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4[[quoteright:350:[[Film/MrAndMrsSmith2005 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/beauty_is_never_tarnished.png]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:350:Would you believe that they were in a BrutalBrawl just moments before this?]]
6
7->''"A scar on the face is a badge of honor for a man. Though it's only a flaw on a woman."''
8-->-- '''Momo Nishimiya''', ''Manga/JujutsuKaisen''
9
10Women and girls are action and adventure heroes - just like men and boys are! They get into dangerous situations, face menacing villains, get captured, and even get into fights. But where death-defying stunts leave men visibly bruised and bloody, the women are oddly '''put-together'''. When women tear their clothing, it's [[{{Fanservice}} that kind]] of ClothingDamage; if their hair's unkempt it's [[UnkemptBeauty artfully dishevelled]]. Cuts on the face are always perfectly placed to emphasize their cheekbones. Basically? Fierce hand-to-hand fights are cool, [[{{Catfight}} even sexy,]] but the broken noses and black eyes they cause are not. A heroine will almost never suffer a '''[[ScarsAreForever permanent]]''' injury such as the loss of a limb or eye, no matter how much punishment she goes through. Even when heroines '''die''', they'll (usually) be privileged to suffer "beautiful" deaths (IRL, [[NoDeadBodyPoops corpses occasionally shit themselves]], and this is statistically more likely in women than in men).
11
12In video games (especially fighting ones) in that girls and boys can fight and both genders can take the same hits, it is not uncommon for girls to have less extreme facial reactions (IE. doesn't pop out tongue, eyes don't come out of head, or general deformation such as jaws stretching out when hit under said jaw) while males tend to vary on their consequences for taking hits even if they take the same amount of damage to the HP bar.
13
14The other version of this trope concerns a different form of beauty: "inner" beauty -- i.e., the recognition that women have bodily functions, due to being, you know, '''human'''. Gross-out jokes (and anything involving farts, burps, whatever) are male territory.
15
16This trope is generally more prevalent (and noticeable) in visual media when you can actually see the women in question. Preserving female characters' attractiveness at all costs is most likely responsible for the prevalence of the CuteMonsterGirl and its various related tropes. Male aliens, robots, and monsters can be as outlandish as the creator desires, but '''female''' aliens, robots, and monsters inevitably look just like regular attractive women with [[LittleBitBeastly fangs, horns]], [[RubberForeheadAliens antennae]], or even just an [[GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe unusual skin]] [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation color]]. Expect the aforementioned female non-humans to be nowhere near as ugly as [[HollywoodHomely they're depicted]] [[InformedAttractiveness as]] [[InformedDeformity being]].
17
18This is also part of the reason that MenAreTheExpendableGender, and that female characters who '''do''' die generally get much "gentler" deaths or [[GoryDiscretionShot don't die onscreen.]] After all, you can't show a woman getting set on fire, riddled with bullets, or having her head ripped off by the monster without ruining her '''good looks''', and [[MostWritersAreMale nobody wants that]]. There is also a practical possibility for this in long-running works - characters who have particularly bad scars will get them on their back, chest, or legs to save make-up artists the trouble of having to apply more prosthetics than they would if the scars were on the face.
19
20It's more common in the West, particularly in older movies and shows - however in Japan, the '''outer''' beauty version is often averted, with [[GenderIsNoObject people being roughed up or exposed to violence regardless of sex/gender]]; on the other hand, the '''inner''' beauty version is, if anything, much stronger. This may not protect female antagonists from [[CoveredInGunge gunge]], or, less commonly, female villains from the [[GoodScarsEvilScars appropriate scarring]].
21
22Compare DirtForcefield, KickingAssInAllHerFinery. Contrast UnkemptBeauty. For the clothing only, see BulletProofFashionPlate. A common specific form involves characters (especially women) who PrefersGoingBarefoot, whose feet are very rarely shown to be as dirty and/or calloused as those of people who habitually go barefoot outdoors are in real life.
23
24If beauty '''is''' tarnished and then subsequently killed off, it's DeathByDisfigurement. If she lives, it's almost always a ticket to the land of BodyHorror, via BeautyToBeast. If '''intentionally''' done by themselves, it's TarnishingTheirOwnBeauty. For a version of this that applies to beauty lost through time, see MenGetOldWomenGetReplaced. GoodThingYouCanHeal can be used as a DoubleSubversion of this trope - beauty gets tarnished, and then quickly restored.
25----
26!!Examples of the first (action-oriented) kind:\
27'''NO AVERSIONS'''
28
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
32* ''Manga/AirGear'' mostly plays this straight, although there are a few exceptions. The biggest would probably have to be [[spoiler:[[StatuesqueStunner Benkei]]]], who hacks her own right leg off to get out of a trap. It doesn't grow back or get replaced.
33* ''Manga/{{Arachnid}}'':
34** Alice gets beat up so much by Kamadouma that she spends one chapter with bandages and an EyepatchOfPower. Gokiburi considers her ''"moe"'' anyway. Later on, Dinoponera tortures Alice by stabbing her in the palms, arms, legs, and butt with a potent venomous needle. This ''does'' leave visible scars on Alice's palms, but the sequel ''Manga/{{Blattodea}}'' is drawn by the illustrator of ''Caterpillar'' and so Alice goes back to looking pristine. In fact, one chapter retcons away the slash injury Kabutomushi had suffered during the Arachnid Hunt.
35** In the prequel ''Manga/{{Caterpillar}}'', Imomushi is said to be CoveredInScars that aren't actually detailed on the artwork by any of the three illustrators who portrayed her in the overall series. She and Kabutomushi get beat up a lot over the course of the story but receive no lasting injuries.
36* ''Manga/BlackLagoon'':
37** Zig-zagged in the character of Balalaika. The parts of her face that aren't horribly scarred are beautiful. The parts that are scarred look like she's been deep fat fried, hence why some people call her "Fry-Face" (but only to her back).
38** When Revy and Roberta have their NoHoldsBarredBeatdown at the end of Roberta's first arc, they are bruised and bloodied but suffer no permanent damage.
39* ''Anime/CarriedByTheWindTsukikageRan'': Ran and Meow never look unkempt or dirty at any point in the series, even though they very often find themselves with no food and out in heavy rain, walking through the countryside for days on end. They also never suffer battle injuries: the closest is Ran getting her hair ribbon cut, which just causes her flowing black hair to fall down in a rather fetching manner.
40* In ''Manga/Change123'', the female fighters get badly injured, but few scars mar their perfect features. The one time they were shown/drawn was when Gettou explained [[JustifiedTrope how hers were closed up so they'd heal and fade]].
41* Happens in ''[[Anime/Danganronpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool Danganronpa 3]]'''s Future Arc. Out of the [[spoiler:4]] people to get injected with Monokuma's poison, the men are shown having half their bodies turn purple and them crying blood in graphic detail. The sole female to get poisoned, however, has her head tucked away neatly so that we can't really see anything. [[spoiler: In a unique subversion, this foreshadows that she isn't dead.]]
42* In ''Anime/DarlingInTheFRANXX'', the WildChild Zero Two had a childhood where she was treated more like a circus lion than a human, complete with chains and sedatives. Yet in the present day (when she's someone's {{Love Interest|s}}) she wears a perfectly coiffed military uniform, her hair is well-groomed, and she is able to function in human society just as well- if not ''better''- than people who had human contact growing up. She is also a total DudeMagnet, even though [[NubileSavage she likes to catch and eat raw fish]].
43* ''Manga/DeathNote'': At one point in the story, Light Yagami and his father Soichiro are both imprisoned and placed under constant surveillance in order to determine if either of them is Kira. Soichiro's appearance starts radically changing as a result of the stress; he grows a beard and his hair starts graying. Light, on the other hand, being a textbook {{Bishonen}}, is hardly affected at all.
44* In ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'', despite being tortured by Myotismon, Gatomon only gets one scar, on its paw (which is usually concealed by other things anyway). Its digivolution, Angewomon, doesn't have any scars at all and is the series's MsFanservice.
45* ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheSpaceHeroes'' have the gang's breakout from Ikaros' dungeon, with everyone suffering assorted AmusingInjuries in the process and seen getting bandaged later on... except Shizuka, who doesn't even have a scratch on her.
46* In ''Manga/DrStone,'' people who are unpetrified have weird lines on their bodies from where they started to crack as statues. For most of the characters, these are jagged lines on the face; [[GirlNextDoor Yuzuriha]], however, has artful swirls near her shoulders, while [[DarkActionGirl Homura]]'s is on her thigh.
47* In ''Literature/{{Gosick}}'', [[spoiler:Avril]] is revealed to have been kidnapped and replaced by an impostor. Despite having been tied up underneath some floorboards for ''at least'' a few days, she looks clean and has no visible signs of injury when she's discovered. What makes it even stranger is that a {{Flashback}} shows that she had to be physically overpowered by her captor after fighting back, which you think would have at least left a mark or two.
48* In ''Manga/{{Hitohira}}'' [[spoiler:Nono and Risaki]] start a brutal fight which leaves them both unconscious, but it apparently doesn't leave any bruises.
49* In ''Manga/{{Holyland}}'', despite spending months on the street doing street fighting on concrete with no rules, the BeautyEqualsGoodness protagonists never seem to break their noses, get scars or chip or lose visible teeth. [[TheHero Yuu]] is shown scratched and bruised and loses at least one molar, but nothing permanently changes his appearance.
50* In ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable'', despite the many injuries Josuke endures, he always comes out looking just the way he did before receiving said injuries.
51* Played straight in the first season of ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'', where Nanoha and Fate get ClothingDamage at best while Chrono is shown with his face half covered in blood.
52* Balsa from ''Literature/MoribitoGuardianOfTheSpirit'' receives some serious injuries during the series, but none of them leave visible scars. We can assume she ''must'' have a nasty one on her stomach, but her clothes are rather modest and only show her arms and face, which remain untarnished.
53* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'':
54** Both students and heroes end up in dangerous situations against villains and disasters that leave them bloodied, heavily injured, and often scarred, however, this only applies to the male characters. Female characters are rarely, if at all, seriously injured and at worst rendered unconscious without serious external damage due to an enemy's quirk.
55** Horrifically subverted in regards to how [[spoiler:Midnight is killed. During the heroes' battle with the Paranormal Liberation Front, Midnight tries to knock out Gigantomachia with her Quirk, only to be intercepted by a massive chunk of concrete thrown by Mr. Compress. She falls to the forest floor bloodied and badly injured with her hair disheveled and her mask in disarray. She is later confirmed to have died in her fight with a villain, the manga never shows her body, but an earlier scene of her face down in a pool of blood confirms it wasn't pretty]].
56* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
57** Double-subverted with Nami. The serious damage she receives during her more intense fights does show, but as soon as the fights are over, in any of the more minor battles, and in the long run overall, her skin is absolutely flawless. The most ridiculous is probably the case of her shoulder; she ''stabbed'' it repeatedly during her epic FreakOut at Arlong Park, and it left a very large and visible scar (which you can see [[http://onepiece.wikia.com/wiki/File:Nami_Scar.png here]], above the [[FanService fan service]]) for the remainder of the arc. As soon as the arc was over? She got a new tattoo and her scar was nowhere to be seen. But deep stab-wound scars like that, in real life, are particularly nasty and never quite heal so completely.
58*** In the manga, for some time the scar was still visible a bit under her new tattoo the times she wore sleeveless shirts, but by the Whisky Peak arc, it completely disappeared. Maybe Creator/EiichiroOda thought it was too much of a hassle to draw.
59** Generally speaking, when Nami and Robin are in a fight, their injuries are far more minor compared their male crew mates and virtually never to the face. They are also immune to the AmusingInjuries regularly inflicted on the male protagonists.
60** Double-subverted with [[spoiler:Sanji's brother]] Vinsmoke Yonji. Sanji kicked him so hard in the face during their confrontation that his face resembled a piece of bent metal and stayed that way for a while. The only way he could successfully restore his face to normal was by using a ''press machine'', and he's looking fine afterwards.
61** The Thriller Bark Pirates have four (living) members; three are {{Gonk}} men and one is a pretty woman. The three men are beaten to a pulp by the Straw Hats, while the woman is simply scared into fainting and doesn't suffer any injuries during the story arc (or at any point), and even gets to pull a HeelFaceTurn.
62*** Also applies to the undead members. Almost all of the zombies are grotesque and/or monstrous in appearance, except for Cindry, who still resembles the beautiful woman she was in life (intentionally so, because the MadScientist responsible for assembling all of them was smitten with her). While most of the other zombies are shown being beaten up and brutalized over the course of the story, Chopper is able to disable Cindry simply by TalkingTheMonsterToDeath.
63** During the Sabaody Archipelago Arc, a family of Celestial Dragons is introduced, with two ugly male members and one pretty female member (one of the few non-{{Gonk}} Celestial Dragons seen). The two ugly men are pummelled unconscious in the story arc (although one only accidentally), while the woman gets off with no injuries (she's knocked out without being touched with a burst of [[AwesomenessIsAForce Conquerer's Haki]]).
64** During the Dressrosa Arc, the Donquixote Pirates has two non-{{Gonk}} female members. One is beaten simply by frightening her into fainting (twice!), while the other is convinced into pulling a HeelFaceTurn. By contrast, all the men and the uglier women are beaten up.
65** Big Mom's 3 Sweet Generals consist of two males and one female. Luffy beats the two males of them to a bloody pulp in brutal extended battles over the course of the Whole Cake Island Arc, while the one female never gets into a fight at all. Notably, there was a fourth Sweet Commander, another male, who was mentioned to have been beaten offscreen (and demoted for his loss).
66** To piss off Sanji, Niji beats a pretty servant girl to a bloody pulp [[ForTheEvulz just for the hell of it]]. The injuries are quite brutal in the manga, thereby averting this trope, but the anime plays this straight, heavily downplaying her injuries. Originally a tooth was knocked out, her right eye and lips were swollen, and she was bloody all over, but the anime just has her covered in scuff marks.
67** Another anime-only example. In the Skypeia Arc, when Conis speaks out against Enel and tries to warn the populace about his plans to kill everyone, a kid throws a rock at her head for speaking ill of Enel, causing her to bleed a little. In the anime, this is changed to a tomato. The anime has regularly shown violence from the manga far more graphic than that, so it can be assumed these two cases were changed simply because showing the face of a pretty woman character being wounded was unacceptable.
68* For someone who is consistently a ButtMonkey who gets attacked often, Jessie from ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' sure has immaculate makeup. It doesn't matter if she's having a SickEpisode or being attacked by Pokemon, her hair always bounces back without styling needed and her lipstick never smudges. In fact, the only time she's probably ever even ''shown'' without makeup was a [=XY=] VillainEpisode.
69* The absolute majority of female characters from ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' almost never suffer physical injuries (comically that is; when it comes time for occasional serious drama, especially in the final arc, some injuries will be necessary). It's always the guys (including [[DisguisedInDrag those guys]]) who get punched, kicked, rocked, shocked, burned, and subjected to all other kinds of cartoon violence. Poor them, considering the main good guys are pretty chivalrous letting the girls beat them to a pulp, and even get upset when a bad guy even dares go physical on girls. The only exceptions are Ranma's female self, his MagicMirror female clone, the two devious yet stupid Chinese sisters who get beaten up by Shampoo, and Konatsu's butt-ugly step-mother and step-sisters (well, technically they aren't "beauties").
70* Played straight initially with Flamenco Girl in ''Anime/SamuraiFlamenco''. In some of her early fights, she does get hit from time to time, but nothing too drastic that would make her look bad.
71* Played relatively straight in ''Manga/{{Sekirei}}'', with tons of ClothingDamage and minor injuries that never scar. Haihane is notable as the only Sekirei with visible scarring, but this may be justified since it's suggested they have better-than-human healing and access to incredibly advanced medical technology. [[spoiler: Karasuba notes that MBI's treatments are so advanced, the near-fatal injuries she received from Miya's RoaringRampageOfRevenge left only a small scar.]]
72* ''Manga/TenjhoTenge'' tends to go both ways on this. In both the anime and the manga, women are engaged in battle just as much as, if not more than, men. However, in the animated version, the effects of combat on the girls tend to be limited to ClothingDamage or injuries which don't obscure beauty, like bruises away from the face or sprained limbs. The manga, which is a great deal more violent, has many female characters face ''terrible and permanent'' disfigurement for their lifestyle choices (such as crushed faces, severed limbs, eyes stabbed, and other wonderful things). However, the main female cast, like Maya and Aya, tend to not face such consequences. Although, since they are legendary fighters, it could just be their skill. Maya is also [[spoiler:nearly beaten to death by Kagiroi]].
73* In ''Manga/ToLoveRu'' normally if any accident occurs, the males will suffer AmusingInjuries while the girls just get ClothingDamage or other embarrassing things.
74* In ''Manga/{{Uzumaki}}'', protagonist Kirie suffers burns that are serious enough to put her in hospital for some time, yet manage to mostly miss her face. Once she leaves the hospital, the ones on her legs are also fully healed without a trace of scarring.
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Comic Books]]
78* ''ComicBook/XMen'':
79** The spin-off ComicBook/GenerationX notably featured a team of three girls (all extremely attractive) and three boys -- two of whom had powers that left them physically deformed. Which didn't stop them from being considered attractive by many readers, of course -- but when the series' primary MrFanservice has ''no lower jaw'' (when he took his mask off), while his girlfriend is a generic all-American blonde it smells a little like a double standard.
80** Seen in earlier X-Men teams, too, where the physical mutations seemed to pop up only in male characters -- [[Characters/MarvelComicsBeast Beast]] and [[Characters/MarvelComicsNightcrawler Nightcrawler]] are visibly abnormal, [[Characters/MarvelComicsAngel Angel]] has hard-to-hide wings, [[Characters/MarvelComicsLogan Wolverine]] had claws. The only female X-Men character of that period who had a visible mutation [[Characters/XMen60sMembers Polaris]], with easily-dyed green hair (technically, [[Characters/MarvelComicsStorm Storm]]'s white hair and blue eyes are physical aspects of her mutation, but they only add to her exotic beauty). Even today, the X-Men have not had a female member who wasn't at least a CuteMonsterGirl.
