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13[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/LeParkour_01_350_4007.png]]
14[[caption-width-right:350:[[WesternAnimation/SupermanTheatricalCartoons Able to leap between buildings in a single bound!]]]]
15
16
17->''"Parkour!"''
18-->-- '''[[Creator/AchievementHunter Ray Narvaez Jr.]]''' whenever making the slightest jump
19
20Parkour (and its similar offshoot free-running) is a physical discipline originating in UsefulNotes/{{France}}, more specifically, a suburb of Paris called Évry (although it's worth noting that the inventor's father/teacher was born in [[UsefulNotes/TheFrenchColonialEmpire French-controlled]] UsefulNotes/{{Vietnam}}). It can be summed up as either [[JustForFun/XMeetsY acrobatics meets assault courses]] or skateboarding ''[[RuleOfCool without a board]]''.
21
22Parkour (the name is a variant of ''parcours,'' meaning a course or route) is based on general principles of survival: Should one ever need to get from Point A to Point B as fast as possible, the shortest distance is always a straight line. The goal, therefore, is to get past, over, under, or through various obstacles without wasting any time. And it just happened that Évry's central agora is an incredible mishmash of stairs, decks, catwalks and roofs at different heights -- and thus, the best way to go in a straight line from A to B in downtown Évry was jumping and running through obstacles. (As of today, the nearby suburbs of Courcouronnes and Lisses have "parkour parks", like skate parks made for practicing parkour).
23
24Parkour practitioners (called by gender-specific nouns, following the original French; a male Parkour runner is a ''traceur'', a female is a ''traceuse''; referring to multiple practitioners uses ''traceurs'') run their environment like an obstacle course: vaulting obstructions, leaping gaps, [[WallRun running up walls]], {{wall jump}}s, and otherwise taking wild shortcuts. Although commonly associated with cities, Parkour can be used to navigate any type of environment. Traceurs will tell you their discipline becomes a mindset over time. They learn to unconsciously scan their surroundings for routes and movements. Think of ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed'' or ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdge''. Plus, it not only [[RuleOfCool looks damn cool]], but is practical, and may prove to become a more widely practiced discipline similar to martial arts.
25
26The obvious example of Parkour usage is moving from point A to B, but the core idea is simply to make yourself more practically agile and more able to overcome physical obstacles. A mundane example is accidentally throwing something (e.g. a football) on a rooftop and needing to recover it. A practitioner of Parkour would be able to get onto the roof, get the object and get down safely.
27
28[[OlderThanTheyThink The practice of Parkour actually predates the use of that term to describe it]]. It is a refinement of human movement rather than a brand new skill, the movements have been practiced in various ways for a long time. For example, stuntmen and martial arts film actors have been doing similar things for years, a good example being Creator/JackieChan.
29
30Not to be confused with its counterpart, "Free Running", which is similar but with a difference of [[TechnicianVersusPerformer "form" over "function."]] One of the central "rules" of Parkour is that it is not a competitive sport, and emphasizes efficiency, self-discipline, and [[DontThinkFeel oneness with the surroundings]], whereas "free-running" is based on stunts and acrobatics that can be done in one location, just for the hell of it, and may include extra flips and spins that are functionally superfluous (and energy inefficient) but [[RuleofCool look damn cool.]] Note that often, traceurs will be able to and will perform flips and the like and can be considered both a traceur and a free-runner. The main distinction of traceur and free-runner is in the mindset of the person.
31
32Parkour has begun to appear more frequently in TV shows, owing to its growing popularity. Its moves are commonly employed by martial artists, notably {{Ninja}} and practitioners of SheFu. With special effects and wirework, it becomes an even more impressive feat than it already is. That could be considered proof positive that movie producers are dedicated to [[MisaimedFandom missing the point]], because Parkour is [[RuleOfCool cool]] because it is ''[[RealLife real]]''. Many new video games employ it to expand a player's platform hopping repertoire.
