of their appearances. [[spoiler: Clouseau and Chandra are almost this at the end of ''Curse'' - they aren't found out by Sleigh, but Lytton's wife steals the diamond from them!]]
140** At the end of ''Shot'', Dreyfus accidentally murders several people trying to kill Clouseau and has a nervous breakdown. He is still Chief Inspector in ''Return'', where he does the same thing again, only this time he is actually committed for it.
141** ''The Pink Panther Strikes Again'' takes it up to eleven. Dreyfus disintegrates the UN building, attempted to destroy England, yet two movies later, ''Trail'', he is Commissioner again and no one talks about it (this is either a PlotHole or just NegativeContinuity).
142*** A similiar thing happened before ''Trail'' in ''Revenge of...'', nobody remembers Dreyfus' scheme in ''Strikes Again'', and they even ask him to give a eulogy to Clouseau's (faked) funeral.
143** ''Return'' ends with ''nobody'' going to prison for the actual theft of the diamond. Partially {{justified|Trope}} in that a lot of people thought Colonel Sharkey was in on the conspiracy [[spoiler: and he's too dead to defend himself]]. Claudine Lytton [[spoiler: the actual culprit]] is not seen in the epilogue, though.
144* LeftStuckAfterAttack: In ''Curse of The Pink Panther'', the renowned martial artist Ed Parker plays an enforcer for the antagonists, who punches through a metal shed door and gets his arm stuck for a solid twenty seconds before managing to free himself.
145* LethallyStupid: Inspector Clouseau. Ask Dreyfus.
146* LicensedPinballTable: Released by Creator/{{Gottlieb}} in 1981, and '''very''' loosely based on ''Return;'' [[Pinball/PinkPanther click here for details.]]
147* MamasBoy: Jacques Gambrelli in ''Son of the Pink Panther'', who lives with his Italian mother, Maria Gambrelli, who was married to Inspector Clouseau, which makes Jacques Gambrelli the son of Inspector Clouseau.
148* MateOrDie: How Jacques Gambrelli was conceived, according to Maria's explanation in ''Son of...'': She and Clouseau were stranded on a snowy night, and he suggested they make love to keep warm. Their affection for each other was not a romance for the ages, however (she regards it as a youthful folly), and she never revealed to him that he'd sired a son.
149* MyBelovedSmother: Maria Gambrelli, who told Jacques that his father was a classical musician for fear that he might follow in his father's footsteps and get hurt.
150* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: France seems to have a lot of people with British or American accents in these films, with prominent examples including the original Dreyfus, Benjamin Ballon in ''Shot'', and Philippe Douvier in ''Revenge''. Of particular note is Bruno Langois of ''Trail'' and ''Curse''. The "French Godfather" would sound more at home running one of New York's Five Families -- and unlike Douvier, whose accent they at least tried to HandWave by establishing that he had spent a lot of his early career working for the American Mafia before returning to his native France, Bruno's accent is never explained at all.
151* NotMeThisTime: In the reboot, The Tornado, a serial thief, was believed to have resurfaced and stolen various treasures around the world, including the Magna Carta, the Turin Shroud, the Imperial Sword, the Pink Panther Diamond (allegedly), and the Pope's ring. Turns out, he never actually committed those crimes (for one thing, he would have deduced that [[spoiler:the Pink Panther Diamond on display was in fact a forgery]] had he truly stolen it), it was his scorned lover, [[spoiler:Sonia]] who did the deed, eventually [[spoiler:killing him before they located him]].
152* OddlyNamedSequel2ElectricBoogaloo: Original series only. ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' made a joke about this: "We now return to ''The Return of the Pink Panther Returns''".
153* OneSteveLimit: There are two characters named Charles: Sir Charles Lytton (The Phantom) and Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus (Clouseau's superior).
154** Jacques Gambrelli, though it's justified because he is Clouseau's son.
155** There are even two Simones: Simone Clouseau/Lytton, and Simone [=LeGree=] (the GirlOfTheWeek in ''Revenge'').
156* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Clouseau's accent in ''Return'' tends to veer between the more normal-sounding voice he used in the first two films, and the thicker, more nasal accent he uses in ''Strikes Again'' and ''Revenge''.
157* PhantomThief: The Phantom in the original movies. The Steve Martin movies have the Tornado.
158* PlotHole: ''Trail'' says that Lytton married Simone after the events of the first film. If so, where does Claudine, his wife in ''Return'', fit in?
159* PutOnABus: Creator/BlakeEdwards did this to Clouseau himself to make way for ''Son of the Pink Panther''. That was not a good idea.
160%%* {{Qurac}}: Lugash. Also MysticalIndia, as Lugash seems to use Indian titles like Maharajah.
161* RealLifeWritesThePlot: One reason the RunningGag of Clouseau's costumes became more pronounced in ''Strikes Again'' and ''Revenge'' was because Peter Sellers' health had become too frail for him to perform as much slapstick as he wanted to. ''Trail'' and ''Curse'', of course, were completely conceived/made after Sellers had died, and the plots work to compensate for this absence.
162* ReassignedToAntarctica: Dreyfus frequently threatens to send Clouseau to Martinique for exasperating him. In ''A Shot in the Dark'', Clouseau was about ready to leave when he is reluctantly reassigned to the Gambrelli case by Dreyfus.