81** [[Characters/MarvelComicsLauraKinney X-23]] is the pretty, {{Fanservice}}y, OppositeSexClone/daughter of Wolverine. Besides the fact that she's a clone of the famously ''un''attractive Wolverine, she's been shot, stabbed, slashed, gutted, blown up, burned down to a ''skeleton'', and had limbs hacked off entirely, and the only lasting mark on her body is the [[spoiler: emblem associated with ComicBook/CaptainUniverse]] on the palm of her right hand. {{Justified|Trope}} since she has a HealingFactor, but the sheer amount of physical abuse she sustains makes it pretty egregious.
82** ''ComicBook/XMenPhoenixLegacyOfFire'' is pretty blatant with this trope. Jena Pyre gets knocked down with such a force that she has to be placed on HealingVat because she broke some bones with the impact, yet the artwork doesn't depict her with a single bruise or scratch on her body -- they wouldn't want to ruin that tender MsFanservice body, though unlike X-23, she doesn't even have a healing factor to justify this. Later on, [[spoiler: she gets impaled with a sword by the BigBad, but astonishingly, there [[BloodlessCarnage is absolutely no blood]]]].
83** Male example in ComicBook/AstonishingXMen after Colossus is discovered to still be alive after having been assumed to have died years ago he reveals he had been imprisoned, tortured and experimented on the entire time yet is still as handsome as ever with no visible scarring.
84* ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'': While [[Characters/MarvelComicsBruceBanner Bruce Banner]] gets grotesquely muscular and [[ClothingDamage rips his shirt]], depending on the artist, his [[ComicBook/SheHulk female counterpart]] merely gets two feet taller and turns green, or bulks up some, but nowhere near as much as Bruce.
85* From ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' comics, the Characters/{{Black Cat|MarvelComics}}. Her nose has been broken ''three times'' and while she has frequently been beaten up with her costume reduced to shreds and noticeably wounded a few times, she rarely has any lasting damage, with no scars at all. (Given her [[{{Stripperiffic}} taste in costume]], they'd likely show.)
86* A [[GenderInvertedTrope Rare Male Example]] is ''ComicBook/HeathenCity Maranatha'', a [[HoYay homoerotic]] [[FilmNoir noir]] action thriller with its share of violence. Despite all the thrashing the characters go through, Owen and Malloy never tarnish their good looks.
87* Vanessa, the DumbBlonde {{Idiot Hero}}ine of the French comic ''ComicBook/LesBlondes'' regularly gets injured in various {{slapstick}} ways and is regularly seen recovering in the hospital while relating her latest mishap to her friends. None of her accidents leave her with lasting scars that would mar her good looks.
88* Played painfully straight in Wally Wood's ''ComicStrip/{{Sally Forth|Wood}}'' -- although Sally is ostensibly a soldier in a commando team, she's almost never seen as anything less than [[RuleOfSexy sexy, pristine, and completely naked.]]
89* In ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'', Nico Minoru's [[BloodMagic powers are fueled by her being constantly wounded]], and at one point, she willingly suffers torture at the hands of her evil ancestor in order to get a power boost, and yet with the exception of ''ComicBook/AvengersArena'', in which her left hand and forearm are blown off, requiring her to replace it with [[ArtificialLimbs a prosthetic]], she's never been shown to have any permanent scars.
90* In ''ComicBook/RequiemVampireKnight'', its established that those who are reincarnated in [[PlanetHeck Résurrection]] will retain the mortal scars that killed them in real life, with [[AntiHero Requiem]] having a bullet hole in his head caused from a BoomHeadshot and Otto von Todt having a [[GoodScarsEvilScars scar over his eye]] over being [[FacialHorror cleaved in the face with a knife]]. With that said some exceptions happen: [[FemmeFatale Claudia]] died through spontaneous combustion and looks like a drop-dead gorgeous vampiress rather than a burn victim, while Rebecca died in an extermination camp as a Jewish prisoner (and looked exactly like you would expect one to look like), but when she is reborn in Résurrection as a [[CuteGhostGirl lemure]], she is restored to her pretty appearance before being captured.
91* Golden Eyes, the beautiful protagonist of ComicBook/GoldenEyesAndHerHeroBill, gets this in spades. After her ambulance is struck by a shell, she has to crawl out of the wreckage and shuffle through the underbrush in a tattered uniform: yet she's still so beautiful that a German officer who finds her sneaking about can't help but be instantly besotted with her looks.
92* ''ComicBook/{{Druuna}}'': Although many other characters may suffer horrible injuries or mutations, Druuna herself never loses her stunning looks. In ''Morbus Gravis'', a doctor wonders if she has some sort of [[TheImmune genetic immunity to the viral plague]]. In ''Clone'', she starts off with the disease having negatively affected her appearance, such as losing all of her hair, but her mind is then uploaded into a healthy version of her old body.
93* In ''[[ComicBook/StreetFighter Street Fighter Legends: Ibuki]]'' the titular character is shown getting into dangerous fights, and even [[https://i.imgur.com/PmcRRm8.jpg lands rather hard in a seated position]] after being knocked back by Elena. All throughout she never shows any physical wear from battles or injury to her coccyx/hip area from falling in such a way.
94* Despite running through the jungle and fighting wild animals while wearing nothing more than a FurBikini, ComicBook/RulahJungleGoddess seldom has so much as her hair tousled.
95* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: Marya ''never'' wears shoes whether she's patrolling her mountain home or at school in Washington D.C., yet her feet are always drawn as clean with no callouses or scuffing.
96* [[{{Ninja}} Ninjette]] from ''ComicBook/{{Empowered}}'' had been seen to take all types of nasty injuries as she fended off rival ninja clans from abducting her for ninja breeding stock, but nevertheless generally looks hale and hearty. [[spoiler:It's revealed in Volume 8 that, to keep up a strong front for Empowered's sake, she hides all of her blunt force trauma and stab wound scars with 'yasegaman no jutsu'[[note]]"Grin and bear it", or "Faked Stoicism", magic[[/note]] illusions, lamenting how it drains up her ki reserves that could have been dedicated to actually healing.]]
97[[/folder]]
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99[[folder:Comic Strips]]
100* In ''ComicStrip/SpyVsSpy'', when the two (male) spies, Black Spy and White Spy went at each other, there was a roughly equal chance either one would end up brutally clobbered or reduced to LudicrousGibs. However, the (female, and much more attractively drawn) Grey Spy who occasionally appeared was an InvincibleHero (or InvincibleVillain, as it's never clear who, if any, is the good guy) who was ImmuneToSlapstick that would effortlessly destroy the other two spies every time without fail. This predictably made her unlikeable to both the cartoonist and fans, and she was soon PutOnABus and has since only made rare appearances.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Fan Works]]
104* Averted in ''Fanfic/TheButcherBird'': [[TheGunslinger Lauren]] sustains permanent burns covering her left arm, [[spoiler: Tashigi]] gains half of a GlasgowGrin thanks to shrapnel, and [[SeenItAll Ostavila]] is scarred from a lifetime of piracy. The only recurring female character that fits this trope is [[AmazonianBeauty Douglass Tina]], and that's because of her HealingFactor.
105* ''Fanfic/UltimateSpiderWoman'': Mary Jane Watson has been smashed into walls, zapped with electrical bolts, slashed by razor bats, burned with flame, and been punched square in the face, but she's never suffered any permanent scars or blemishes. Her injuries tend to heal rather quickly by themselves once she gets some rest, although she [[CutHimselfShaving still sometimes has to explain how she got hurt in the first place.]] She typically claims that she was caught up in a supervillain attack, which is more plausible than you might think because of how many supervillains are causing mayhem in New York at any given time.
106* Played with in ''Fanfic/ChildrenOfTime'' in the cases of Literature/SherlockHolmes and Beth Lestrade.
107** The TallDarkAndHandsome Holmes undergoes ''three'' separate, injury/scar-cleansing situations: one by [[Series/DoctorWho TARDIS]] medical equipment, one by a Time Lord's regenerative abilities, and one by [[BackFromTheDead rejuvenation from death]]. However, in the case of the second situation, he ''is'' left dirty and smelling like the Thames -- the regeneration healed injuries and scars ''only''.
108** Miss StatuesqueStunner Beth gets one scene of SheCleansUpNicely after having gone around several months as a [[WholesomeCrossdresser Wholesome but often dirty and scraped Crossdresser]] (for practicality and SweetPollyOliver purposes). She is also branded once and shot not long after but is also healed in the TARDIS, leaving her skin unmarred... except for [[ScarsAreForever one scar on her neck]] from an AttemptedRape. In the next season, she's said to have a lot of scars from her time as a DeathSeeker.
109* Despite going through torture, graphic violence, and emotional trauma, Nala remains exceptionally beautiful throughout ''Fanfic/TheLionKingAdventures''.
110* [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Rarity]] pulls this off in ''Fanfic/{{Greenfire}}'', still looking stunning despite having spent several hours digging for gemstones. Then again, given that Greenfire a.k.a [[AlternateUniverse Spike]] is doing the assessment and he's smitten with her, the narration is probably embellishing.
111* [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Rarity]] again, in ''Webcomic/StarMares'', manages to be almost perfectly coiffed (but for a few split ends) despite having been chained up and wired into the Nightmare Moon's targeting computer for decades, with only a twice-yearly manestylist.
112* Averted in ''Fanfic/NaturalSelection''. Characters who undergo injuries have them described long after the injuries occur. Satsuki gets this the most as her injuries are gone over all throughout the Naturals Election. Nui and Ryuko, however, play this trope straight. Though in their case, it's justified due to both of them possessing {{healing factor}}s.
113* Justified in ''Fanfic/TheSecretReturnOfAlexMack'' since one of Alex's powers lets her turn into a [[NighInvulnerability Nigh-Invulnerable]] silvery liquid form. She still gets bruised on occasion, but generally walks away from fights much less injured than other team members.
114* Averted in ''Fanfic/OlivesLastPartner'', where Olive is just as beaten up as Otto and Oscar, perhaps even moreso since she has a physical injury in the form of a lump on the side of her head from where it hit the wall after she gets thrown across the room by a flood of orange juice.
115* In ''Fanfic/OSMUFanfictionFriction'', Oswald and Orla are tasked with catching blobs at Precinct 13579. Oswald manages to catch some and is covered head to toe in slime from the struggle, while Orla isn't dirtied up at all. When asked how she managed it, she remarks that when you have over 400 years' experience with catching blob, "one learns their ways."
116* In ''WebVideo/FateStayNightUnlimitedBladeWorksAbridged'', Shirou {{lampshade|Hanging}}s this when Blood Fort Andromeda- a Noble Phantasm that is known to ''dissolve any poor sap unfortunate enough to get caught in it''- dissipates upon Rider's brutal death, but all the students look completely unharmed.
117-->'''Shirou:''' You know, you'd expect some scarring and boils and stuff from them melting as long as they did. But nah, they're all still beautiful.
118[[/folder]]
119
120[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
121* Every single one of Creator/HayaoMiyazaki's heroines, except for the one point (''if'' it occurs) in each movie where they get a little bit dirty or stained on purpose to show they're not afraid to do it, e.g., [[Anime/PrincessMononoke San]] cleaning the blood out of one of her "brother"'s musket-shot wounds, or [[Manga/NausicaaOfTheValleyOfTheWind Nausicaä]]'s dress being stained with Ohm blood (which is actually a key plot point). Sorta like their skin and clothes are made out of Teflon. (How else do you explain San's gear being clear of blood stains not much later when even modern soap powder has difficulty getting it all out?)
122* ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'':
123** Elsa has impeccable makeup despite spending most of the film surrounded by water and ice. Even when crying, it doesn't smear. Maybe it's a MundaneUtility for her [[AnIcePerson ice mage]] powers?
124** Even when [[spoiler:freezing to death from the inside out]], Anna doesn't look too sick.
125* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersUniversity'': The PNK and HSS teams make it through the first Scare Game unscathed. For the EEK team, Brynn Larson suffers a "minor" swelling after accidentally stepping on a stinging urchin. However, her sorority proves to show the best teamwork when Carla Delgado and Maria Garcia aid her and the rest keep close as to make sure she doesn't endure any more pain before making it out of the event.
126* ''WesternAnimation/SleepingBeauty'': Prince Phillip is a Rare Male Example. Despite being bound, gagged, blasted, zapped, lapidated, thorned, burned, and clawed, the dude comes fresh as roses and ready for a ball!
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Film -- Live Action]]
130* In ''Film/AliceInWonderland2010'', Alice falls down a rabbit hole, gets shrunk, enlarged, and stuffed in a teapot, then fights the Jabberwocky...all without a curl of hair getting out of place. She gets a scratch on her arm, but that's it.
131* ''Film/AnneOfTheIndies'': Molly (played by Debra Paget) is abducted and held prisoner by pirates and suffers nothing more than some decorous damage to her dress. Later she is marooned on a cay with her husband. Despite the fact she should be suffering from exposure and dehydration, her hair and makeup remain perfect.
132* ''Film/AtomicBlonde'': While virtually every other death in the movie is extremely brutal and leaves horrible, disgusting corpses, Delphine is garrotted, while she is wearing her underwear, and there isn't as much as a line across her neck.
133* PlayedForHorror in ''Film/TheAutopsyOfJaneDoe''. Jane Doe's body is unnaturally preserved and devoid of external bruises or marks. The "beauty" of the corpse contrasts even more with the discovery of the corpse's gruesome internal traumas. A final unnerving instance of it occurs when in the last moments of the movie, [[spoiler:the police investigate the morgue following the deaths of the Tildens and the corpse is shown to be perfectly intact, which the audience saw resulting from the transfer of her injuries to Tommy]].
134* In ''Film/TheAvengers2012'', all of the male heroes go through the movie in various states of bodily damage, exhaustion, and fatigue. ComicBook/BlackWidow, however, other than bleeding from her forehead and lip, suffers little visible damage. Keep in mind that this character is introduced in the film [[spoiler: being tortured by Russian terrorists]] and later spends a significant amount of time [[spoiler: fighting the Hulk and having a building fall on her]]. On the other hand, [[Characters/SHIELDDirectors Maria Hill]] winds up with some pretty nasty cuts to her face after narrowly avoiding death-by-grenade, remaining bruised and bloody until the action subsides and she's seen getting medical attention.
135* ''Film/BatmanReturns'':
136** Subverted by [[Characters/CatwomanSelinaKyle Selina Kyle]] after she is pushed through a window to her (presumed) death. She has a large, bloody cut on her head from where a shard of glass slashed her, and upon landing in the alley, she loses consciousness and lays in the snow for so long that her skin goes icy white. Then about a dozen cats show up and crawl over her body, one of them ''chewing her fingers'' and drawing a fair amount of blood. Then her eyes roll around in their sockets, [[Wrestling/TheUndertaker Undertaker]]-style, as she regains consciousness. ''Then'', upon arriving home, she slowly undergoes a [[HeroicBSOD Heroic Breakdown]] that begins with her messily downing an entire carton of milk, spilling a good portion of it on her dress and leaving her with a "milk mustache"; she can also be seen ''drooling'' the milk from her [[SlasherSmile maniacally grinning lips]] as she goes crazy in subsequent shots.
137** Played straight with the Ice Princess. [[Characters/BatmanThePenguin The Penguin]] hits her in the face with a sharp-edged Batarang (stolen from Batman by one of his minions in an earlier scene) the approximate size and shape of a Frisbee, which had earlier flattened three grown men -- and although Commissioner Gordon tells the news media that there was blood on the Batarang when the police found it, in subsequent scenes the girl is not bleeding and doesn't even show scar tissue. Of course, [[spoiler: the last we see of her, she's falling from an impossibly high building and is killed when she lands face-first on the Gotham Plaza dais, so her pretty face almost certainly got mashed to a pulp -- but we never see her autopsy photos, so we'll never know for sure]].
138* Creator/HalleBerry:
139** In ''Film/Catwoman2004'', Patience has to crawl through a waste pipe and gets drowned by a massive jet of sewage. However, when she washes up on shore, she's only just got a bit of dirt on her face.
140** Played straight in ''Film/XMenTheLastStand''. Storm gets into some pretty rough fight scenes with Callisto but never comes away with anything worse than tousled hair.
141* In ''Film/TheBookOfEli'' the world has become a complete wasteland with very limited resources but, hey Creator/MilaKunis looks nice. This is justified in that she and her mother were being pampered by the BigBad, receiving rare bottles of shampoo and perfume.
142* In ''Film/TheBourneUltimatum'', a GiantMook punches Nicky in the face, knocking her unconscious without otherwise injuring her or marking her in any way.
143* In ''Film/BrokenBlossoms'', Lucy has an abusive father who likes to take out his anger by whipping her. Still, there aren't any bruises on the visible parts of her body. The closest is a [[spoiler:smudge of blood on her mouth the [[OffingTheOffspring last, and hardest, time]] he beats her]].
144* In ''Film/CaramuruTheInventionOfBrazil'', the main protagonist Diogo is put on a ship and sent on exile as a criminal, gets shipwrecked and later stranded in the land that would later be Brazil, yet he retains his {{pretty boy}} looks during the entire movie without even growing a beard during this period, considering that at least several months have passed with him being unable to shave. This is a [[HistoricalBeautyUpgrade huge departure]] from real life where Diogo is often depicted as a hardy, bearded man (like you would expect from a man stranded in a savage land for a ''long'' time).
145* In the 1958 film version of ''Theatre/CatOnAHotTinRoof'', Maggie (Creator/ElizabethTaylor) goes out to the pouring rain and gets her hair soaking wet, but the next time we see her, it's perfectly dry and styled.
146* In ''Film/TheChargeAtFeatherRiver'', all of the men look suitably disheveled following their hard cross-country ride/hike: dusty, sweaty, unshaven, numerous small wounds, their clothes rumpled, etc. Anne [=McKeever=], however, still looks fresh and rested, her face clean, and her hair styled in a suspiciously '50s coif. Her sister Jennie also looks presentable but has more justification: being dressed in hardwearing buckskin and having her hair in practical plaits.
147* ''Film/CharliesAngelsFullThrottle'': In the final fight with [[BigBad Madison]], the Angels got serious injuries that in real life might need medical attention, particularly when they get thrown away from a speeding car. Nevertheless, after defeating Madison, the Angels could attend Alex's boyfriend, Jason's, movie premiere looking pristine and fine.