33
34A realistic version of RoofHopping -- most Parkour is done at or near ground level, because that's where one encounters the most obstacles. If used well this can be a great help to a person running a MobstacleCourse.
35
36For the use of parkour in combat, see the subtrope CombatParkour.
37
38----
39!!Examples
40
41[[foldercontrol]]
42
43[[folder:Advertising]]
44* A commercial for AT&T High Speed Internet shows a man learning Parkour via online videos.
45* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDe7bXqsF04 Austrian Army TV-Ad.]]
46* One of the first things to introduce Parkour to a mainstream British audience was a stunning [[Creator/TheBBC BBC 1]] ad featuring David Belle RoofHopping home to watch his favourite show.
47* The government of Mexico launched at the end of 2012 (not without some controversy) an spot featuring Parkour practitioners to emphasize the youth and strength of the new administration. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9o1NQmcQh5g No, seriously.]]
48* There was an old Nike commercial that aired around 2000-01 or thereabouts where a traceur blasted across rooftops to avoid... [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment a chicken.]]
49* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FeOhok5mOM A GO! promo from 2010]] features people doing parkour while multicolored streaks associated with their then-current on-air branding appear on-screen.
50[[/folder]]
51
52
53[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
54* Used in ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' as a means of fighting the Titans, given their height and their one weak spot being on the base of the neck.
55** With grappling hooks!
56* The characters Izaya Orihara and Shizuo Heiwajima from ''Literature/{{Durarara}}'' practice Parkour, or something very much akin to it. The former learnt it to avoid Shizuo's many attempts to kill him very much dead, and the latter in order to catch the former and kill him very much dead.
57* A much less flippy- and martial-artsy-version occurs in ''Manga/Eyeshield21''. Sena, and a few other running backs, have the ability to foresee the quickest and safest abilities to get to the goal. Thus, it involves [[MobstacleCourse running in between people, cutting back, slowing your speed, etc.]] One of Sena's contemporaries, Patrick "Panther" Spencer, is fond of running across rooftops as his morning exercise.
58* In the ''[[Anime/Gundam00AWakeningOfTheTrailblazer Gundam 00]]'' movie, Hallelujah uses Parkour to defeat alien-possessed vehicles. He knew he was screwed when the helicopter came after him, though.
59* The opening of ''Anime/{{K}}'' implies that Saruhiko Fushimi is able to do this. It shows him jumping from street light to street light, with [[CutlassBetweenTheTeeth his sword between his teeth]] no less, and the anime proper shows him to be very quick and agile.
60** There's some of this from Izumo Kusanagi in season 2, as well.
61* [[GagNose Kaku]] from ''Manga/OnePiece'' is particularly skilled in this. Even his nickname that the people of Water 7 gave him, "Yamakaze" refers to this trope.
62* The magical girls in ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'' are implied to be able to do this, as several scenes in the Main Story of ''Magia Record'' imply that they can jump from roof to roof without getting hurt. The reason why preteens can do this, is because [[spoiler: their bodies are contained in a Soul Gem, and it grants them agility, also because they won't die unless their Soul Gem is hit]].
63* Minako Aino from ''Manga/SailorMoon'' can be seen parkouring since the days of [[Manga/CodenameSailorV her solo manga]], anticipating the scene in the anime where she does RoofHopping ''without transforming''. In the manga she apparently taught the skill to the others, as in the Infinity Arc Ami uses a Parkour jump to escape an attack from Viluy.
64* Langa of ''Anime/SK8TheInfinity'' does this in the illegal skate park S ''with'' his skateboard...because he has a habit of slamming his skateboard against the likes of tree branches or leaping from boulders, et cetera, to utilize snowboarder moves, getting from point A to B even quicker than usual. By episode 11, [[spoiler:his best friend Reki picks up his tricks.]]
65* In ''Manga/SnowWhiteWithTheRedHair'' both Zen and his aide Obi prefer to get places by trying to take the shortest route, often jumping over balconies instead going around to the stairs or using other potential obstacles like trees to get around faster. Zen isn't able to get as much practice as he'd like as being a prince his antics are not put up with by his superiors.