163* RefrigeratorAmbush: Cato pulls one off in ''Return'', and again in ''Son''.
164* RevengeOfTheSequel: ''Return of'', ''Strikes Again'', ''Revenge of'', ''Trail of'', ''Curse of'', ''Son of''.
165* RogerRabbitEffect: Several of the films end with the animated Pink Panther interacting in some fashion with the live-action characters. ''Son of...'' does this in the ''opening'' credits.
166* RunningGag / SequelEscalation: Clouseau's accent, his disguises in the later films, Cato's attacks and the subsequent fights, Dreyfus' murder attempts and his eye twitch, and the NonFatalExplosions.
167** "Never look a gift horse in the mouth" is a popular philosophy amongst disparate characters in ''Curse''.
168* ShapedLikeItself:
169-->'''Francois:''' Do you know what kind of bomb it was?
170-->'''Clouseau:''' (''gravely'') The exploding kind.
171* {{Sidekick}}: Hercule is this to Clouseau in ''Shot''. Cato, whose role is largely confined to Clouseau's apartment in most of the films, becomes this outright in the second half of ''Revenge'' and later serves the same role in ''Son'' for Clouseau, Jr. In ''WesternAnimation/TheInspector'' animated shorts, Deux-Deux fills this role; in the reboot, it's Ponton who does the same.
172* SignificantBirthDate
173** Used as an in-joke in ''Trail'' -- Clouseau was born on September 8, which means he and Peter Sellers share a birthday.
174** In ''Curse'', we learn that Dreyfus was born on April 1 (AprilFoolsDay).
175* SinsOfTheFather: Quite a few of the jokes of ''Son of the Pink Panther'' revolve around the secondary cast hating Jacques Gambrelli, even if he has not done anything to them personally (''yet''), because he is the son of Jacques Clouseau. That includes Dreyfus [[spoiler:not knowing what to do because he's in love with Maria but Clouseau's ''breed'' would be his foster son if they marry]] and Balls pointing out that Clouseau never paid him in full for the many costumes he purchased and when Gambrelli asks for a disguise for the third act, Balls makes sure that the villains will know who to look for by placing a big "CLOUSEAU" on the back of it.
176* SomebodySetUpUsTheBomb: In the Sellers films it's a RunningGag from ''Shot'' onwards that ''somebody's'' going to try to off Clouseau with a bomb at some point, be it a TimeBomb or IncrediblyObviousBomb.
177* SpiritualSuccessor: The Neil Simon-penned film ''After The Fox'' (1967) features Sellers as a master criminal nicknamed "The Fox" who uses a phony movie shoot as cover for a gold heist. Much of the humor is identical to that in the ''Panther'' films, and there is even a Panther-style opening credit sequence featuring a cartoon fox.
178* TokenGoodCop:
179** In the original continuity, Inspector Cloueseau is an accident-prone CluelessDetective, his boss Dreyfus is a hammy, AxCrazy ButtMonkey, and most of the SpearCarrier uniformed cops provide some bumbling slapstick, but BeleagueredAssistant Francois is competent enough in his MrExposition role. Clouseau's assistant from ''Film/AShotInTheDark'' is very practical and conscientious, but, as revealed in a later film, he takes early retirement rather than keep working with Clouseau.
180** Clouseau's assistant In the reboot duology, Gilbert Ponton, is a CloudcuckoolandersMinder with some good fighting and observational skills, while Clouseau is a GeniusDitz who normally puts an emphasis on the Ditz and Dreyfus and his staff vaingloriously pursue the wrong leads.
181* TranslationConvention: Parodied as a RunningGag - everyone is assumed to be speaking French, but only Clouseau has a [[JustAStupidAccent French accent]].
182* UntoUsASonAndDaughterAreBorn: Turns out that [[spoiler: Jacques Gambrelli/Clouseau, Jr.]] has a twin sister!
183* WalkingDisasterArea: Most of the films' humor revolves around the incredible amount of destruction and misfortune caused by the clumsy and idiotic [[CluelessDetective Clouseau]]. In the second film, Dreyfus claims that with ten Clouseaus he could destroy the world. This is ''not'' meant as a compliment.
184* WallpaperCamouflage: Clouseau and Ponton manage this in the reboot.
185* WhatTheFuAreYouDoing: Clouseau's impromptu "training sessions" with Cato.
186* WritersCannotDoMath: In ''Curse of the Pink Panther'', Dreyfus' birth year is said to be 1900. This movie was made in 1983, placing this character in his early 80s. Never mind the fact that Dreyfus obviously doesn't look that old (Herbert Lom was only in his 60s), but then comes ''Son of the Pink Panther'' which takes place 10 years later, meaning in that movie he must be in his early 90s! Even if Dreyfus was in his early 80s in ''Curse...'', shouldn't he be retired from the police force by then?
187** It's more likely that, due to its voice tone at the moment, the computer that was regurgitating Dreyfus' basic information was going to reveal the last two digits after 1900, but was cut off by François because of how much it was starting to annoy Dreyfus.
188* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: The plot of ''Inspector Clouseau'' wraps up pretty quickly after the gang's boat sinks without telling if they were arrested or if they got away.
189** In ''Revenge'', Dreyfus and Cato are never seen again after the fireworks factory explodes until ''Trail''.

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