148* In the Creator/NicholasSparks offering, ''Film/TheChoice'', the heroine is hit by a car and spends an undetermined amount of time in a coma (in the book, it's for a full year). When she finally awakens, she looks the same as ever -- no pallor, no weight loss, perfect hair, etc.
149* ''Film/TheChroniclesOfNarnia: Film/PrinceCaspian'' gives us a [[GenderInvertedTrope Rare Male Example]] when the eponymous character hits his face on a tree branch in the opening escape sequence and gets up looking as handsome as ever with nary a scratch on him.
150* In ''Film/{{Clash of the Titans|2010}}'' Io constantly looks as though she's just come from a spa while the male characters look increasingly grimy. This, combined with her habit of just showing up without provisions even though she's following the same route as the others, gives the impression that her {{curse|dWithAwesome}} isn't immortality but the ability to ''teleport'', and she's just porting in from Argos whenever she's needed.
151* ''Film/TheCraft'':
152** Bonnie has scars from a fire she was in years ago, and desires to be rid of them. But it's no coincidence the scars are only on her shoulders and back, leaving her face unaffected (presumably also having to spare Creator/NeveCampbell additional hours in the makeup chair). Sarah does give her a form of LaserGuidedKarma later, where she makes Bonnie hallucinate that her scars have returned, now covering her whole face (and [[BodyHorror it's not pretty]]). Still though, when the other girls are BroughtDownToNormal in the finale, Bonnie remains unscarred.
153** Laura Lizzie plays with the trope. As revenge for bullying Rochelle, Sarah casts a spell to make all her hair fall out. There is one scene where she's half-bald and looks quite pitiful. But the next time she's seen, she's wearing a wig. It's admittedly never said whether the snap back at the end would have her hair grow back.
154* ''Film/DWar'' has the heroes' car blasted by a dragon's fireball, flip a few times in the air, and skid along the ground, only to have the woman emerge (white sweater included) completely unscathed. Of course, there was a little bit of black soot on her face.
155* In ''Film/Daredevil2003'', Matt Murdock has many scars all over his body, although his face is left untouched. Elektra, despite [[spoiler:a stab through her hand, a cut on her neck, broken back, head injury, and getting gutted]], is still pretty enough that Bullseye tried to kiss her.
156* ''Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy'':
157** Bruce also has several scars along his back but again, his face is okay.
158** Also done with Catwoman who takes this trope to an extreme. She never gets harmed, she never gets any injury or is hurt once. It's weird because she is constantly fighting but nobody was a match for her and she outsmarted everyone she fought.
159* ''Film/{{Dredd}}'':
160** Averted from before the film begins with Ma-Ma, who is played by the very beautiful Lena Headey, but who has very prominent facial scarring. [[spoiler: Even more averted at the end, when Dredd tosses her off a building and we see in close-up and slow motion the effect of her landing face-first on the ground two hundred storeys below.]]
161** Similarly, though Anderson is played by the beautiful Olivia Thirlby, she's wounded during the film. She's visibly bruised by the end, plus looking realistically tired and mussed.
162* Slightly subverted in the climactic shoot-out in ''Film/DuelInTheSun'': although Pearl's ''face'' is untouched, her clothes and especially her hands are realistically torn and bloody after she crawls up a mountain on her hands and knees--possibly because actress Jennifer Jones really did injure herself in the process.
163* In ''Film/TheEye'', Creator/JessicaAlba's character [[spoiler: is twice blinded by explosions, the first from a firecracker and the second from an exploding tanker sending windshield glass into her eye. Despite getting a face full of high-speed glass, in the end, she has perfect skin]].
164* ''Film/EyesWideShut'': All of the women are subject to this.
165** Domino looks very beautiful for a dying, drug-addicted prostitute.
166** After ''just'' OD-ing at Ziegler's house, Mandy looks no different than a healthy person (and beautiful).
167** We also never see the death of the woman at the party, and while Bill looks at Mandy's corpse, she never looks visibly injured.
168* ''Film/TheFinal'' both plays straight and averts the trope. Two female bullies get chemicals smeared all over their faces to destroy their good looks forever, and one gets two of her fingers cut off. However, far more male bullies are tortured than females despite there being a well-developed female bully who never gets tortured. Also, Emily is [[spoiler: shot in the head]] but this isn't shown.
169* If you go with the hypothesis that [[spoiler:Jenny]] from ''Film/ForrestGump'' has AIDS, you'll be left wondering why you don't see her with sores and lesions from Kaposi's Sarcoma, hair graying and loss, and other nasty symptoms associated with that disease. Particularly naïve children watching the film might speculate that she died from...being extremely tired, perhaps? The same goes for his cancer-stricken mother.
170* ''Film/Fresh2022'':
171** There is no visible change to Noa's appearance, even after she has spent days—if not weeks—locked in a cellar, chained up, and physically and emotionally tortured.
172** Penny as well, despite having been in captivity longer, having more of her body parts sawn off, and not having Steve's favor like Noa.
173* ''Film/GangsOfNewYork'':
174** The only punishment inflicted on Amsterdam Vallon (played by pretty-boy actor Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio) for his attempted assassination of Bill "The Butcher" is a mild scar on his cheek. Given the bankability of [=DiCaprio=]'s pretty face, however, it's impressive the film even goes this far.
175** Jenny Everdeanne. She has scars but placed where almost no one can see them.
176* ''[[Film/TheGrayMan2022 The Gray Man]]'': Six spends the entire movie getting punched, shot and thrown to the ground but the only damage to his face is a single, stylish gash above one eye.
177* ''Film/GoneGirl'': When [[spoiler: Amy kills Desi]], somehow she manages to be soaked in blood from the neck down. A gorefest with a pretty face, it plays this trope very straight.
178* Zig-zagged in ''Film/HardRevengeMilly''. Milly is tortured and mutilated by the Jack Brothers in flashbacks (with a certain amount of GoryDiscretionShot) but they leave her face untouched, even though she bit one of them on the face. In the main film, all of her injuries are covered by her normal clothes, and we just see her pretty face.
179* ''Film/HeroicTrio'', a Hong Kong movie featuring three beautiful superheroines, lampshades this at one point. The characters narrowly avoid getting blown up. One of the characters turns to the other and quickly asks, "Am I still pretty?". At most, they get bloodied mouths and dirt smeared on their faces, so the answer is yes.
180* ''Film/TheHungerGames'':
181** Due to medical treatments, Katniss's swollen Tracker Jacker stings completely vanish in the next scene. The cut she receives on her face all but vanishes in the next scene as well. For all the time she spends sleeping outside and fighting to the death, she still looks great by the end.
182** This goes for the other female Tributes too on the whole -- even little Rue looks rather perfectly coiffured and clean, for a twelve-year-old surviving in the woods. In life, Glimmer also looks salon-perfect -- but the trope is {{averted|Trope}} by the state of her dead body after the tracker-jackers kill her.
183* Mia in ''Literature/IfIStay'', in her out-of-body state, looking the same as she did before the accident.
184* In ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom'', the heroine's clothes never tore or got stained. She also gets locked inside a metal cage and lowered into a lava pit. She's only a teensy bit sweaty when she's rescued, [[ConvectionShmonvection showing no visible burns or signs of heat stroke.]]
185* ''Film/Jailbait2014'': Despite numerous beatings and assaults, the worst injury Anna sustains is some bruising that disappears by the next nude scene and a small scar on her cheek.
186* ''Film/JamesBond'':
187** Occurs with 007 frequently. It's hard to remember movies where he ends up looking terrible; only three come to mind: ''Film/DrNo, Film/LicenceToKill'' and ''Film/CasinoRoyale2006'' -- his first film (where the Bond Girl is the one who ends up immaculate), and two DarkerAndEdgier approaches. The last one starts a trend for Creator/DanielCraig to avoid it, with ''Film/QuantumOfSolace'' having Bond look, as M says it, "like hell" within 15 minutes.
188** In ''Film/{{Goldeneye}}'', as the half-naked Bond and Xenia wrestle in the sauna, he gets the upper hand, draws his gun, and demands that she take him to the as-yet-unseen villain. When they arrive at the villain's headquarters, ''she's'' disheveled, as one would expect as she had to hurriedly dress at gunpoint. Bond, however, is as impeccably dressed as ever, which he somehow managed despite holding a gun on her.
189** Played with in ''Film/DieAnotherDay''. Bond is filthy with a shaggy beard and hair after being tortured for 14 months. This is 007 at his most unkempt in the entire ''series'', and audiences at the time were a bit shocked to see the character in such a disheveled state. However, Bond is still in remarkably good shape for someone who had endured that type of hell for so long. All it takes are a single shave, a hair cut, and a change of clothes for Bond to become sexy again.
190** ''Film/CasinoRoyale2006'': Vesper Lynd's mascara ''does'' run when she sits crying in the shower, but oddly, it's not at all affected when she [[spoiler:drowns]].
191* ''Film/{{Jumanji}}'' has Peter getting turned into a monkey and Alan getting all dirty but despite being involved in the same actions, Sarah and Judy don't look that bad. Judy does [[spoiler: get shot in the neck with a barb from a poisonous plant]] but the wound isn't shown on camera much.
192* While the Bride suffers plenty of beat downs in ''Film/KillBill'' and is frequently seen bloodied and bruised, none of her injuries or ordeals leave any lasting visible damage or scars.
193* ''Franchise/KingKong'':
194** ''Film/KingKong2005'': {{Downplayed|Trope}}. Ann is extremely filthy, barefoot, has torn clothes, and a scratch/scrape here and there, but considering the abuse she takes in the jungle, it's still pretty light. She's also not blue from frostbite and hypothermia, despite wearing only a flimsy dress on a night cold enough for the Central Park lake to be frozen solid. Nor does she exhibit these symptoms after falling through said lake when an artillery shell hits it.
195** ''Film/KongSkullIsland'': Both the major female members of the [[Characters/MonsterVerseSkullIslandExpedition Skull Island expedition]] plus Conrad. Creator/BrieLarson's Weaver goes through a lot of abuse including a violent helicopter crash, several explosions, a very deep fall into water, and [[spoiler: being held in Kong's ginormous fist when it's pulled down Ramarak's throat]], yet the worst she gets are dirty clothes, a minor bruise and two scrapes under her left eye, a scrape on the left side of her jaw, and a bruised right shoulder -- apart from that, she looks gorgeous from beginning to end. To some extent, Conrad gets a bit dirty without it detracting too much from his Creator/TomHiddleston given good looks. San only suffers a couple of cuts and scratches.
196** In the sequel graphic novel ''Skull Island: The Birth of Kong''; though [[Characters/MonsterVerseSkullIslandKaijuAndOtherCreatures Kong's parents]] wouldn't exactly be considered beautiful to humans, in Riccio's MaybeMagicMaybeMundane dreams, after the two apes are killed and the Skullcrawlers have left; both their corpses are shown to be uneaten, intact and no worse for wear apart from several gouges in their chests. Which is very puzzling since the entire source of the Skullcrawlers' hyper-aggression is all-consuming Horror Hunger.
197* ''Film/LaraCroftTombRaider'' and its sequel play it very straight. [[Film/TombRaider2018 The 2018 reboot]], not so much, even if Creator/AliciaVikander [[https://ogimg.infoglobo.com.br/in/22500917-fcc-d9c/FT1086A/420/x75606514_SCAlicia-Vikander-em-cenas-de-Tomb-Raider.jpg.pagespeed.ic.UqCtvy2taK.jpg still looks quite good for someone dirty and bruised]].
198* Spoofed in ''Film/LastActionHero'', where all Jack Slater needs to clean up after emerging from a tar pit is a few seconds with a towel.
199-->'''Danny:''' "You know, [[LampshadeHanging tar actually]] ''[[LampshadeHanging sticks]]'' [[LampshadeHanging to most people.]]"
200* Particularly noticeable in movies from the 1950s and so (at least, those rare movies where women ventured out). See ''Film/TheLeechWoman'' on ''[[Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000 MST3K]]'', whose leading lady romps through the jungle in a white blouse -- and it stays white the whole time! Ajax, strong on dirt?
201* In ''Film/TheLegendOfZorro'', Creator/CatherineZetaJones runs across a dirt field at full speed, fights with a shovel, runs back across the same field at full speed, falls in the dirt at least once, and when she gets back to her room her white nightgown is spotless and she doesn't have a hair out of place.
202* ''Film/LesMiserables2012'' goes for "extreme realism" according to the director, with the depiction of 1800s France, and the trope is averted by having Fantine's beauty get destroyed by poverty (Creator/AnneHathaway lost a lot of weight and had her hair cut off to provide the effect). But it's still played straight in other areas; Eponine for example is poor and unhealthy in the book, yet this version of her has clear skin and perfectly waxed eyebrows with her hair only attractively messy. Cosette's child self only has a little bit of messy hair and looks very good for someone forced to work like a dog in the Thernardiers' inn. And Mme Thernardier is given a healthy dose of AdaptationalAttractiveness and just has UnkemptBeauty for the scenes where she's starving on the streets.
203* From ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'', Frodo loses a finger, Boromir catches several arrows in his chest, Aragorn spends the whole trilogy bloody, bruised, and scraped. Practically all of the cast is harassed by either the Watcher in the Water or a Cave troll. And all pretty boy Legolas gets over the course of is a bruise and a little smudge of dirt. And Éowyn made it through almost the entire Battle of the Pelennor Fields unscathed, with never a cut or a bruise until the Witch-King smashes her shield and her arm with his gigantic mace.
204* ''Film/LoveStory'': Jennifer Cavalleri Barrett, despite suffering from leukemia, never looks anything but as lovely as she has throughout the entire film.
205* This page's image comes from ''Film/MrAndMrsSmith2005'', where the assassin couple played by Creator/BradPitt and Creator/AngelinaJolie gets at most minor bruises from all the destruction and fighting they endure.
206* Creator/GreerGarson's Oscar-acceptance speech for ''Film/MrsMiniver'' was famously the longest in history. She thanked her hairdresser and costume designer and everyone else who had anything to do with the production. She had reason to be thankful since her character gets through the [[UsefulNotes/TheHomeFront London Blitz]] without a hair out of place.
207* In ''Film/NeedForSpeed'', the female companion is in a very, very nasty car crash and is shown in the hospital with little more than a band-aid on one cheek and still having perfect hair and makeup.
208* A studio enforced example in ''Film/NowVoyager'', the TropeCodifier for BeautifulAllAlong. Charlotte Vale is intended to be overweight and completely unattractive due to her mother's abuse - and after [[MentalHealthRecoveryArc getting therapy]], she gets a glamorous makeover. Creator/BetteDavis wanted to look even uglier for Charlotte's 'before' self, even having her costumes padded. The studio however considered it too grotesque, so she's HollywoodHomely with glasses, an unflattering dress, and BigOlEyebrows.
209* Played both ways in ''Film/OneHundredFeet''. Marnie sports multiple bruises and contusions and the occasional cut but never suffers anything worse despite being hit hard enough to be thrown across the room.
210* ''Film/PlanetTerror'', in which Creator/RoseMcGowan gets her leg chopped off, to be [[RuleOfCool replaced by an assault rifle with an underslung grenade launcher]]. However, one will notice that all of the major female characters survive the film, with the [[BrainFood notable exception of Fergie's character]]. [[HerHeartWillGoOn Very few dudes make it out alive]].
211* In ''Film/{{Poseidon}}'', everyone else gets thoroughly soaked several times before [[MsFanservice Emmy Rossum]]'s hair ''finally'' stays matted down as it should. After that, everyone's a mess.
212* The trope is in full force in ''Film/{{Predators}}''. All the male characters are filthy and battle-damaged by the end of the film (or at least, the end of their participation in it). The lone female? Barely covered in a light, even film of dirt, not any hint of actual damage. The one bit of damage she's seen to take is suitably out of the way that it doesn't have to get filmed in subsequent shots.
213* Elizabeth Swann goes through a lot in the ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'' movies with only disheveled hair and a few smudges of dirt. During the climactic battle in the third movie, Davy Jones smacks her in the jaw with his claw-arm hard enough to send her flying, and she doesn't get so much as a bruise.
214* ''Film/{{The Princess|2022}}'': ZigZaggingTrope. While the Princess's face gets off easy, she does get a few nasty cuts and gets stained with blood throughout the movie.
215* ''Film/ResidentEvil2002'' has Alice make it through the entire ordeal without so much as a scratch. The worst she gets is a little wet. Illustrating just how much this trope is in effect, Creator/MillaJovovich noted that her body was covered in lesions and bruises after shooting the brief scene where she is dragged along the grille of the train.[[note]]It's worth noting that Milla would have had to do multiple takes of the scene, meaning she was dragged along the grille several times, whereas Alice obviously only does it once.[[/note]]
216* In ''Film/Rogue2020'', Samantha 'Sam' O'Hara (Creator/MeganFox) is a mercenary captain leading her squad on a rescue mission against a camp full of jihadists, and then being stalked by a rogue lioness. Despite being in the thick of all the fighting, she winds up far less dirty and disheveled than her men, suffering--at most--a minor cut on her chin.
217* In ''Literature/SafeHaven'', the heroine is able to give herself a perfect haircut and dye job in the midst of frantically fleeing from her abusive husband. She also doesn't have a mark on her even though a flashback shows that he slapped and tried to strangle her before she fought him off and managed to get away, and she's sporting perfect makeup, which would hardly be the top priority of a frightened woman desperate to get out of town.
218* ''Film/{{Serenity}}'', where the female crew gets banged up pretty badly, though mostly in areas away from their faces.
219** Zoe's face remains untouched, but her back receives a horrible slash that will probably become a rather unattractive scar, even with Simon's medical skills.
220** Kaylee is incapacitated by a series of poison darts, leaving her skin and face untouched.
221** Inara is bitten in the face by a Reaver, but by the end scenes is just as lovely as ever.
222* Used in ''Film/ShaunOfTheDead''. No one, except for Shaun, gets really bloody and dirty until the end. Even then, Liz is still better off than Shaun.
223-->"You've got some red on you."