66* ''Manga/SPYxFamily'': An anime-original segment in Episode 19 shows Yor using parkour to get to Eden Academy to deliver Anya her P.E. uniform.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Comedy]]
70* Sometimes referred to as "the French art of [[CheeseEatingSurrenderMonkey running away]]".
71[[/folder]]
72
73[[folder:Comics Books]]
74* In ''ComicBook/AstroCity'', this is practiced by the Trouble Boys, a bunch of young men who admire Jack-in-the-Box and race him across rooftops for fun. When you can practically keep up with a guy with spring-powered leaps, you're ''good''.
75* On the Creator/DCComics side, ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'' is a bit of a trope codifier for superhero quasi-parkour. Being {{Badass Normal}}s, he and his sidekicks and students (ComicBook/{{Nightwing}}, ComicBook/{{Batgirl}}, ComicBook/RedRobin, ComicBook/{{Robin}}, [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Spolier]]) essentially use parkour (along with a ''lot'' of BuildingSwing) when they're flying around rooftops. And now Batman has selected Bilal Asselah, an actual French free-runner, to take up the mantle of "Nightrunner" as part of the Batman Incorporated program.
76* A major talent of Jaeger, the protagonist of many story arcs in ''ComicBook/{{Finder}}''.
77* Both Paul Patton Jr. and his son Shinji practice this in their superhero identities in ''ComicBook/TheFoxHunt''.
78* Creator/WarrenEllis' ''ComicBook/GlobalFrequency'' centered one story around it.
79* Pretty much any non-flying, athletic comic-book superhero (or villain) is sure to end up using parkour-like techniques, including a lot of {{Roofhopping}}, along with BuildingSwing moves, to get around the urban environment. Some notable examples from Creator/MarvelComics include:
80** ''ComicBook/CaptainAmerica'' villain Batroc does this, combined with the French martial art ''savate,'' as his shtick (he's called Batroc the Leaper for a reason). This is played up in the one-shot issue "Captain America and Batroc", where he comes to identify as a ''traceur'' after befriending a group of young practitioners.
81** Spidey's pal Comicbook/{{Daredevil}} tends to do this kind of thing ''even more,'' though. His radar sense gives him perfect 360-degree awareness of his environment, and his blindness protects him from vertigo.
82** {{ComicBook/Gambit}} is famous for this, as part of his rep as a stealthy and extremely skilled master thief and close quarters fighter - heck, he's the literal KingOfThieves in the Marvel Universe.
83** The current ComicBook/MsMarvel has occasional friendly encounters with Laal Khanjeer (Red Dagger), a Pakistani BadassNormal superhero who combines this sort of skill with precision knife throwing. Ms Marvel explicitly calls what he does parkour; he says that he's self-taught, and learned most of his best moves by watching Website/YouTube videos. He's clearly a very naturally talented ''traceur''.
84** ComicBook/SpiderMan. Because when you can jump four stories, swing on webs, and stick to walls, the fastest route from A to B can change significantly. Doesn't change that parkour is essentially one of Spidey's powers.
85*** There is a famous Spidey story where he is forced to track a villain to suburbia and basically relies on free-running to get around because web-slinging doesn't work well on one-story houses.
86*** The Spidey villain Screwball has no powers but her skill in parkour.
87* ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdge'', based on the video game of the same name.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Comic Strips]]
91* ''ComicStrip/TheWizardOfId'' once revealed that Humpty Dumpty has been taking parkour lessons. Notably, it shows him surviving his infamous fall.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Fan Works]]
95* In ''Fanfic/TheBridge'', Monster X turns into a human when transported to the Equestria Girls universe. He uses ninja-like parkour to get around, complimented by the fact he still has a degree of super strength.
96* In ''Fanfic/CrownsOfTheKingdom'', Mickey and Minnie get around this way.