224* In ''Film/SinCity'', there is a scene where Dwight (Creator/CliveOwen) and Miho (Devon Aoki) both plunge into a tar pit, coating themselves entirely in black tar. Miho is naked when she jumps into the tar, although it's hard to tell (the comic is more explicit in this detail) she should at least have tar stuck to her skin. Dwight is similarly clean and he actually fell into the tar while fully clothed. Miho also had blood splashed all over her face in an earlier scene, which also got cleaned up inexplicably very quickly. Oh, and the men get bruised up and battered a lot, showing scars, cuts, and blood all over in this movie. Some women do die, but it is normally clean gunshot and there is not near as much dirt on them.
225* Played straight for the first half of ''Film/SnowWhiteATaleOfTerror''. Lilli is involved in a cave-in underground and is seen with dirt all over her after they get out, but is perfectly clean the next time we see her. It's implied she washes in the stream. Then at the end, Claudia cuts her face with a pane of glass.
226* {{Invoked|Trope}} in ''Film/SnowWhiteAndTheHuntsman''. The two title characters come across a village inhabited only by women, all of whom intentionally scarred their own faces so they would be considered ugly in the eyes of Queen Ravenna, sparing them from being sacrificed to her life-stealing magic.
227* In ''Film/SpaceJam'', Lola Bunny is the only main cartoon character that never suffers any kind of injury, or, indeed, any kind of indignity. Other characters (mainly Bugs) even deliberately take hits intended for her.
228* ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy:''
229** In ''Film/SpiderMan2'' Rosie still looks pretty good for someone who was killed by a hundred shards of flying glass, including at least one to the face/eye.
230** [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] in ''Film/SpiderMan1'' where [[Characters/MarvelComicsPeterParker Spider-Man]] is badly injured in the climactic showdown, including taking a grenade to the face and being beaten to a bloody pulp by the superhuman [[Characters/MarvelComicsNormanOsborn Green Goblin]]. His mask and costume are all torn and his exposed face is bloody and bruised, but by Norman's funeral, he is all healed up and looks completely okay. This could be explained away as his HealingFactor kicking in, but due to the brutal and violent nature of the film, the next movies toned down the blood, so despite getting in more battles, Peter rarely suffered that much. In ''Film/SpiderMan2'', his face remains completely intact, but his suit gets torn, and this is after the control panel of a train exploded near his masked face (his mask has some burn marks, his face has none). The worst he suffers is some bruises across his face in ''Film/SpiderMan3'' despite getting bashed across the face by [[Characters/MarvelComicsEddieBrock Venom]] with a metal stick with jagged edges. Also, no matter how bad his hair gets messed up, whenever he pulls his mask off, it is neatly combed back to normal within the very next shot.
231* ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'':
232** Carol Marcus [[spoiler: gets fed a piece of the scenery by Khan when she gets in his way, and shortly afterwards has her leg stepped on by him, complete with a {{sickening crunch}}. Cut to a shot of her being dragged to a teleporter and sickbay, and she has absolutely no external signs of injury]].
233** Unlike Spock in ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan'', [[spoiler:Kirk doesn't have any burns on his face and hands when he dies of radiation poisoning after repairing the warp drive]].
234* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
235** Nothing ever mars Princess Leia's beauty no matter what happens to her -- captured, tortured, broken out in a shoddy rescue attempt (let's be serious, it was rather unprofessional), and to top it off, dumped in a garbage bin -- she still looked great after it all. And ''that'' was just [[Film/ANewHope the ''first'' movie]]. Of particular note was ''her hair''. Almost all of her hairstyles would be difficult -- if not impossible -- for a hairstylist to even ''create'', to say nothing of keeping them in place after all she goes through. Ironically, the most realistic one was the style she had in ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' while [[GoGoEnslavement Jabba's prisoner]]. (And in that case, ''the rest'' of the outfit was very unrealistic.) Parodied in ''Film/{{Spaceballs}}'':
236--->'''Vespa:''' [[BerserkButton You shot my HAIR!]]
237** Padmé is the same in the prequels, but at least in her case, her clothing usually seems to have been made with combat in mind in such situations. In the climax of ''Revenge of the Sith'', [[spoiler: Anakin, having embraced his Darth Vader persona by this time (although not yet in the cybernetic suit and mask) Force-chokes her in a mistakenly vengeful rage. Instead of breaking into undignified gagging as Admiral Motti did in ''A New Hope'', Padmé only gasps softly and then faints]].
238** In ''Film/TheForceAwakens'', only Rey remains unwounded while Finn and Kylo Ren both have serious injuries after the three of them duel with lightsabers. Also when Poe is strapped to the torture machine he is shown to have gotten bruises and blood all over, but when Rey is put on the same device, not a single one to be seen[[note]]Actually, that frame doesn't seem to be a torture device, just a restraint. Poe was tortured by an interrogation droid that can be seen over Kylo Ren's shoulder in a few shots. We never see the droid in Rey's interrogation scene, so Rey probably wasn't tortured at all. But, that just further enforces this trope[[/note]].
239** In ''Film/TheLastJedi'', Rey gets a nasty slice on her upper arm during her fight with Snoke's PraetorianGuard. It remains visible until the end of the film (it's even on the poster), and it looks deep enough to scar. But all it does is contribute to her [[GoodScarsEvilScars rugged, action hero image]].
240* In ''Film/StreetsOfFire'', [=McCoy=] and Ellen Aim aren't hurt at all by the gang, while the men get the snot beat out of them.
241* ''Film/TheTerminator'':
242** Sarah Connor's hair is immaculate at the end of the film, despite having been at ground zero for two explosions, being chased all night by a Terminator, and all the other damage she suffered.
243** In one of Kyle's flashbacks of the future, a fellow Resistance fighter removes her helmet to reveal that perfect makeup that hasn't been hindered by the apocalypse.
244* Films of Film/TheThreeStooges had a rare exception to their usual standard of not actually hitting a woman. A short featured the Stooges as cavemen courting. Moe and Larry have their mates subdued in stereotypical clubbed-hard style. Shemp's beloved had to bash ''him''. The rival tribe comes along, sees the Stooges hauling the women away, and hurls spears at them, sticking in the usual rear slapstick target. Since Shemp is the one being dragged, though, it's the woman who's hit.
245* ''Film/{{Transformers|FilmSeries}}'' doesn't go too overboard on this with Creator/MeganFox, but it is really glaring in reference to the robots. The ProductPlacement for GM vehicles apparently mandates that all of the Autobots' car modes must be sparklingly clean at all times.
246** ''Film/TransformersRevengeOfTheFallen'' plays this trope noticeably straight. Megan Fox looks as though her (rather overdone) makeup was being touched up every 30 seconds. This is particularly jarring in the final battle when every other (human) character is covered in filth and blood, Fox still looks perfectly clean and her makeup is totally untouched after both she and the main lead get poorly teleported to the other side of the world, run several miles through the hot desert, have several explosions happen basically on top of them, and get thrown into the sand. The main lead is bleeding, grimy, and filthy while she just has her hair a bit rumpled.
247** And then in [[Film/TransformersDarkOfTheMoon the third film]], after being thrown through a building, running through an apocalyptic battleground, the lead and the soldiers with them are suitably beaten up, ''Carly's hair and white jacket aren't even ruffled.''
248* ''Film/TriangleOfSadness'': Models Carl and Yaya go through the third-act {{Robinsonade}} with their features no worse for wear. Yaya briefly has some angry red spots on her face, but they're gone by the final scene and her face remains unmarred and lovely.
249* The first ''Film/UltramanZearth'' plays this trope for laughs in the disastrous initial attack against Alien Benzene and his monster Cotton-Pope. The MYDO Strike Team tries a tactical strike on the alien, only to backfire with their jets blown up, but while all the men end up badly bruised and injured, their faces covered in bandages (all of which are AmusingInjuries) the sole female, Tohru Hoshimi, suffers from having some soot on her nose and cheek. It helps that she's a genuine NiceGirl and the only character who treats Asahi (Zearth's accident-prone human form) with respect instead of picking on him repeatedly.
250* ''Film/{{Untraceable}}''. The male victims suffer agonisingly slow deaths with obvious and continuous physical damage (i.e. one victim is submerged up to his neck in a tank slowly of sulfuric acid). The heroine's suspended over a DeathTrap that will either kill her instantly or let her escape without a scratch.
251* In ''Film/VForVendetta'', Evie's appearance doesn't suffer at all after a prolonged period of imprisonment and torture. It can even be argued that having her hair shaved down to stubble just makes her look even more doe-eyed and delicate. This is in stark contrast to the comic, where she looks like a mummy afterwards.
252* In ''Film/{{Versus}}'', every single character with the exception of the female lead ends up literally coated in blood; and the male lead is implied to lose an eye (although it could be just stuck shut). More than that, her white shirt isn't stained in the least.
253* ''Film/{{Wolves}}'': Cayden is left badly injured after his first fight with Connor, but everything heals after he wolfs out, including scars. Although wolfing out while that injured is apparently ''very'' painful.
254* ''Film/WonderWoman2017'': A highly egregious example occurs during the sniper scene where Diana takes down the sniper by jumping into the tower the sniper was in, destroying it. Diana walks out of the rubble all clean and her hair still fresh. May actually be a subversion due to her being a supernatural being, so mortal stuff kind of just....pings off of her not showing any lasting damage. Now when she fights Ares......
255* ''Film/TheWorldOfSuzieWong'' - the prostitutes in the Nam Kok all look very good considering they make their money sleeping with as many sailors as possible. Suzie in fact has been homeless since she was ten and is attractively svelte. This is all explained in the book - where Suzie previously lived with a cousin who took care of her for a couple of years before she became a prostitute. And even then they worked in a dance hall with rich businessmen as their clients - so they weren't sleeping with that many. The girls at the Nam Kok are also considered a step above streetwalkers and the hotel arranges for them to have weekly medical checks.
256* Sci-Fi horror movies, such as ''[=Yeti=]''. Members of both genders survive a horrific plane crash and a battle with a crazy ass monster trying to off them all. Perfect hair.
257[[/folder]]
258
259[[folder:Literature]]
260* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'':
261** While Rachel tends to get beaten up as badly as ([[LeeroyJenkins if not worse than]]) the rest of the Animorphs crew in battle, everyone describes her as being the type of girl who could walk through a hurricane and still have perfect hair. Cassie compares her to TheUndead, except un-dirty. On a similar note, Cassie is the only character described as being able to make the sometimes horrific-looking process of morphing look beautiful and elegant (the Andalites call it morph-dancing).
262** The Animorphs fight in animal forms and the morphing process gets rid of injuries (sort of like a DNA-based factory reset... loosely speaking since it can include skintight clothes and covers changeable features like hairstyle). It really only counts if they get into a fight while human, and returning to human form doesn't always remove clotted blood. A WhatIf future revolves around Tom noticing Jake's...disheveled appearance and blowing his cover.
263* In Creator/RobertEHoward's Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian story "Literature/AWitchShallBeBorn", Taramis:
264-->''Taramis was still beautiful, in spite of her rags and the imprisonment and abuse of seven weary months. ''
265* One of the two main points of Creator/CSLewis' ''Literature/TheGreatDivorce'': there is no room for evil or sin ''whatsoever'' in Heaven. Many of the Ghosts refuse to go to Heaven because it will mean giving up their quirks, such as saying mean things to their loved ones. The contrapositive of that statement also falls under this trope. ''Everything'' in us can find its fullest and most joyful expression in Heaven if it will only submit first to God. Specifically seen in the case of the Lizard, which represented a certain Ghost's uncontrollable {{lust}}. After the Lizard is killed by an Angel (with the Ghost's permission), the Ghost turns into a Person, and the Lizard is reincarnated as a Stallion, an expression of joyful, holy, physicality.
266* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' is an exception in some ways: she's lost an eye and an arm and had her facial nerves on one side paralyzed. In others, not so much; despite [[InformedDeformity mentions]] that the replacement facial nerves don't synch perfectly with the other side of her face, the prosthetics she uses to replace her missing parts are both cosmetically perfect ''and'' [[CursedWithAwesome far more versatile than her original parts]], and none of the problems detract from her [[CanonSue great beauty, personal charisma, or ridiculous willpower]].
267* Apparently invoked by the Capitol in ''Literature/TheHungerGames''. After her Games, Katniss finds that the hearing in her left ear is restored, and while she was out the Capitol apparently enhanced her appearance for the cameras -- her skin's perfection, smooth and glowing with no burns, scars, or anything. Peeta, on the other hand, has his lower leg replaced with a metal and plastic device. This is true for all Victors, who will go on to live in the spotlight (and sometimes be forced into sex work in the Capitol) after their bloodbath. However, in subsequent books, she gets a nasty scar on her arm at the end of the second book, and by the end of the third much of her body is covered by burn scars and skin grafts. Even after this, however, her face suffers no lasting damage.
268* ''Literature/IfIStay'': Mia in her out-of-body state, looking the same as she did before the accident.
269* In the first book of the ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'', there's Arya after she's been rescued; Eragon notes that a month of torture and imprisonment in a dirty dungeon wasn't enough to diminish her hotness. The implication is that she's ''so'' hot that the various marks and injuries aren't enough to do so.
270* {{Action Girl}}s and female [[PersonOfMassDestruction people of mass destruction]] are in large numbers in ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon''. Yet, with one exception, they received no disfiguring injuries. This is particularly jarring for Aiz, who has been DungeonCrawling for 10 years and known as LadyOfWar!
271* ''Literature/JourneyToChaos'': Hailey Heleti is a {{reconstruction}} of the trope. Yes, she does get bruised during a fistfight, cut by blades, etc. [[MundaneUtility but she has a spell for that]]. She's so skilled with it that she doesn't need words or a staff. Give her a minute and she won't look like she was ever in a fight.
272* ''Literature/KushielsLegacy'': Phèdre usually heals from injuries without any scars; even after being burned and partly [[FlayingAlive flayed alive]], her scars are only mentioned once and don't detract from her sex appeal (or ability to get into her amorous adventures) at all when realistically they should be quite severe. She {{lampshade|Hanging}}s her improbable healing as a side benefit of the divine blessing that supports her [[CasualKink Casually Kinky]] life as a sacred prostitute.
273* Enjolras in ''Literature/LesMiserables'' is a [[GenderInvertedTrope Rare Male Example]]. Repeatedly described as a PrettyBoy, even after a whole day of battle he doesn't have a single scratch on him and is so beautiful that enemy soldiers hesitate to shoot him.
274* Asha in ''Literature/TheLicaniusTrilogy'' gains a pallid hue and sprawling black veins on her face when she is turned into a Shadow, but Davian (and many others) still consider her to be strikingly beautiful.
275* Inverted in Stephen R. Donaldson's two-book series ''Mordant's Need''. Twice, a woman is wounded, and both times it's noted that the wound only ''enhances'' their otherwise shallow beauty.
276* ''Literature/TheMortalInstruments'': {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''Literature/CityOfAshes'' when Alec, Jace, and Isabelle return from fighting a demon in a subway tunnel and Alec questions why Izzy never gets any dirt on her. Her response? "I'm pure at heart. It repels the dirt."
277* In-universe in ''Literature/TheNightMayor'', this is noted as an attribute of the fictional action heroine Vanessa Vail. When she passes out from her injuries she falls gracefully into a nice-looking sprawl, and when she's dying of an incurable illness she's positively angelic. The plot of the book involves her creator, Susan Bishopric, getting caught up in a real adventure, and getting increasingly annoyed every time she thinks about how good Vanessa would still look after what Susan's just been through.
278* ''Literature/TheQuintessentialMarySue'': Nothing can impair Mary-Sue's beauty, not even dirt or grime. In fact, her beauty is so innate that cosmetics can only cover it up.
279* ''Literature/SaintessSummonsSkeletons'': Alith gains a [Presentable] skill that makes her immune to all kinds of dishevelment.
280--> Your hair doesn't get tangled. Your makeup doesn't run. Your nails do not break. You do not grow any body hair. Your face is more symmetrical. Your teeth are white. Your skin is unblemished. Your clothes do not crease. You do not sweat. You smell of flowers… Under a storm or in the deepest pits of filth, a lady must always be presentable. And thus, you will.
281* ''Literature/TrappedOnDraconica'': Rana lived in a desolate mountain cave for years, yet she's still a knock-out beauty. [[JustifiedTrope However]], the narration notes that 'dust itself was afraid to touch it (her dress)'. It's possible she used her ShockAndAwe powers to create a DirtForcefield.
282* In ''Literature/VictoriaANovelOf4thGenerationWar'', Nazi officer Captain Halsing provides a Rare Male Example by appearing unexpectedly clean and well-kempt after a long and arduous trek through the wilderness. This is specifically commented on and showcases his competence and fastidious nature. More symbolically, it also illustrates the [[RepressiveButEfficient insistent neatness and orderliness]] his fascist state represents.
283[[/folder]]
284
285[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
286* Such a common SoapOpera trope that soap magazines frequently ridicule it and need to praise the few times that it's Averted or even subverted:
287** On ''Series/TheBoldAndTheBeautiful'', after Brooke had a nervous breakdown and spent weeks wandering the beaches of Barbados, critics blasted the storyline for many reasons, not the least of which was that this supposedly mentally ill and homeless woman was apparently still managing to take showers, brush her teeth, comb her hair, and make regular trips to the salon, as evidenced by her perfect hair, skin, nails, teeth, and clothing. This was also done when Taylor Hayes was burned in a house fire. After several weeks of angsting over whether or not she would be disfigured, the bandages were removed … and as a writer for Soap Opera Digest snarked, "I've had ''sunburns'' that were worse than that."
288* {{Inverted|Trope}} with a Japanese game show that features Masahiro Chono slapping contestants. Later, it was decided to bring [[Wrestling/KiaStevens Amazing Kong]] onto the show, but she was politely asked to leave after making a man bleed.
289----
290* ''Series/The100'': Subverted. While the attractive cast often gets in fights that leave them bruised and bloodied, facial wounds, including deep-looking cuts, typically heal over in a couple of episodes. Notable facial scarring is quite rare. Many characters also manage surprisingly well-kept appearances despite their very rough lifestyles.
291* ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'' plays with this trope with its three female leads: [[note]]No {{inver|tedTrope}}sion here for the male leads, all of whom regularly get their faces messed up[[/note]]
292** It's usually [[PlayingWithATrope played straight]] with Simmons, who can get infected with deadly viruses, chased and captured by the bad guys, and generally be thrown around a lot without looking too much the worse for it a few minutes later. Though in the latter circumstance, it might be a subtle case of PlayedForLaughs since she's [[TheDividual usually standing with]] [[ButtMonkey Fitz]], who can [[RunningGag reliably catch a few good bruises to the face and head]] during even a minor stand-off. Even when she's [[ColdBloodedTorture tortured]] and Fitz is [[ForcedToWatch forced to hear her screams]] in the other room, once she's freed she has nothing more than a few bruises and a little blood on her lip.
293** Played straight with Skye during her homeless period at the start of the show, when she's supposedly living in her van but nevertheless reliably in full make-up with amazing hair.
294** May is an interesting example: as the show's resident ActionGirl she's often shown as messy, bloodied, and dishevelled as the guys -- up to and including stitching up her own stab wounds in a spare moment -- in an apparent {{aver|tedTrope}}sion of this trope; yet somehow that seems to be part and parcel of her particular brand of [[MsFanservice Fanservice]].
295*** Played straight in the Season 1 finale, when after May's long and very brutal fight with Ward, May has no visible bruises and looks like she hasn't been in a fight at all (in contrast to Ward, whose face is very beaten up).
296* Played straight for the most part in ''Series/{{Arrow}}'', at least in terms of their faces. Oliver is heavily scarred on his chest and abdomen, but never his face.
297* [[Creator/AndAndDec The Ant & Dec Show]]'s short-lived 'Beat The Barber' sketch was short-lived for a reason. It turns out MoralGuardians were shocked at a girl having her hair cut from losing a challenge and they protested. There were no protests over two boys having their hair cut before the girl. [[note]]The girl claimed she volunteered for the skit and had wanted to have her head shaved like the boys, but they were reluctant to shave her head and just gave her a bob instead.[[/note]]
298* An episode of ''Series/TheATeam'' ("The Bend in the River") had the team hiking, camping, and fighting in the jungle for several days. The guys were sweaty, rumpled, and grungy, but their resident girl looked utterly perfect at all times, to the extent of her white shirt and pale slacks remaining spotless while she was kneeling in a hole digging for ancient artifacts.
299* Tracy in Season 5 of ''Series/{{Baywatch}}'' turns out to have advanced cancer, yet shows almost no outward signs of suffering from the illness. In a possibly unintentional LampshadeHanging, Mitch even asks how someone so beautiful could be dying.
300* ''Series/BirdsOfPrey2002'' {{handwave}}s this with makeup that works really well to cover up battle scars. Justified in-universe, in that (a) anyone with a secret identity ''needs'' to cover up scars they couldn't have gotten in their civilian persona, and (b) with the kind of money and technology that lies beyond a lot of DC heroes, it wouldn't be too hard to come up with makeup that good.
301* In the UK science show ''Brainiac'', there are male and female test subjects (called 'Brainiacs') who are subject to experiments. You will find that for all of the experiments that subject a person to pain (such as electric shock), getting dirty, urinating, or just behaving in an uncivilized manner, female Brainiacs are never chosen. They usually take on administrative roles and assess the males who perform these kinds of experiments. The exception seems to be the "Can You Do Your Job While Being Electrocuted?" skit -- where a female checkout operator, ballroom dancer, and school teacher were used.
302* {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d on ''Series/BreakingIn'', when, after being caught in a very strong security system, all of the male members of the team sustained bruises or some other sort of minor injury (including one getting his eyebrows burned off), and Melanie does not. She gets called out on it, with people wondering why she doesn't seem to have a scratch on her.
303* ''Franchise/{{Buffyverse}}'':
304** One egregious example is "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS4E5BeerBad Beer Bad]]", where tainted beer turned a group of frat boys and Buffy into Neanderthals. The boys actually transformed into stereotypical cavemen while Buffy just acted differently and had a few tangles in her hair.
305** Usually played straight with Faith, and easily explained by the enhanced resilience enjoyed by all Slayers. Even after extended battles with Buffy, who hit harder than most vampires, Faith always looked fine, without even a smudge on her makeup.
306*** While attempting to defeat The Beast in "[[Recap/AngelS04E13Salvage Salvage]]", Faith suffers a horrific beatdown and is so bloody and battered afterwards that she can barely walk. Her reactions afterwards show that her confidence is just as damaged as her body.
307** The first fight Buffy and Faith had with each other did leave a few bruises on each other's faces.
308** In her debut episodes, Fred looks more like she spent a few days camping than five years in a hell dimension.
309** A rare gender-swapped version; Spike is simultaneously the IronButtMonkey and MrFanservice. The guy gets his ass kicked just about every other episode, but very, ''very'' rarely does his handsome face actually ''see'' any of the damage.
310* ''Film/TheBurningBed'': Francine gets some black eyes but still looks pretty good after Mickey beats her up, with a minimum of swelling and redness. Of course, she's played by Creator/FarrahFawcett, who was an incredibly attractive woman.
311* Played with on ''{{Series/Chuck}}''. Sarah frequently gets into fights with that episode's bad guy or mooks. Usually, she comes off without a scratch despite often taking several good hits. Other times she's had bruises and split lips. Some notorious fights (the high school reunion and car fights in Season 2 and Season 4's catwalk fight) ended with her face rather battered and bloody. Nonetheless, by the next episode, her face is back in perfect condition (one wonders how no one ever seems to notice). Chuck himself has been in several fights from Season 3 forward but never shows a sign of having been hit. Casey has sustained several visible injuries over the course of the series, but they seldom carry over into subsequent episodes. Most notoriously, after being shot in the leg in Season 3 and needing emergency surgery performed, in the episode set the ''very next day'' he shows no sign that he was ever wounded.
312* ''Series/Counterpart2018'': Baldwin gets grazed on the cheek from a shot by Howard Prime, leaving her with a GlasgowGrin scar after this. However, she's still very beautiful despite this.
313* The classic Polish series ''Czterej pancerni i pies'' had a precise rule about this. All the male characters would get dirty and greasy but all the female characters would always be shown with no dirt and clean clothes even though they were supposedly experiencing the same wartime conditions as the men. This was done very deliberately to soften the impact of a UsefulNotes/WorldWarII series on a viewing public that lived through the war.
314* German kids' series ''Series/DiePfefferkorner'', which centers around a group of kid detectives, tends to treat their interrogated captives differently by gender. Boys are tied up and subjected to silly tortures, like being tickled, forced to smell old socks, or strapped to a rotating wheel. Girls, on the other hand, are just tied up and left alone.
315* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
316** A male example: The Fourth Doctor has [[UglyCute odd looks]], but possesses an almost [[VocalDissonance incongruously]] beautiful deep dramatic voice that was commonly remarked upon at the time. Unwillingness to even temporarily ruin this results in a scene in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS14E5TheRobotsOfDeath "The Robots of Death"]] where his voice is completely unaffected by the fact that he is inhaling copious amounts of {{helium|Speech}}. He later gives a HandWave to Leela that his BizarreAlienBiology includes "a larynx that can put up with anything".
317** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS21E6TheCavesOfAndrozani "The Caves of Androzani"]], the Fifth Doctor gets a full outfit of ClothingDamage and covered in filth and blood, in addition to becoming progressively sicker and sicker from poisoning, ruining his skin tone and leaving dark circles around his eyes. Peri also gets poisoned and dragged through most of the same stuff he does, but all that happens to her is her skin and lips becoming romantically pale.
318** When Martha Jones appears in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E13LastOfTheTimeLords "Last of the Time Lords"]], she's a refugee who has been walking the post-apocalyptic Earth for a year, barely a step ahead of the Master and his forces, facing exhaustion, blistering heat, and freezing cold. Despite all this, she looks no less well-rested and well-groomed than she did while traveling with the Doctor. Some fanfiction writers spoofed this by having her travel pack secretly filled with cosmetics and hair products.
319** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E2TheWitchsFamiliar The Witch's Familiar]]", Missy pushes Clara down a hole to see how deep it is. After falling twenty feet and landing on solid rock, Clara has virtually nothing to show for it except some scrapes. Similarly, when she is later hooked up to a Dalek in the same episode, she comes out of the experience looking as perky as ever.
320** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E10FaceTheRaven "Face the Raven"]], despite being KilledOffForReal, [[spoiler:Clara]] looks unblemished as the camera hovers over her dead body.
321* ''Series/DoomPatrol2019'': Not counting [[TheMentor The Chief]], the men of the team are all inhuman in appearance to some degree. Robot Man and Negative Man don't have human bodies at all, and while Cyborg is still fairly handsome, half his body is replaced with machinery. Meanwhile, the two ladies of the team -- Elasti-Woman and Crazy Jane -- look like normal beautiful women when not using their powers, as they just so happen to have abilities that don't compromise their appearance.
322* In the ''Series/EmeraldCity'' episode [[Recap/EmeraldCityS1E1TheBeastForever "The Beast Forever"]], after the tornado throws Dorothy's car at East, neither of them looks much the worse for wear, even though East went up over the hood and Dorothy got smacked in the face with the airbag ''after'' the car flipped a couple times. There's a little trickle of blood, but that's all.
323* ''Series/{{Euphoria}}'':
324** Rue is a drug addict who gets herself in brutally disturbing and at times physically dangerous situations. However, even after nights of partying, she rarely ever looks worse for wear.
325** Jules and Maddy get bruises from their encounters with [[spoiler:Cal]] and [[spoiler:Nate]] respectively, but both are easy to cover up and look gorgeous otherwise.
326* ''Series/{{Fleabag}}'': Despite the [[NoNameGiven protagonist]] being an apparent sex addict and alcoholic, she always looks clear-skinned, with clean, neat hair. Taken [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]] as everyone comments on her looking "unusually" good at her mother's funeral...when she doesn't look any different from how she ever looks.
327* In the pilot episode of ''Series/Forever2014'', Henry is chatting up a beautiful cello player when the subway train they are in crashes. Afterwards, the car is full of dead and dying people, some more mangled than others, but the cellist is still beautiful, marred only by a tiny trickle of BloodFromTheMouth.
328* ''Series/GameOfThrones'':
329** This show provides a rare example with a male character. When Ser Loras Tyrell removes his helm in "Blackwater", his curly hair looks perfect despite having fought a battle; he even does a mild HairFlip. There doesn't appear to be a single scratch or bruise on him. [[http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4qbcj850i1qk4ih5o1_500.gif A popular animated gif on tumblr]] pokes fun at this improbable moment.
330** Another such example that can even be contrasted with a female is that in Season 7, [[spoiler:Jorah Mormont is cured of greyscale]], leaving virtually no visible effect. In contrast, [[spoiler:Shireen Baratheon was permanently marked by the disease]].
331** In the books, Daenerys' hair is burned off in her OutOfTheInferno moment, but here it's as fireproof as the rest of her -- and not even a bit sooty. Also applies to whenever she rides Drogon with only partially braided hair. As any woman with long hair can tell you, it only takes a little bit of wind and a few short seconds to turn those luscious waves into a total rat's nest.
332** In-universe invocation in "The Door". Sansa Stark looks very little the worse for wear despite having been forcibly married to brutal sadist Ramsay Bolton and subjected to rape and torture every night. Because Ramsay was smart about it: there are still enough Stark loyalists left in the North who would rise up in revolt against the Boltons if one of them were seen abusing the daughter of Eddard Stark. So he made sure to never do anything to her face, or to any part of her that would show. What else he might have done to her [[NothingIsScarier is left to the viewer's imagination]].
333** In the battle of Castle Black, [[spoiler: Pyp]] is given the very gross death of getting an arrow through the neck and blood splattering everywhere. [[spoiler: Ygritte]] who dies minutes later does so by an arrow through the back, allowing so as not to detract from her actress's beauty. She even makes a [[DropDeadGorgeous beautiful corpse]] in the next episode.
334** [[spoiler: Catelyn Stark]] is also given a much milder death than in the books. There she began clawing at her face, ripping great chunks from her skin and was essentially given a MercyKill to put her out of her misery. In the show, she's simply given a slit throat in the closing seconds of the episode.
335** Male example in Jon Snow. Despite being ExposedToTheElements and away from the chance of a decent wash for pretty much most of the episodes, he always ends up looking quite good. His PrettyBoy features are never damaged at all -- even when in the above-mentioned battle, he gets his head smashed against an anvil and BloodFromTheMouth, yet no missing teeth.
336** The party of Bran, Rickon, Meera, Jojen, and Osha likewise look very good for people who have spent months travelling through the wilderness. Bran is riding in a wheelbarrow, yes, but his hair always looks like it's just been washed.
337** Talisa looks very good for someone who's introduced having to amputate a foot. Despite likely being in such situations frequently, she's never covered in too much blood and her hair is only lightly tousled.
338** Arya is shown to have scars from her training with the Faceless Men. None of these are on her face.
339** The entire crew comes out ridiculously unscarred from the cataclysmic battle against the undead horde. Never mind that most of them should've been certainly dead 2-3 times over - they barely have any visible injuries!
340** Arya comes out of [[spoiler: the massacre of King's Landing]] with nothing more than a light covering of ash, despite [[spoiler: being inside a city that's burned to the ground]]. None of the characters do in fact.
341* ''Series/GeneralAndI'': Even when seriously injured, Bai Ping Ting rarely looks worse than slightly disheveled.
342* ''Series/GilligansIsland'' wasn't ''supposed'' to be realistic, but it is a good example. Despite being marooned on an island, Ginger always had great hair and her makeup never seemed to run; Mary-Ann always looked rather decent too. In fact, the whole cast was able to maintain impeccable hygiene, and their clothes never wore out.
343* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' played straight for [[spoiler:Nikki. The woman gets caught in a burning building that ''explodes''. Yet at her funeral, she gets an open casket and]] doesn't have any burn marks at all.
344** Claire's beauty is literally incapable of being tarnished. At least, [[GoodThingYouCanHeal not permanently]]. It's been said that Claire is this show's [[Series/SaturdayNightLive Mr. Bill]].
345** When exposed to nuclear radiation her skin is burned to the point that her skeleton is shown. And yet her hair remained intact.
346* ''Series/{{JAG}}'': Other than after a traffic accident in "The Four Percent Solution", Mac never sustains any visible injuries throughout the show. In "A Tangled Webb", she was about to be subjected to ElectricTorture, but [[TheHero Harm]] saved her in the nick of time.
347* ''Series/KeepBreathing'': Liv is scuffed up with her hair bedraggled as a result of her time in the wilderness, along with getting injured, though it's not that visible. She's still good-looking, with only minor bruises that are all hidden under her clothing.
348* Ayumu from ''Manga/Life2002'' is frequently bullied in very physical ways but never gets a scratch. The male characters appear wounded or scarred when they're assaulted. Downplayed in the original manga, where while she doesn't get hurt by others she does [[SelfHarm hurt herself]].
349* ''Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'':
350** Galadriel wanders Middle-earth for centuries through various elements and swims across the ocean, yet her fair features are never weathered.
351** Miriel is blinded by flying cinders from Orodruin's eruption, but her eyes and face bear no signs of burn injuries. (Otherwise Elendil might have suspected something was wrong before she made an incongruous remark about "smoke.")
352* In the Season 4 [=DVDs=] of ''Series/{{Lost}}'', Evangeline Lilly (Kate) laments that her character never gets to look beat up, no matter what damage she appears to take.
353* Bo from ''Series/LostGirl'' ends up bruised and bloodied on a regular basis but, being a [[SuccubiAndIncubi succubus]] with ready access to a bunch of willing partners, rarely takes long to restore her health and with it her drop-dead gorgeous looks. Interestingly, Bo is so ridiculously beautiful that even while limping and being covered in cuts, slashes and her own blood from head to toe doesn't detract much from her attractiveness in the first place.
354* ''Series/MaidMarianAndHerMerryMen'' is a very good example. The show featured a considerable amount of slapstick (mostly mess), though almost no actual violence, Maid Marian herself is practically never a victim, even when all of the rest of her band are. Admittedly Rose once got paint poured over her, but then Rose is a villain. (The trope seems to apply slightly less strongly to female villains.)
355* In the live-action adaptation of ''Manga/NodameCantabile'', Nodame always has perfect makeup on despite her character being established as a total slob.
356* In ''Series/{{Pixelface}}'', Alexia can run through her action/adventure game ''Legend Hunter'' without even breaking a sweat. When Rex once has to run a level for her, he returns considerably beaten up.
357* Despite the setting being AfterTheEnd and humans living with no water and electricity, the whole cast of ''Series/{{Revolution}}'' has impeccable hygiene: hair neatly cut, clothes clean, and the men seemingly have a way to shave. Naturally, the reason is never addressed.
358* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'':
359** In the Season 4 episode "Delete", Chloe shows absolutely no injury after she has been slammed head-first into walls multiple times, thrown down two flights of stairs, and hit by a few of Lana's most vicious kicks, with at least one directly to the face. Oddly, she actually had blood on her face when it is over and she definitely isn't beaten as badly as Chloe.
360** In "Spirit", the same thing happened, just worse. Clark [[spoiler:possessed by Dawn]] hits her with a SuperStrength punch also directly to the face that sends her flying into some metal canisters and she is completely unscathed. However, [[spoiler:Chloe is eventually revealed to have healing powers]].
361** In "Persuasion", Chloe and Tess had a brutal fight during which Tess grabs the front of Chloe's coat and punches her in the face repeatedly. Nope, nothing. Not to mention Tess tackled Chloe through a glass table and the latter smashes her with a glass bottle...
362** Green Arrow provides a male example. Late in Season 9, [[spoiler:Zod sears his house symbol into Oliver's chest with his heat vision]]. Later on, in Season 10, he hasn't even got a hint of a scar from it.
363* ''Series/SpecialOpsLioness'': Cruz gets several wounds during her TrainingFromHell which stay with her the rest of the season, but they really do nothing to detract from her beauty.
364* While Samantha Carter of ''Series/StargateSG1'' does get plenty beaten and bruised over the course of the show ("Death Knell" is a particularly brutal example), the creators of the show do invoke this trope in the commentary of "Off the Grid" when the camera pans across SG-1 revealing three severely bruised and bleeding guys... and one beautiful blond woman (though she did have a bit of a bruise on her face at the time).
365* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'':
366** Despite the Doctor saying otherwise, Captain Janeway suffered some remarkably mild-looking fire injuries in the episode "Year of Hell" (even her famous red hair is intact). Ironic given the ResetButton conclusion (which meant that the producers didn't have to worry about long-term effects) and that ''Voyager'' itself is [[TrashTheSet completely trashed]].