97* In ''Webcomic/FriendshipIsMagic'', the human Rainbow Dash practices this as a hobby and aspires to join the Wonderbolts, a team of professional parkour practitioners. The villain gang the Shadowbolts also practice this.
98* In ''Fanfic/FriendshipIsMagicalGirls'', this is Lightning Dust's preferred form of both getting around and fighting.
99* Being a The Matrix and Supernatural crossover ''Fanfic/HuntingSeries'' naturally uses a little bit of this. Particularly, in part 3 - Hunting and Saving when John Winchester uses it to save a kid that's being held ten feet off the ground by a vampire.
100* In ''Fanfic/Zootopia2TheMovie'', displaced human Bart Torres uses this to try and escape from Judy and Nick.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
104* In the DVD commentary for Shane Acker's ''WesternAnimation/{{Nine}}'' -- the feature film -- it's stated that the movements of resident badass 7 were heavily inspired by this, as well as skateboarding and watching female athletes perform other various sports activities. It shows.
105* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanUnderTheRedHood'' has some of this while Batman and Nightwing are chasing Red Hood.
106* ''WesternAnimation/{{Brave}}'': Right before Merida's day out on horseback, she does a couple of very traceur-like moves, which underscores her athleticism.
107* ''WesternAnimation/HappyFeetTwo'' has Boadicea pulling off parkour moves to move swiftly across the landscape of Antarctica.
108* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{The Hunchback of Notre Dame|Disney}}'', Quasimodo pulls off a lot of neat parkour-style moves on the rooftops of the cathedral.
109* ''Anime/ResidentEvilDegeneration'', a CGI movie based off the ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' series, has Leon do an incredible Parkour sequence near the end of the movie to escape a SelfDestructMechanism.
110* In ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosMovie'', parkour serves as the real-world roots of the legendary platforming skills they acquire later. Early in the film, they shortcut through a construction site after their van stalls out, although only Mario can really show off due to Luigi being stuck with their heavy toolkit. He later gets the chance to show off after arriving in the Dark Lands, scaling a craggy moat of lava to get away from a horde of Dry Bones, and by the end of the film, [[spoiler:both of them use Super Star-powered Combat Parkour to tag-team Bowser and his army with ease.]]
111* Probably an example before this style, but in the stop-motion Creator/{{Rankin Bass|Productions}} cartoon, ''WesternAnimation/SantaClausIsCominToTown'', Kris Kringle uses some fairly sweet moves to escape the Burgermeister Meisterburger's troops.
112-->'''Burgermeister Meisterburger:''' Oh, look! He climbs like a squirrel, leaps like a deer, and is as slippery as a seal!
113* Although the animators based it more on surfing and skateboarding movements, Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' movie has the title hero do lots of Parkour-style movement through the jungle.
114* Parkour seems to be the main mode of locomotion for the stray boys Black and White in ''Manga/{{Tekkonkinkreet}}''.
115* The Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles always had a bit of Parkour in them, but ''WesternAnimation/{{TMNT}}'', the CGI movie, has them doing full-on parkour runs of the city. Even more impressive is that each turtle has his own preference and style of moving.
116* Shows up, weirdly enough, in ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'', with Woody, Buzz and Jessie pulling off borderline ninja moves. When you're the size of a toy, you have to get creative to move in a human-sized environment.
117** A notable mention is Buzz's first flying sequence in the original movie.
118* Mei does this twice in ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'': The first time is when she's running home from school after she transforms in the middle of a math class due to [[AmazinglyEmbarrassingParents her mom embarrassing her]], the second time being when she heads to the concert after [[spoiler:deciding to embrace her panda spirit]].
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
122!!Actors:
123* A staple of Creator/JackieChan movies, though outtakes show that being able to leap up a wall in three bounds does take just the right amount of momentum and angle, and failures range from hilarious to painful (or both).
124* Keaton could be considered a comedic successor to Creator/DouglasFairbanksSr., the first Hollywood actor to portray Robin Hood and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yaBud6ii5Wk Zorro]]. (Keaton even played a role originated by Fairbanks when the latter's 1915 film, ''Film/TheLamb,'' was remade as Keaton's first feature, ''Film/TheSaphead,'' in 1920.)
125* Creator/BusterKeaton was the master before Parkour [[UrExample was defined]]. Climbing around buildings and jumping from ledge to ledge with no safety restraint was a big part of his SilentFilms in the twenties. {{Ninja}} building climbing stunts in early martial-arts films are also {{Ur Example}}s.
126* There are a number of movies where Creator/WillSmith plays the main character, that have him showing off his Parkour skills -- as an introduction to his character to show off just how much of a badass he should be thought to be. See: ''Film/IRobot'' and ''Film/MenInBlack'', in particular.
127
128!!Individual films:
129* ''Film/AssassinsCreed2016'': As in the games, Assassins run, jump and climb over quickly traverse city rooftops and evade pursuing crusaders.
130* ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'': Alita often uses flashy moves during battles and to get around using any part of the enviroment that comes in hand. Of course, having an advanced cybernetic body is a major help for all those jumps and cat leaps.
131* ''Film/BabylonAD'' Darquandier's men show these skills when tracking the protagonists through a Russian train station and refugee camp.
132* ''Film/BloodAndChocolate2007'', a seamless blend of werewolves and Shakespeare-style romance set in Bucharest, features a female protagonist and her wolf pack who uses Parkour to evade all pursuit.
133* The eponymous lead of ''Film/BooneTheBountyHunter'', played by Wrestling/JohnMorrison, utilizes a lot of parkour in his pursuit of bail-jumpers. His more acrobatic stunts are partially justified by that he's playing it up for his reality show.
134* In ''Film/BreakingAndEntering2006'', the teenage burglars Miro and Zoran are talented traceurs. When the police chase them across the roof of Miro's housing development, they escape [[spoiler:for the time being]] by jumping down about twenty feet from one roof to another without getting injured.
135* In ''Film/{{Colombiana}}'', Cataleya (even as a little girl!) and a random mook chasing her use this.
136* In ''Film/TheCrow1994'', Eric Draven uses Parkour-like movements to cross the city rooftops.
137* The French movie ''Film/District13'' makes liberal use of Le Parkour. David Belle, a co-founder of Parkour, features in the co-main role.
138** ''Film/BrickMansions'' is the US remake, with David Belle again in his same role, with the other lead played by the late Creator/PaulWalker. Walker doesn't do any Parkour in the film, there's a clear division of labor with Belle in the running role and Walker in the shooting and driving one.
139* In ''Film/{{Enchanted}}'', Prince Edward has no problem navigating either the forest or Manhattan this way.
140* Seen in ''Film/ExitThroughTheGiftShop'', when an apparent graffiti artist in France escapes from two policemen by quickly scampering to the roof of a building.
141* ''Film/{{Freerunner}}'' features a group of eight parkour practitioners who routinely participate in a race across the city before it gets turned into a DeadlyGame.
142* Bruce Banner shows off a little Parkour while running from General Ross in the ''Film/{{The Incredible Hulk|2008}}'' movie. A Parkour expert choreographed the Hulk's movements.
143* ''Film/JamesBond''
144** ''Film/CasinoRoyale2006'' features a Parkour chase through a construction site. A bomb-maker runs from Bond using Le Parkour techniques, whereas Bond goes for a [[ThereWasADoor more straightforward approach]] of crashing through walls. [[CastTheExpert They cast the co-founder of the movement]] (Sebastian Foucan, who originated the "free-running" branch of the discipline) as the bomb maker just so they could do that sequence with maximum awesome.
145** ''Film/QuantumOfSolace'' also has a Parkour chase with Bond chasing a man over the rooftops of Siena.
146* Spoofed in ''Film/JohnnyEnglishReborn'' when English is chasing an assassin with these skills; English runs him down by doing mundane things like squeezing between air-conditioner units instead of running over them, using a crane instead of jumping between buildings, and taking the elevator instead of climbing down the scaffolding. Some would argue that he's simply taking the pragmatic approach, which may or may not tie into the true spirit of the discipline (i.e. getting from A to B the most efficient way possible).