367** Seven of Nine's famous [[SensualSpandex catsuit]] was justified as a dermaplastic material to cover and heal the injuries from her Borgification. Must have taken her skin a long time to heal, as she [[MsFanservice never stopped wearing it]]. In addition, while most other Borg have been seen to have had extreme modifications to their faces, the worst Seven gets out of it is a piece of tech permanently affixed around her left eye (although the series does leave it ambiguous as to whether her hair is real, given she was hairless as a Borg).
368** The hair is completely real, as the Doctor personally states that he took the liberty to stimulate her hair follicles when explaining the work that went into restoring her human features.
369* ''Series/StarTrekPicard'':
370** In "Nepenthe", Elnor kicks Narissa so hard in the face that she falls down, yet she doesn't have a broken or bleeding nose, a black eye, a loose tooth, or any kind of bruising or blemish ''whatsoever''. The same thing happens in "Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2" where Seven of Nine punches Narissa a couple of times and the latter then roughly tumbles on to the floor, but Narissa's pretty features remain unscathed.
371** Although this trope normally applies to female characters, Elnor is nevertheless [[GenderInvertedTrope treated no differently]] than an attractive ActionGirl by the showrunners in terms of constantly maintaining his photogenic appearance because he's an {{Elfeminate}}, LongHairedPrettyBoy who's played by Evan Evagora, an ex-model. In "Broken Pieces", he's punched and kicked in the face several times, but you wouldn't know it from his flawless, injury-free visage.
372** In "Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2", Narissa smashes Seven of Nine's face against a console. There's a little bit of blood on the side of the latter's mouth, but otherwise, Seven's gorgeousness hasn't been negatively affected.
373* ''Series/StrangerThings'': Steve Harrington getting [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown the absolute shit beaten out of him]] and ending up with enormous bloody scars on his face happens [[RunningGag at least once a season]], while his ex-girlfriend Nancy Wheeler hasn't gotten much worse than a ''shove'' in four seasons of television.
374** This is pretty blatant in Season 3. Jonathan & Nancy get attacked by their flayed ex-coworkers from the ''Post'' in the hospital, while Steve & Robin get captured and interrogated by Russians opening a gate to the Upside Down beneath the Starcourt Mall. In each boy-girl pair, guess which one is beaten bloody and which one is left basically unharmed?
375** Season 4 has Steve's face left alone, but he still gets a nasty bat bite. Nancy just gets dirty. We even get a gender death contrast: [[spoiler: Eddie is bitten to death by a swarm of bats, including on his face. Max may have had multiple limbs magically broken, but her face just has tears of blood on them. It's not exactly a 'beautiful death' - she is a child who ''really'' doesn't want to die. She's revived and ends up in hospital in a coma, still with an unblemished face. Subverted with Chrissy, whose jaw gets massively dislocated on her death.]]
376* In-universe example in ''{{Series/Supergirl 2015}}''. Cat Grant recalls once interviewing the wife of a public figure, and then finding out that she had a make-up artist who worked very hard to cover up bruises from when he'd been hitting her.
377* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'':
378** [[GenderInvertedTrope Gender-Inverted]] on a regular basis. The two pretty boy leads, Sam and Dean, might get beaten up regularly (Dean particularly is barely recognizable a few times after being pounded to a pulp) - but it's rare to see the effects last even until the end of the episode. Dean even says at one point that coming BackFromTheDead erased all his old scars and sorted out his broken fingers. Uh, we've seen your hands, sweetie, they had a lovely manicure. The inversion makes more sense when you remember that ''Supernatural'' is targeting a [[EstrogenBrigade very different audience]] than most of the shows on this list.
379** There's also a Season 3 episode where a young woman who has been in a coma since the age of eight appears to have spent the entire time lying peacefully in her hospital bed, with perfect hair and a full face of makeup.
380** When [[OurAngelsAreDifferent Castiel]] joins the cast, he continues the trend, as his HealingFactor ensures no scars. He eventually [[HealingHands starts healing Sam and Dean]] on occasion, making their pretty faces make a little more sense.
381** Season 8 gives us Dean and Castiel's adventures in Purgatory, a forested dimension where one doesn't sleep or eat and spends the whole time fighting monsters. Their bodies and clothes are dirtied up and Castiel grows a beard, but they still look amazing and show no signs of actually being wounded in any way.
382** At the end of Season 12, Kelly Kline goes into labor wearing a white nightgown and makeup, barely breaks a sweat, and dies in childbirth looking angelic. Possibly justified since her child is a highly powerful angel/human hybrid so it's possible he prevented the process from being too painful for her.
383* Noticeable to some extent in the later seasons of ''Series/{{Survivor}}''. While both men and women show many of the expected effects of primitive living for a month, the men almost always have visible stubble and clearly grungy hair, while the women almost never have leg stubble and their hair often seems much cleaner.
384%%* Actually a plot point in ''Series/TheTwilightZone2002'' episode "Eye of the Beholder".
385* ''Series/WonderWoman1975'': Wonder Woman fights {{mooks}}, leaps over trees, stops cars, and breaks boulders without getting a hair out of place. Somewhere there's a mook locker room where the thugs have a betting pool not on who can beat her, but on who can get her hair mussed up.
386* ''Series/{{Yellowjackets}}'': The Yellowjackets don't look particularly disheveled after many weeks of living in the wilderness with very limited food. Besides messy hair and armpit hair, they all look like they've simply been camping for a few days. Van suffers a grievous injury after being attacked by a ''pack of wolves'' that leaves her with little more than a few red lines on her face.
387* {{Lamp|shadeHanging}}ooned in ''Series/YoungBlades'' when D'artagnan comes out of a fight without a scratch in ''Coat of Arms''.
388* Both used and subverted in ''Series/ZNation''. Roberta and Addy look quite good for the third year of a ZombieApocalypse, but by the end of Season 1 Cassandra looks quite banged up and sickly.
389[[/folder]]
390
391[[folder:Pinball]]
392* For Creator/{{Gottlieb}}'s ''Pinball/{{Rocky}}'' pinball machine, Creator/SylvesterStallone had his likeness on the backglass repainted three times because he didn't want it to look beaten up even after ten rounds in the ring.
393[[/folder]]
394
395[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
396* {{Wrestling/GLOW}} occasionally featured the women bleeding, but only in ways that didn't detract from their physical beauty -- either with fake blood or coming from a body part like the leg. Accidental aversions happened whenever the women were injured -- such as Susie Spirit, who dislocated her arm in a memorably graphic moment.
397* Inverted by Wrestling/{{Ivory}} in a match against Wrestling/{{Lita}}. Her boots caught Lita above the eye, cutting her a little. Sensing the potential to make the match more exciting, she deliberately targeted the wound in order to make it bleed more. It worked and the match got positive reviews. The fact that Lita already had a hardcore {{Tomboy}} image probably made the folks backstage more comfortable with it.
398* [[Wrestling/LisaMarieVaron Victoria]] specifically set out to damage Wrestling/TrishStratus's career by ruining her looks, but ended up with a bloody nose and a cracked tooth before she made Trish spit out any blood.
399* In WWE's first women's steel cage match, Victoria said she wanted to bleed but the office refused. She had Lita throw her into the side of the cage in the hopes it would happen naturally, but it didn't.
400* Krissy Vaine claimed that in her time in the WWE developmental system -- which was just as the Diva Searches were happening and more models than ever were brought in (Krissy has said she believes the only reason she was kept on was because of her own modeling background). So all the developmental Divas felt pressured to preserve their good looks 24/7 -- which is not easy when one is getting beaten up in training. She has admitted that [[OldMaid at the age of 26]] she freaked out and was spending over half her monthly pay on Botox.
401* Wrestling/{{Melina}} Perez claims to have gotten a bloody lip in a match with Wrestling/{{Michelle McCool}} but it didn't show up on-camera.
402* Wrestling/BethPhoenix suffered a swollen eye after a botched leg drop from Alicia Fox and was taken off television for five weeks -- despite being the reigning Divas' Champion at the time.
403* Played with in [[Wrestling/TotalNonstopActionWrestling TNA]] when they had a women's First Blood match but at the end, there was only a small trickle of blood when Tara hit Wrestling/{{Daffney|Unger}} with a toolbox.
404* {{Enforced|trope}} in Wrestling/RingOfHonor, where the Lovely Lacey got reconstructive surgery after BJ Whitmer hit her with Wrestling/JimmyJacobs's spike. Jacobs would blame himself for the instance and proceed to campaign against the American healthcare system in his Age Of The Fall.
405* Parodied by Wrestling/CodyRhodes in 2011, when Wrestling/ReyMysterio kicked him in the nose at the tail end of his "Absolutely Dashing" gimmick. He began showing up with a protective facemask, ranting about how [[JerkassWoobie he was now disfigured for life and was going to take out his misery on the entire world]]. A few months later, he apparently got over the trauma and took off the mask -- and he looked just the same as he'd always done. Of course, this is Wrestling/DustyRhodes' younger son we're talking about, so [[HollywoodHomely Cody had had a basset-hound face to begin with]]. In any case, no change, and no tarnishing (to the extent that there was anything to tarnish).
406* Blading had long been a popular way to insert drama into a match -- where the wrestlers would hide razor blades in their gear and cut themselves to escalate the violence of the match. While men and women did this in most places where pro wrestling occurred to various degrees, women in WWE never bladed, because that would have detracted from the {{Fanservice}}. The blood mentioned above was accidental.
407* Eventually men in rated pg WWE were barred from blading too, with Wrestling/{{Batista}} getting fined 100,000 USD for doing so. Medical glue was also adopted to "instantly" close wounds, but this wound up nearly ruining matches, such as a ladder match between Wrestling/{{Christian}} and [[Wrestling/TheWorldsGreatestTagTeam Shelton Benjamin]]. Wrestling/BrockLesnar resorted to opening up wrestlers the hard way, but he had little finesse and ended up making people look ''worse''.
408* Behind the scenes, the Divas had to resort to lots of hacks and tricks so that the bruises and scrapes they got from wrestling most of the week wouldn't show up on TV. Strategically applied makeup would take care of the face, while most women resorted to weaves and extensions to prevent their hair from getting too damaged. Likewise their gear was secured with lots of double-sided tape to prevent any WardrobeMalfunction (or revealing too many body bruises). However, this practice has pretty much been discontinued ever since the WWE Women's Evolution took off as the focus shifted from looks to wrestling ability. These days, women being busted open is now acceptable these days.
409[[/folder]]
410
411[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
412* ''TabletopGame/TalesFromTheFloatingVagabond'' has this as a trainable skill for either gender: "Look Good at All Times".
413%%* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'': The "No Visible Damage" perk from ''GURPS: Supers''.
414* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Played straight with the tall and usually pretty [[OurElvesAreDifferent Eldar]], who never leave battles with scars and deformities due to their advanced medical technology and psychic healing. Also played straight by Callidus Assassins, who are all shape-shifters.
415* In ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', some LadyOfWar-esque fighting styles grant a side effect that invokes this; any clothing the martial artist is wearing will serendipitously avoid stains and tears, whether they're standing in a ballroom or a mud pit. Of course, magic is involved.
416[[/folder]]
417
418[[folder:Theatre]]
419* In '''every''' production and adaptation of ''Theatre/{{Annie}}'' the main character and her friends look remarkably healthy and well-fed for residents of an orphanage in Depression-era America. (Especially considering the heavy implication that the director was neglectful and abusive; even kids in a respectable place would likely have been somewhat undernourished.)
420[[/folder]]
421
422[[folder:Toys]]
423* Creator/{{Mattel}} has a line of ''Wrestling/{{WWE}} [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Zombies]]'', in which [[http://www.oafe.net/yo/wwe_z1_hhh.php the male characters]] are burnt, broken, and often have major bodyparts missing; [[http://www.oafe.net/yo/wwe_z2_sb.php the women]] will get a small scrape or cut and minorly disheveled clothing.
424[[/folder]]
425
426[[folder:Video Games]]
427* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'': Ann is an ActionGirl who fights and takes down entire barrage of mooks equipped with hi-tech weaponry, specialized soldiers from a private organization with an array of ultramodern tech and [[MiniMecha battle mechas]] equipped with deleterious firearms, to even encountering hostile supernatural abominations, and makes it through without a single scratch.
428* ''VideoGame/BaldursGateIII'': Karlach the tiefling barbarian [[MadeASlave spent ten years as a slave-warrior]] in the Nine Hells. Her body and arms are covered in enough scars to qualify as BodyHorror, but her face is completely unblemished.
429* In the ''Franchise/BatmanArkhamSeries'', while playing the game with the normal skins will avert this trope, playing the game with the special DLC skins will play this trope straight -- Batman can get shot, beaten up, thrown out of windows, survive explosions, the works and he and his costume will look pristine. Doesn't matter how far into the past or the future that suit is, it will be clean and Batman without even a split lip.
430* ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'': Ayla is a cavewoman from 65,000,000 B.C.. She's depicted as a NubileSavage, with curly, un-matted hair and no noticeable scars.
431* Played straight in the VideoGame/DefJamSeries, where the women can engage in no holds barred brawls just as brutal as any of the male characters, and yet, not a speck of blood or a bloodied nose results from it.
432* ''VideoGame/{{Dislyte}}'': In the Ruler's Law event, [[spoiler:while Jin Yuyao shows Alexa to Abigail through her communicator, Alexa says that she's covered in bruises, has a bloodied mouth and bruised legs. Yet, her sprite only has a couple of bruises on her face (and in the fully illustrated scene in 2-6, more bruises can be seen on her body) and doesn't look too badly beat up otherwise]].
433* ''VideoGame/TheEvilWithin'' provides a male example in the form of [[DistressedDude Joseph]] [[WaistcoatOfStyle Oda]]--despite taking quite a beating throughout the game, any blood or bodily harm he receives never sticks to him for long, and he usually looks pristine again by the next cutscene. His fellow detectives, on the other hand.
434* In ''VisualNovel/FateHollowAtaraxia'', Souchirou was awestruck by Caster's beauty the instant he met her, although during this meeting she had fallen on visibly leaf-strewn earth and rain was coming down.
435* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'':
436** Part of Tifa's backstory is Sephiroth slashing her across the torso with his giant sword. You'd think this would leave a pretty noticeable scar, right? Nope, she recovers from it just fine with no ill effects whatsoever. She spends the whole game in a tank top. Pity she never taught Aerith her secret, isn't it?
437** Perhaps she did -- when Aerith gets stabbed, there's not a trace of blood, and while she looks shocked and in pain at first she dies with a smile on her face (as Cloud observes in dialogue later). Her hair comes undone, but this is just so her hair can romantically billow out around her beautiful corpse as her body sinks into the water. This is especially notable considering that Aerith's death was an attempt to write a non-beautiful, emotionally realistic PlotlineDeath.
438** Then, in [=FF7=] remake, Aerith goes through Corneo's rape mansion, a literal sewer, a train graveyard, exploding helicopters, and Marlene, a kid, and kids aren't known for filters, claims she smells nice, like a flower. By contrast, Biggs and Tifa both comment on their own BO and need for a shower, so smelling good is clearly a Cetra power in Remake.
439** In ''VideoGame/CrisisCore'', Cloud and Zack both look remarkably good considering the fact that both had been critically injured (in the case of Cloud, he was stabbed clean through his body) and then spent four years in PeopleJars. They don't get any blood or marks on them and have perfectly maintained their elaborate hairstyles. Even right at the very end when Zack is murdered and both young men are covered in mud and blood, the amount of blood is extremely limited and their hair still looks great, instead just looking attractively smudged up. (This is a censorship issue as much as anything, as the developers had really wanted blood but had to fight really hard to even get ''that'' much).
440* Seen somewhat in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', near the end of the game, when [[spoiler:Bastila goes over to the Dark Side. For everyone else, including your character, the result of drastic drops into the Dark Side is progressive disfigurement. Bastila remains as good-looking as ever]].
441* Kai'Sa in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' has, from a young age, been struggling to survive in hellish desert catacombs infested with [[EldritchAbomination monsters from]] [[EldritchLocation The Void]]. Despite this, she appears to have eyeshadow, lipgloss, and eyebrows on fleek in her splash art, and lacks any real scars to indicate her years of battle (though she does have pronounced FacialMarkings). Compare this to Kassadin and Malzahar, other humans were directly exposed to The Void and don't look perfectly human anymore. This is partially {{justified|Trope}} to a degree by the fact that unlike the two, she's wearing [[BioArmor a suit composed of a Voidborn symbiote]] which also usually conceals her face with [[CollapsibleHelmet a helmet]] (which she canonically wears constantly, and has the option of equipping it in-game), suggesting that it's protected her from the brunt of any corruption.
442* The survivors in ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' and ''VideoGame/Left4Dead2'' may get a scratch here or there and they get blood on their bodies when injured, but for the most part, their looks are never tarnished no matter how beat up they get or how wet they get from walking through water or rain.
443* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'': This is [[GenderInvertedTrope gender-inverted]] for Link, [[TheHero The Hero]] of the series, yet from every minor battle to difficult boss fight, there isn't a single scratch or burn to be seen on him (the only indication that shows he '''really is''' injured is when he bends over in exhaustion when low on health). The fact that he manages to journey long without a moment's rest plays a bit more on this as well.
444** Princess Zelda has been attacked in a number of ways, including being afflicted with spells, being thrown around carelessly, turned to stone, and even having her body stolen and possessed. None of it permanently damages her in the slightest.
445** {{Downplayed|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild'', where both Princess Zelda and Mipha and seen tending to a wound on his right arm in memory flashbacks, but this is most likely PlayedForDrama for the sake of the situation regarding his relationships with them. There is also another memory depicting Link and Zelda's escape from Calamity Ganon and the Divine Beasts; both of them are completely soiled head-to-toe in grime, mud, and rain. It is also played with when a lady in the Gerudo Town Inn points out the scars she sees on Link's body while giving him a spa treatment.
446* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
447** The PC is customizable, and one can give their character scars for either gender. However, males can get real disfiguring scars, but women are limited to small scratches.
448** In the second game, both genders get a set of scars that become more prominent the higher Shepard's [[KarmaMeter Renegade]] stat gets.