147* ''Film/{{Juice}}'': Bishop and Q successfully evade the cops doing this, leaving said cops dumbfounded.
148* In ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'', Eggsy won the local gymnastics championships twice and was considered Olympic material, but now only uses his athletic talent to evade pursuers. [[CombatParkour He uses it to great effect in the final battle against Valentine's men and Gazelle]].
149* ''Film/LiveFreeOrDieHard'' has Gabriel's henchblond, played by Cyril Raffaelli, employ Parkour and [[DanceBattler bouncy dexterity]] throughout the movie. Rafaelli was also in ''Film/District13'', in which he co-starred opposite a co-founder of the discipline.
150* In ''Film/LupinIII2014'', Pierre demonstrates his Parkour ability during the opening heist, sliding and flipping through a LaserHallway, and hopping around the walls and columns to avoid setting off a weight-sensitive alarm.
151* In what must be one of the earliest cinematic examples, the 1920 film ''Film/TheManFromKangaroo'' contains a scene where John Harland chases after a mugger, and the two of them hurdle fences, climb up sheer walls, climb up lampposts and pipes, drop off a bridge, etc.
152* In ''Film/NewTownKillers'', Sean's skill at free-running helps him to stay ahead of Alistair and Jamie who are HuntingTheMostDangerousGame with him as the prey by going over and across thee historic architecture of Edinburgh.
153* Parkour on film is definitely OlderThanTheyThink, with instances and influences traceable to at least the 1930s with the crowning backstage sequence in ''Film/ANightAtTheOpera''.
154* All the mall thieves of ''Film/PaulBlartMallCop'' can do some Parkour tricks along with using bikes and skateboards to get around.
155* In ''Film/PoolOfLondon'', Vernon is an acrobat who scales a bombed out building and then leaps across the street on to the domed roof of the building opposite in order to break into it.
156* The 2010 movie ''Film/PrinceOfPersiaTheSandsOfTime'' has Dastan doing Parkour, of course.
157* A trio of "traceurs" serve as couriers for mobster Billy Russoti in ''Film/PunisherWarZone''. One of them learns the hard way that the discipline doesn't cover how to dodge rockets in mid-air. According to the DVDCommentary, this was meant as a TakeThat aimed at just about every movie on this list.
158* ''Film/ResidentEvilFilmSeries'':
159** Alice uses this at times.
160** In ''Film/ResidentEvilAfterlife'', Claire runs up a wall (in a wet bathroom!) to evade the Executioner.
161* The trailer for ''Film/TheSpirit'' shows him doing this over rooftops. Of course, he was also good at this in the comics.
162* The UsefulNotes/{{Bollywood}} movie ''Film/{{Tashan}}'' features parkour in a couple of action scenes, courtesy of star Creator/AkshayKumar's fascination with the pastime.
163* Featured in ''Film/TheTournament'' focusing on a group of assassins, competing in an underground fighting tournament put together by TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness. One of the characters, "The Frenchman" used Parkour to good effect.
164* In ''Film/TransformersDarkOfTheMoon'', Sam Witwicky does some Parkour moves as he's running through a debris-and-wreck-laden street near the climax of the movie. When being interviewed after filming the first movie, Creator/ShiaLaBeouf revealed that he spend many months up to the shooting building up his muscles only to find out the hard way that agility was more important for the role.
165* During ''Film/TronLegacy'', Sam briefly does a few vaults over police cars near the start of the film. Attention isn't called to it, and it could easily be missed by someone who doesn't know what to look for. Parkour features much more heavily in ''VideoGame/TronEvolution'', and may appear in ''WesternAnimation/TronUprising''.
166* ''The Literature/{{Twilight}} Saga: New Moon'': When Jacob climbs through Bella's window.