449** Strangely, in the first game the default female design had a more noticeable scar than the male design, including an additional one near her lip. Both of these are gone in the second game, while the default male scar remains.
450* While ''VideoGame/MetalSlug'' generally averts this, the third game has a rather blatant example with the death animation when the player character gets hit by an acidic slime. The male characters are StrippedToTheBone and the female characters suffer clothing damage.
451* A more extreme example is in the web game ''VideoGame/NanacaCrash''; all the male characters take heavy abuse in the game, while all of the females remain untouched and instead heap abuse on the male characters. Not surprising considering it's [[VisualNovel/CrossChannel based off an H-game]].
452* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'':
453** If you play a female protagonist, her hair and clothes ''never'' get so much as a smudge no matter where she goes; forests, sandstorm-filled deserts, ash-strewn volcanic mountains, or even muddy swamps where she might find a BattleInTheRain. Though this applies to the male protagonists too (who admittedly have a less crazy AnimeHair).
454** This is taken [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]] in ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'' where you can accessorize, and buy ''very'' expensive and stylish clothing in some stores; you'd think one would be insane to wear them in a mud-strewn swamp like Route 16, but you can do so without ruining them and come out fresh as daisies.
455* Resident damsel Ashley Graham in ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil4'' fits this bill, as while she is vulnerable to many attacks that hit Leon, she doesn't bleed or show any damage when hit. And while Leon has many death animations assigned to him Ashley tends to use the same death animation when killed by the same attacks. Miss Graham does have her own two unique death animations that not even the other female character Ada shares but do not show much physical damage. The first is having a giant rock fall on her during Leon's second fight with El Gigante, but in this instance, she isn't shown at all and her other [[https://i.imgur.com/Qpnhgdk.mp4 unique death animation is a neck snap by a zealot when she fails to escape being strangled in time]] before her HP runs out. Her physical appearance does not change in this instance (aside from a dangling body) and her enemy simply proceeds to toss her corpse over his shoulder as the enemy does with the AI Ashley.
456* The protagonists for most of the ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' games never suffer a scratch or a cut of any kind no matter how much they get bitten or sliced by the monsters. It wasn't until ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2Remake'' where the characters are shown with lots of dirt, bruises, and blood on their bodies and faces.
457* Naturally in Fanservice game ''VideoGame/RumbleRoses'', the girls can be whipped, kicked in the nose, and have their joints manipulated in superhuman ways but no matter how much damage they receive they never show any physical injury aside from just holding the area most damaged when damage is high, though this damaged area doesn't affect their ability to fight. A notable example is Anesthesia, who shocks her opponent's bellies with a medical AED for the girls that have the area exposed and take the shock straight to the skin they do not show any damage afterwards to the area either.
458* In ''VideoGame/SaintsRowGatOutOfHell'', when Johnny and Kinzie gain their powers from touching Lucifer's halo, the right sleeve of Johnny's jacket is totally destroyed, the right leg of his pants has several large holes burnt into it, and the skin underneath is severely burned and disfigured with a glowing PowerTattoo across it. Kinzie... just gets the glowing tattoo, and suffers no damage to her skin or pants (the tank top she wears has no sleeves to destroy in the first place). Ironically, as a GeniusSlob, Kinzie can be considered an aversion of the gross-out version of this trope.
459* All of the male characters in ''VideoGame/SamuraiShodown 3'' can be bloodily cut in pieces, even cute, innocent-looking kid Shizumaru. However, Nakoruru and her sister Rimururu are exempt from this. This may have been an oversight on the developers' part, seeing as how then-new to the series Rimururu is a HeadSwap of her sister and they may have not had time to implement a full set of death animations for the both of them. This is rectified in the next game, ''Samurai Shodown IV'', where not only can they die violently, they can also be drenched in the blood of their disemboweled opponents!
460* ''VideoGame/SegaNinja'' (international title: ''Ninja Princess''), despite being a ninja-themed game, doesn't have a death animation for its heroine. Instead, if she loses a life, she then cries before respawning.
461* In the ''VideoGame/SoulCalibur'' series, the Malfested curse tends to twist living beings into monsters. Compare Siegfried (turns into a demonic BlackKnight with a huge mouth in his chest) and [[GhostPirate Cervantes]] with Tira (who looks like a very pale goth) and Ivy who was '''born''' with Malfested blood in her veins and all she has to show is [[TheAgeless halted aging]]. Incidentally, Ivy happens to be one of the biggest MsFanservice examples of the series alongside [[GorgeousGreek Greek beauty]] [[ActionMom Sophitia]], who also gets infected with Malfestation as well but suffers no superficial change (her children are a different story). Inversions '''do''' happen like [[FrenchJerk Raphael]] retaining his PrettyBoy looks after being infected and [[TheWoobie Pyrrha]] (also born with this condition like Ivy) gaining an EvilHand.
462* ''Franchise/StreetFighter'':
463** Chun-Li's defeat portrait in ''VideoGame/StreetFighterII'' is pretty tame compared to the other character's portraits -- her {{Odango|Hair}} are messed up and she's tearful, but that's mostly it. Cammy, too -- she just looks out of breath, and her beret is a bit bashed up. The men, however, are bruised, swollen, and bloody.
464** ''VideoGame/StreetFighterIII'' is even more extreme, and some of the males look completely '''destroyed''' in the defeated portraits -- especially Dudley and Ken who look '''fucked'''. The girls are much less damaged, however -- Elena '''does''' have a black eye, but Ibuki just looks a bit roughed-up and tearful. To be fair in Ibuki's case, [[https://i.ytimg.com/vi/lgJ_pe3O1gg/maxresdefault.jpg she is cut in some areas even her hips]], but it is not nearly as bad as some characters such as Gill.
465*** It is worth noting that by the game Makoto made her debut in ''Third Strike'' and Chun-Li rejoined the cast these girls didn't get the chance to either keep their beauty untarnished or show damage in this game nor any other future appearance.
466** In ''VideoGame/StreetFighterIV'', several of the Ultra Combo cutscenes cause cartoonishly exaggerated reactions to getting hit, but only to the [[https://i.imgur.com/IylRUes.jpg male characters]].
467** In ''Videogame/StreetFighterV'' Necalli has a unique winpose that he lifts his defeated opponent from the back of the [[https://imgur.com/M3D4tNm head up]] as an offering. The females such as Ibuki (as seen in the picture) tend to have more subdued discomforted facial expressions while males have more extreme expressions such as Ryu with one eye open widely. Furthermore while no character shows physical damage, the angle for the girls seems to be fixed so their chests are easily viewable while held in this way compared to the males who vary much more wildly in height and body shape. You can barely see the face of bigger males such as Abigail [[https://sta.sh/0rx8sz9k2lt compared to the girls]].
468* Diva is the first boss in ''VideoGame/StreetsOfRage 4'' who is female and rather pretty looking in a punk sort of way. When you beat her, the following cutscene shows her face which has a bruise and a scratch here and there but still has her pretty looks. Nora, another female boss you fight later on, doesn't even show any damage in the proceeding cutscene after she is beaten.
469* In ''Star Wars Chess'' being the only female character on the good side, Princess Leia benefits from this, while many of her ''deaths'' [[https://i.imgur.com/2cmcNX4.mp4 somehow manage to]] [[WouldntHitAGirl avoid hitting her]] the few that do such as getting hit straight by an energy beam has her show no visible damage or others are in angles where her injury point wouldn't be shown. Luke on the other hand shows all damage.
470* In ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' male characters typically snore when put to sleep; none of the girls do and typically just make more pleasant idle noises. In their defeated poses while they clap all of the girls are also shown taking their loss rather well and bear no ill will but some of the males like Bowser look rather unpleased and refuses to face the camera and Wario seemingly hurls insults towards his opponents. When screen ko'ed a lot of the men are shown as if their face is being pressed against the screen while the girls are just shown looking cutesy in front of the screen before going away.
471** While it wasn't implemented, unused game files from ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosBrawl'' shows the concept of characters getting some sort of damage. However, all the characters these were made for are male with none of the girls having anything associated with them. Some later games did implement physical damage to an extent but even then it has never applied to any lady in the roster.
472* In the ''VideoGame/{{Tekken}}'' series, the Williams sisters Nina and Anna are a prime example, with the convenient justification of being cryogenically frozen between 2 and 3.
473* ''Franchise/TombRaider'': Lara Croft can die in fashions most people would see in a Mature rated game, but the worst that comes out of it is blood loss if any. At least before the DarkerAndEdgier [[Videogame/TombRaider2013 reboot]] where she's constantly [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/cb/Lara_Croft_%282013%29.png dirty, battered and bloody.]]
474** And in the reboot, while Lara gets put through the wringer, her friend and ally Sam goes through much the same affair without so much as a scratch on her. [[spoiler:Then again, that may be justified because the Solarii [[DemonicPossession want to use her body as the next vessel for]] [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen Himiko]], so they want her unharmed and as beautiful as possible.]]
475* Sylvanas Windrunner from the ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'' series. Once a beautiful High Elf, she put up a heroic LastStand against [[VillainProtagonist Arthas]] when he invaded Quel'Thalas. Arthas rewarded her for her trouble by having her brutally tortured, then killing her and turning her into a banshee. Her corpse was left to rot for what was presumably an extended period of time before banshee Sylvanas eventually broke free of Arthas' grasp and possessed it. Despite all this, she's still depicted as beautiful in ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft''. [[UndeathlyPallor Her skin is now blue]] and her [[RedEyesTakeWarning eyes red]], but there's no visible scarring or decomposition. It seems this is a feature of high-ranking undead.
476** The Broken Isles loading screen shows Sylvanas Windrunner fighting demons on the Broken Shore aside Varian Wrynn. Varian's armor is damaged and he has several bloody cuts on his face, but Sylvanas is, of course, completely spotless.
477** Death Knights are similar, the time between your character's death and revival is left unstated, but you're not terribly decomposed unless you choose one of the three skins made specifically with rot in mind.
478** Exaggerated with Derek Proudmoore in ''Battle for Azeroth.'' In the second war, Derek was incinerated by a dragon when sailing at sea(pre-retcon, his body was turned to ash), his corpse sinking to the bottom of sea where it would remain for over '''thirty''' years. Yet when found and resurrected as a weapon by the forsaken, Derek's corpse is not only not a bloated mess from decades under the sea, but inexplicably in pristine condition outside of UndeathlyPallor. Especially notable as a fellow soldier found with Derek, was in poor condition with bones sticking out their body just like all other forsaken.
479* ''VisualNovel/YoJinBo'' allows main characters of [[BulletProofFashionPlate both genders]] to avoid so much as a scratch in art. Despite running from ninjas through a forest, Sayori doesn't ever rip her kimono or get sweaty or anything. In fact, after the [[HotSpringsEpisode hot spring]], Jin even comments on how lovely girls smell after they get out of the bath...despite the fact that her clothes were not washed and thus should ''stink''. She does break a sandal strap once, but that's only [[BridalCarry so Bo could carry her]]. And even when the guys are said to be injured in text, it only rarely shows up as blood spatter in the art.
480 [[/folder]]
481
482[[folder:Web Comics]]
483* ''Webcomic/Level30Psychiatry'' plays with it. [[Franchise/TombRaider Lara Croft's]] more injury-prone reboot is a side effect of surgery to remove her fanservice.
484* In ''Webcomic/NightmareFactory'' this trope is played straight at first. Despite the horrors she endures, Emai still looks good, although this is mostly due to her being a body manipulator and being able to heal her injuries quickly. To be fair, Kreyul goes through just as much and also looks great.
485* ''Webcomic/BoyfriendOfTheDead'': Justified. Alex still wears makeup, clean clothes, and bathes regularly despite it being a ZombieApocalypse. She is in fact first introduced going through a clothing store looking for anything good. Other survivors are pissed when they meet her because they're huddled in stinky and cramped buildings while she's strolling around without a care in the world. Of course, the reason she is so unconcerned is that [[OneManArmy she's killed hundreds of zombies without breaking a sweat]], [[HorrifyingTheHorror and they've all learned to leave her alone]].
486-->'''Survivor:''' This is the freaking apocalypse, girl! What, do you think you're out on a date or something!?\
487'''Alex:''' Yes.
488[[/folder]]
489
490[[folder:Web Original]]
491* WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic is a [[GenderInvertedTrope Rare Male Example]] PlayedForLaughs. No matter how many beatings, suicides, or shots to the head, a few seconds later he'll be clean and pretty again. In ''WebVideo/ToBoldlyFlee'', a giant window explodes right in the face of him and WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick yet they remain their {{Fanservice}}y selves. Justified, as seeing them scarred wouldn't matter one bit to the plot.
492* In ''Literature/DeadWest'', the pretty characters (the Porcelain Doctor, Carolina, Arabell, or Gervas himself) often get a beating, even get hit in the face, but it almost always quickly heals and doesn't leave a scar. Justified that it usually gets fixed by the Porcelain Doctor's HealingHands (or HealingFactor).
493[[/folder]]
494
495[[folder:Western Animation]]
496* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arcane}}'': [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed.]] Vi and Sevika are the two female characters who end up in hand-to-hand combat most often, and their fights commonly lead to them being bruised and bloody by the end. However, such bruises seem to be consistently limited to their cheekbones and don't swell, as opposed to a few male characters who exhibit actual black eyes and swelling.
497* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries''' version of Characters/{{Harley Quinn|TheCharacter}} is frequently fighting and moving around but her make-up never smudges. Even when she wipes her face, it doesn't smudge unless she's intentionally removing it. She has been depicted in the rain with no effect. It must be rather high-quality make-up but still. The comic version of her eventually {{justified|Trope}} this in the ComicBook/{{New 52}} by having her skin permanently bleached white, much like the Joker, instead of her using a costume.
498** In her [[Recap/BatmanTheAnimatedSeriesE5PrettyPoison debut episode]], Poison Ivy winds up totally unscathed from Batman kicking her square in the face, no bruises, blood, or anything.
499* In ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}'', Amy is treated the same as the other characters. However, in the DVD commentary of the YouMeanXmas Episode, it is said that this was done deliberately to '''test''' whether people would laugh at a woman being hurt in amusing ways.
500* ''WesternAnimation/HarleyQuinn2019'': Several times Harley gets into fights, and gets hit hard enough to get a bloody nose, but is perfectly fine a few seconds later.
501* WesternAnimation/KimPossible, and everyone else, never look affected by the action for more than a few moments. Even after [[MudWrestling she fights Shego in a mudbath]], the mud is gone a few seconds later. Dr. Drakken manages to burn his hair off with a few experiments, but that quickly comes back too. Probably the only exception is the occasional GlamourFailure from a defeated villain.
502* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends'' episode "The Glass Princess" sees three of the ponies [[ImportantHaircut get shaved bald]]. It grows back instantly, with a HandWave about it being magical.
503* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'':
504** Rarity cuts off her own tail at one point, reassuring the others that it will grow back. It gets restored by the end of that episode via a different HandWave when [[spoiler: Rarity gains the reawakened Element of Harmony, Generosity]].
505** In "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS4E23InspirationManifestation Inspiration Manifestation]]", Rarity looks very good for someone who's spent the day crying and devouring ice cream, and only very slightly below her usual standards. Of course, this being Rarity, she immediately fixes her mane to its usual pristine state when she perks up.
506** Rarity's human version from the ''Equestria Girls'' universe is likewise able to reset her frazzled hair back to perfect by just running her hand through it, having messed it up moving a piano.
507* In ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches'', while Oggy, Jack, Bob, the cockroaches, and all background characters are frequently beaten up, crushed, squeezed, incinerated, or disintegrated by cartoon violence, Oggy's relatives, including his grandma, his girlfriend (now wife) Olivia and his twin sister Monica, rarely suffer physical damage at all.
508* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'':
509** Korra gets kidnapped in one episode, and in the process gets several cuts and bruises. They stay for the episode after but disappear the next episode. It's justified by the fact that she has HealingHands that need water to work, and until she got loose she had no access to water. She's shown bruised in a future episode though.
510** Asami Sato is this to near MemeticMutation levels. No matter what kind of damage she goes through, whether it be fighting, crashing some vehicle, explosions, whatever you can think of, her makeup and hair will always look perfect.
511* The main characters in ''WesternAnimation/{{Jem}}'' are seemingly always in danger. Whether being stranded on a deserted island, stuck in the mountains near dying, or in the middle of a race their huge EightiesHair and flashy make-up always comes out fine. They never even [[WakeUpMakeup seem to do their make-up or hair]], which is justified in Jem's case as she is using a holographic illusion but everyone else just has natural big hair. It could be easily mistaken that The Misfits have facial tattoos rather than make-up as they never remove them, however, Roxy is clearly shown briefly without her make-up during a MakeoverMontage in "Roxy Rumbles".
512* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
513** Played with (for laughs) in the episode "Krusty Gets Kancelled." Krusty the Clown appears in a TV "comeback" special with various celebrities, one of whom is Creator/LukePerry (who is somehow Krusty's half-brother, even though they're ''at least'' a quarter-century apart in age, and whom Krusty hates for some unspecified reason). Krusty has an ImagineSpot where he spitefully daydreams about Luke getting so grievously injured by some clown slapstick that his gorgeous face is so grotesquely flattened that it actually recedes into his head. Later, when Krusty '''does''' fire Luke out of a cannon on live television, Luke goes flying through a window in the studio and all the way across town, crashing through the Kwik-E-Mart...just as Apu is setting up about two dozen jars of battery acid. Luke smashes through the display and then can be heard screaming that his face has been permanently disfigured - but then when we see him again, he's fine. He finally lands in an abandoned building that promptly gets '''blown up''', but [[IronButtmonkey somehow manages to survive]] - and when he shows up at the very end of the episode, [[AmusingInjuries all he has to show for the incident are some bandages]].
514** Straight example in the WesternAnimation/TreehouseOfHorror parody of ''{{Film/Freaks}}''. Marge plays the beautiful acrobat, but [[AdaptationalHeroism she's not]] in on the poisoning plot, and the final [[spoiler:conversion into a "human bird"]] by the angry freaks happens to Homer, who plays the strongman.
515* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'': During Wendy and Cartman's fight, even though she treated him to a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown, he got in a few good punches at the beginning, and the most that ever happens to her is that she got a little dizzy. She comes out of the thing with only a few bruises on her, while Cartman is covered in blood and probably had half the bones in his face broken. {{Justified|Trope}} as Cartman is a BoisterousWeakling who cannot take a hit.
516* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': [[WesternAnimation/StevenUniverseTheMovie Spinel]], while she becomes dirtier after staying in an abandoned garden alone for 6,000 years and also becomes rooted to the ground, her cute appearance stays cute. This is also true for the creepier appearance she takes after turning evil, which Blue Diamond finds "adorable".
517* The "What If... Zombies?!" episode of Marvel's ''WesternAnimation/WhatIf2021'' series, all the men have torn skin, visible wounds, missing noses, holes all the way through their bodies, etc., while Scarlet Witch... just gets the blue skin and blank eyes, with a few minor scrapes.
518** In the same episode, Sharon Carter was written to have a fairly gruesome death, with Zombie Captain America biting off her lips; this was eventually toned down to an off-screen infection that gave her some cuts on her forehead and a single wounded cheek.
519[[/folder]]
520
521!!Examples and exceptions of the second (gross-out oriented) kind:
522
523[[foldercontrol]]
524
525[[folder:Advertising]]
526* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ved0D1De9U This ad]] for Tröegs beer features a woman in a bikini burping and farting while promoting the beer.
527-->'''Girl''': [[DefensiveWhat What?]] It's natural!
528[[/folder]]
529
530[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
531* Subverted and PlayedForDrama in ''Manga/TheDangersInMyHeart'' when Yamada gets hit square in the face by a basketball. She appears fine for a few seconds until she starts bleeding profusely from the nose and has to be taken to the nurses' office. Not only does this ruin a modeling shoot she was scheduling for, she spends a few chapters with a nose plaster.
532* A good example of this is The Kinnikuman Lady series. Kinnikuman Lady actually falls under both kinds of this. Kinnikuman lady is never shown doing anything even remotely gross unlike her male counterpart who is a major {{Gasshole}} that did all sorts of toilet humor. She also never shown getting as badly hurt as her male counterpart. The worst to ever happen to her was some of her clothing gets torn up.
533* In ''Manga/FairyTail'', a member of a Dark Guild can use magic that makes a virus target the victim's organs, and she prefers to direct it to the intestines -- essentially giving the victim acute diarrhea. [[ButtMonkey Lucy]] is one of the victims. Technically played straight in that the magic is nullified before it gets messy, but she still suffers along with the guys for a while.
534* ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'':
535** Kagura regularly averts this. She is seen picking her nose or ears nearly as often as Gintoki and is even proud of herself for being the first Shonen Jump heroine to vomit on television. But aside from her, the other female characters tend to be subjected to milder cases of ToiletHumour, if any, compared to what the guys get into.
536** A small example in the [[GenderBender dekoboko]] arc. The ending used at the time was [[EvolvingCredits adapted]] to show the characters' genderbent forms, and where the regular version featured Gintoki poking his nose while reading ''Magazine/ShonenJump'', Female Gintoki is just striking a pose with her wooden katana.
537* Averted in ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure''; having a pretty face will not excuse anyone from a bloody, brutal, line-crossing beatdown.
538* In ''Anime/KiraKiraPrecureALaMode'', an exploding oven [[AshFace covers the Cures in soot]], except for beauty queen Yukari.
539* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
540** Luffy tends to ask non-human creatures (more specifically creatures with a lower body that's significantly different from a human) if they poop. The [[DemBones living skeleton]] Brook immediately replies that yes, he does poop. But Luffy never manages to get an affirmative answer from the beautiful mermaids as the first mermaid's reply is interrupted by Sanji who wants to invoke this trope, and the second mermaid takes offense to the question and refuses to answer.
541** The trope is very much averted with [[spoiler:York, who is an attractive young woman and specifically created for the purpose of pooping which she does in her very first scene. To specify, she is one of Dr. Vegapunk's so-called satellite bodies, and her role is go to the bathroom (as well as sleep and eat) for him and the other satellites so that they don't have to do it themselves and can focus on their work.]]
542* The leading heroines of ''Anime/SailorMoon'' are often the victims of AmusingInjuries. Heck, at one point, Usagi even ends up being the butt of a fart joke. The others are not amused.
543* In ''Manga/RockLeesSpringtimeOfYouth'' Neji and Rock Lee are in denial that girls use the bathroom too. They want to believe that NobodyPoops applies to Hinata and Sakura.
544* One episode of ''Anime/YokaiWatch'' features a {{youkai}} that makes people flatulent. Eleven-year-old Nate and the other boys don't think that girls can fart. Nate is horrified when his crush Katie proves him wrong.
545[[/folder]]
546
547[[folder:Comic Books]]
548* The Brazilian comic ComicBook/MonicasGang has a story wherein two six-year-old boys are being babysat by a hot teenager. She lets slip that girls actually ''poop,'' and the boys faint from the shock. She hurries to assure them that when girls poop it's pretty and white and smells of flowers.
549[[/folder]]
550
551[[folder:Film — Animation]]
552* ''Film/ChipNDaleRescueRangers2022'': Gadget Hackwrench has given birth to 42 children but suffered no physical degradation for this feat. Granted, [[ToonPhysics she is a type of being who can ignore such wear and tear if suffering it would have no comedic or dramatic value]] among other reasons, but this is notable since others of her kind suffering the physical and mental ravages of time drives the main plot.
553[[/folder]]
554
555[[folder:Film — Live Action]]
556* Averted in ''Film/{{Exam}}''; all injuries sustained have an effect, and the time spent in the room has an appropriate effect on all of the women.
557* ''Film/MonsterParty'': Although Casper gets covered in blood splatter and severely mussed up while escaping from the mansion, Alexis remains completely untouched in a red party dress with perfect hair and makeup until she takes an unplanned dip in the pool.
558* The hero and heroine of ''Film/TheMountainBetweenUs'' survive a plane crash and manage to hike down the mountain to a cabin, where they engage in GladToBeAliveSex, despite the fact that in RealLife, after several days of not showering ''and'' massive physical exertion, they would have absolutely reeked. Ironically, the movie does depict the abrasions and bruises they would have received after such an accident.
559* ''Film/{{Captivity}}'' plays the physical version of this trope straight with its heroine Jennifer, the film seems afraid to make Creator/ElishaCuthbert look anything less than beautiful, with the one serious physical torture she's subjected to later revealed to be a fake-out. However, it does subject her to ''psychological'' torture and gross-outs, most notably in a scene where she's [[ForceFeeding force-fed]] a smoothie made of [[ImAHumanitarian human body parts and blood]].
560[[/folder]]
561
562[[folder:Literature]]
563* Creator/JonathanSwift wrote an entire [[http://plagiarist.com/poetry/8049/ poem]] about a man's horror at discovering that women have gross bodily functions too.
564* Asha, the titular [[Literature/TheWishingMaiden Wishing Maiden]], is chained at the bottom of a well for a hundred years. After some bathing, she's as beautiful as ever. Could be a JustifiedTrope, in that it's implied someone wished for her to be beautiful, and a few decades in captivity wouldn't have altered the wish.
565* ''Literature/JourneyToChaos'': Kasile insists that she fits the straight version of the trope ("Divine beauty is never tarnished") but this proves not to be the case. She gets sweaty after training in physical combat, bloody after a real fight, and vomits due to a hangover.
566[[/folder]]
567
568[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
569* Body odour and/or halitosis in general seems to be something of an exception as it makes a point [[TakeOurWordForIt without detracting from the actresses' physical beauty.]] Carla from ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' was told off in one episode for her bad breath after her regular hummus breaks.
570----
571* In ''Series/EightSimpleRules'', Bridget uses this trope as her social image. When a boy calls for her and Rory tells him she can't come to the phone because she's in the bathroom, she flips out.
572-->'''Bridget:''' Oh my God! No one can know I use the bathroom! My life is ruined! Damage control, I have to do damage control! ''(picks up the phone and starts dialing)''\
573'''Paul:''' No calls, Bridget! Put the phone down! I've got a very important announcement for the whole family.\
574'''Bridget:''' Dad, priorities here, okay? If I don't get on this phone in the next ten minutes, people are going to think I ''actually use the '''bathroom!'''''
575* ''Series/AllMyChildren'':
576** Heroine Natalie is abducted and thrown into a well by her insane sister Janet, who plans to take over her life. She is held there for what appears to be several months until finally being rescued, yet is only slightly disheveled rather than being bone thin and utterly filthy.
577** Also when Bianca Montgomery developed anorexia, yet looked perfectly normal and healthy, making other characters' horrified reactions at how "emaciated" she supposedly was border on {{Narm}}.
578* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'': Averted when Aeryn, the tough but usually-beautiful main love interest, is infected with Pilot's DNA and turns into a pretty disgusting slimy hybrid for an episode.
579* The "extreme" game show ''Series/FearFactor'' averted this trope. It often had gross-out challenges to complement the more physical ones, and it was egalitarian about them. The (often attractive) female contestants had to [[EatThat eat disgusting "food"]], get [[CoveredInGunge dunked in sewage]], and get [[CreepyCrawlyTorture covered in insects, worms, and rodents]] just like the male contestants did.
580* Kimmy from ''Series/FullHouse'' is said to have feet that smell, which is played up for humor. But since we can only see and not smell Kimmy, we have to [[TakeOurWordForIt take their word for it]], since she is not ugly or anything.
581* ''Series/{{Hacks}}'': When the redheaded Ava gets left in the desert all day, her face gets horribly sunburnt for one scene. The next morning, she looks perfectly normal.
582* Lily Truscott from ''Series/HannahMontana'' is also said to have smelly feet, by Hannah/Miley herself.
583* ''Series/LegendOfTheSeeker'': Jennsen's quite pretty, but this is averted by way of a gigantic black eye when she's captured by D'Haran soldiers.
584* ''Series/MythBusters'':
585** A long-unaired (at least on U.S. television) flatulence myth was "Pretty girls do not pass gas". The result was, of course, [[JustForFun/TropesExaminedByTheMythBusters Busted]], with the proof being a very loud, wet fart by Kari Byron caught on camera (amplified via a microphone).
586** In the Cannonball Chemistry episode, we got to see a ''very'' mussed-up Kari after she'd [[ItMakesSenseInContext used a concrete polisher on a chunk of limestone to make it into a cannonball]]. She then went into detail about [[DeadpanSnarker how she loved the glamour of being a star on television, and how it made her feel pretty]].
587* On ''Series/TheOC'' Summer Roberts became a student activist and gave up bathing for a while. She didn't ''look'' dirty, but the other characters certainly commented on the smell. Also, she stopped shaving her legs, but, slightly conveniently, we didn't see the results.
588* ''Series/SexEducation'': Averted with Aimee Gibbs. She's a beautiful and popular girl who farts when she's scared and is [[ToiletHumour hilariously]] open about her bodily functions.
589* ''Series/TheWilds'': Realistically averted, with the girls having messy hair, sunburns, and grimy skin after days living on the island. The lack of shampoo is even discussed at one point.
590* ''Series/{{Yellowjackets}}'': Only a few days after the girls' plane crashes and leaves them stranded in the Canadian wilderness, they start looking disheveled and unwashed. Taissa, one of three African American team members, is keeping her hair in a headwrap, likely because she can't give it the attention it would need. She later gives herself an ImportantHaircut.
591[[/folder]]
592
593[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
594* As much as WWE fans would rather forget it, Wrestling/NatalyaNeidhart did have a farting gimmick during her time in the company.
595* This is one area not even WWE can avoid. Put two bodies in the middle of a thousand screaming fans under those lights and have them run around? You'll be sweating buckets in fifteen, maybe even ten minutes. Granted, they ''try'', and have at times been known for cutting women's matches down to two minutes or less (though some people think an exerted athlete [[WomenPreferStrongMen has an appeal]] all [[AmazonChaser its own]].) Although according to the performers themselves, there are lots of unseen bits of trickery in order to stop them looking ''worse''. This includes make-up to hide bruises sustained from training, double-sided tape to prevent the gear from looking too disheveled, and careful dieting to avoid [[HollywoodPudgy water weight showing]].
596* WWE tends to try and portray their wrestlers, male and female, as superhuman, and as shown on ''Series/TotalDivas'', wrestlers even have to follow eating guidelines before a match to avoid any problems. Some wrestlers such as John Cena have told stories about their bowels in the ring and told a story during a live event he had acute diarrhea, he stated during a segment with Scott Steiner he had to go under the ring and do his business before coming back up to finish the segment.
597[[/folder]]
598
599[[folder:Video Games]]
600* Strongly averted in ''VideoGame/DeathtrapDungeon''. At low health, our tall, muscular and scantily-clad {{Barbarian Hero}}ine Red Lotus bears some really horrible looking gashes and wounds on her body, even showing exposed bone. Being attacked by fire-breathing enemies causes her to look like a slice of burned bacon, and worse it also looks like her fetishistic leather spandex outfit is ''melting into her skin''.
601* ''Franchise/MortalKombat''. The only real exception here is the X-Ray moves. These incredibly brutal attacks leave horrible wounds that would [[MadeOfPlasticine likely cause instant death to a real human]] but they tend to heal and vanish very quickly. It's also not the case in the Story Mode, where the Trope usually does apply; you can't use Fatalities there, and the blood and gore, for the most part, is removed. The characters can't die during the matches; it can only happen as the plot demands.
602* The ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'' series plays this straight most of the time, considering all the abuse Samus goes through, heck, ''[[VideoGame/MetroidFusion Fusion]]'', ''[[VideoGame/SuperMetroid Super]]'', and ''[[VideoGame/MetroidZeroMission Zero Mission]]'' use their game over screens as titillation! Though somewhat justified in that her PoweredArmor uses energy shields to absorb damage, and any hit that would actually damage her through her energy shields kills her outright.
603* A variation of this in ''VideoGame/SuperMarioRPG'': when your male party members get hit with the [[StatusEffects sleep status]], they let out a big, crass-looking snot bubble. When [[TheSmurfettePrinciple Princess Toadstool]] (your only female party member) gets put to sleep, she daintily [[CatchingSomeZs catches some z's]].
604* In ''VideoGame/DragonsLair 2 Time Warped'', the evil wizard Mordroc turns the beautiful Princess Daphne into a hideous purple-skinned wart-covered monster. You change her back to normal after removing the ring he placed on her finger.
605* Futaba from ''VideoGame/Persona5'' spent almost two years as an anti-social shut-in who spent all her time working on her computer and eating junk food, never leaving her dark, trash-filled room and never exercising. Despite this, she remains slender, has clear and healthy skin, well-maintained dyed hair, and wears clean and stylish clothing.
606* It's possible for your protagonists in ''VideoGame/WorldOfHorror'' to accrue some truly ''nasty'' injuries depicting various levels of BodyHorror. Said injuries aren't necessarily [[DeathByDisfigurement fatal]], either; in fact, it's entirely possible for you to make it through and come out the other end alive, looking significantly worse for wear.
607[[/folder]]
608
609[[folder:Web Comics]]
610* ''Webcomic/LastRes0rt'' avoids this trope and heaps on the gore pretty even-handedly, lady players included. So far, Addy's been shot at least once through the chest, Daisy's playing on an amputated leg, Jigsaw hulks out into her zombie-esque SuperpoweredEvilSide roughly once an episode (after being shot and getting cut up a bit), Cypress dove head-first into a pool of rapidly-dissolving nanotech compared to stomach acid... and then, well... [[https://www.lastres0rt.com/comic/lets-play-ragging-on-the-man-with-the-gun/ this.]] The boys get beat up too, but there's only so many of them...
611[[/folder]]
612
613[[folder:Web Original]]
614* ''WebVideo/MonsterFactory'' makes plenty of genuinely gross-looking female monsters. They generally prefer to make boys but will do runs of female monsters to address the balance.
615[[/folder]]
616
617[[folder:Western Animation]]
618* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender''
619** An example is used in the first episode; it's particularly blatant when Appa sneezes toward [[ButtMonkey Sokka]] and Katara, and almost magically, only one winds up covered in green goo. Guess which.
620** In "The Drill" episode, the only female character who ''doesn't'' end up liberally caked with mud is one who very deliberately stayed away from it. [[MagnificentBitch Azula]] and [[MsFanservice Ty Lee]] are exactly the sort of characters who might be expected to look implausibly perfect regardless of circumstances.
621* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
622** The episode "World Wide Recorder Concert" had the musicians playing a [[BrownNote "brown note"]] so loud that it caused everyone in the world to poop their pants. Assuming this meant ''[[ExactWords everyone]]'' everyone, that included all the sexy girls and women too.
623** In the episode "Rainforest Shmainforest", Kenny's {{Love Interest|s}} frequently picks her nose. It doesn't bother him tho.
624* Lil in ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'' was just as gross and filthy as her twin Phil. However, in the spin-off ''WesternAnimation/AllGrownUp'', she attempts to be a girly-girl but doesn't quite get there. She farts in one episode and repeatedly denies it.
625* ''WesternAnimation/{{The Powerpuff Girls|1998}}'':
626** During one episode, Buttercup winds up covered head-to-toe in assorted waste, and everything refuses to associate with her until she bathes. [[EveryoneHasStandards This includes the monsters!]]
627** An odd double-subversion happens in the episode where Him brings the Rowdyruff Boys back stronger and immune to the Girls' kisses. The Girls are clearly visibly hurt and wounded from the brutal fight... But the wounds strangely vanish as soon as they manage to turn the fight around.
628** In "Reeking Havoc", several characters create a methane monster by farting after eating chili made by the Professor in a chili cook-off. [[MsFanservice Ms. Bellum]] is shown farting as she's [[VisualPun cutting cheese]].
629* Following the original film mentioned above, Judy rarely fell victim to effects of the game in ''WesternAnimation/JumanjiTheAnimatedSeries''. Even when it was her that broke the rules, ''Peter'' was inexplicably punished or transformed for it, something he lampshaded the unfairness of.
630* In a ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'' short, "Dipper's Guide to the Unexplained - Mailbox", Mabel causes a mailbox to explode using a video of her putting gummy worms in her nose. The explosion messes up her hair, takes off a small part of her sweater, and covers her in soot, but not much more than that; meanwhile, Dipper's and Soos' shirts are completely ripped to shreds.
631[[/folder]]

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