167* ''Film/UndercoverBrother''. While fighting Mr. Feather, Undercover Brother briefly jumps up on and runs along a wall to escape being sliced by Feather's BladeBelowTheShoulder.
168* ''Film/{{Watchmen}}''. Rorschach shows some skills in this area when infiltrating the Rockefeller Military Research Centre.
169* Briefly seen, in an effects-exaggerated way, in the late-1980s feature-length adaptation of Mike Jittlov's ''Film/TheWizardOfSpeedAndTime''.
170* In ''Film/TheWolverine'' Logan uses a very messy variation, which is still very effective. One of the shirtless Yashida Yakuza uses this, as well as Harada and his Ninja, although it veers into Freerunning here and there. They're Ninja after all.
171* The French film ''Film/{{Yamakasi}}'' revolves around a group of ''traceurs'' stealing from rich people's houses, in an attempt to pay for a young imitator's surgical operation. The film itself is a big showcase of Le Parkour -- it starts straight out with the eponymous troupe climbing the Aubervilliers town hall with absolutely nothing but their feet and hands.
172[[/folder]]
173
174[[folder:Gamebooks]]
175* Toward the end of the first ''Literature/LoneWolf'' book, ''Flight from the Dark'', you can use the "Roofways" to reach the king's citadel while avoiding the crowded streets. It is mentioned the citizens of Holmgrad were familiar with this way of travel before a royal decree forbade it because of too many accidents. Indeed, an unlucky roll can result in [[TheManyDeathsOfYou yet another untimely death for Lone Wolf]].
176[[/folder]]
177
178[[folder:Jokes]]
179* [[http://weknowmemes.com/2012/01/parkour-the-martial-art-of-running-away/ This meme]] pokes fun at the fact that [[CheeseEatingSurrenderMonkeys the French]] of all people came up with the world's most elaborate technique for running away.
180[[/folder]]
181
182[[folder:Literature]]
183* In ''Literature/ChasingShadows'', all three kids are parkouring experts, and Holly and Savitri use the skill to their advantage in trailing Wiry.
184* In the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'', students of the Guild of Assassins' school are taught this skill as a means of quickly and silently moving between points using unorthodox and unexpected routes. Combined with ''edificeering'', best thought of as a sort of urban mountaineering, this is a major part of the student Assassin's Final Exam, and invariably incorporates an Emergency Drop - a moment where the ''parkour'' is engineered to go catastrophically wrong and the student has to rescue the situation quickly or die horribly.
185* In the ''Literature/DresdenFiles'' book ''Literature/SkinGame'', Harry Dresden takes up the sport. His friends are somewhat embarrassed by his habit of repeatedly shouting "Parkour!" as he runs and jumps.
186* ''Literature/SlugDaysStories'': In ''Penguin Days'', Lauren's nine-year-old cousin Kevin does parkour. He practices by running up a tree and jumping off it.
187* In ''Literature/SpookCountry'' by Creator/WilliamGibson, Tito, a member of a Cuban-American crime family, practices “la systema”, which is apparently rooted in the pragmatic martial art of that name from Russia, and enriched by the presence of Afro-Cuban orishas — and some acrobatic movement. He knows some "free-runners" in Washington Square Park; they are university students and just in it for fun, and he picks up some of their moves, but seems to think of them as less than serious. This makes Tito a recruit for "the Old Man's" plot to contaminate an illegal container (of truck size) by shooting it with radioactive bullets. To disguise the entry holes, Tito runs along a slack-rope, covering the holes with magnetic discs.
188[[/folder]]
189
190[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
191* ''Series/AgentCarter''. Agent Sousa has a YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe expression when an [[ActionGirl agent of the Black Widow program]] escapes down a stairwell by leaping down the balcony rails. It is 1947 after all.
192-->'''Sousa:''' She's...she's coming down the stairs and she's coming fast!
193* ''Series/AlexRider2020'': The first of Alex's particular set of skills, showcased as he sneaks back into school to retrieve Tom's confiscated phone. Next up is lockpicking, as he opens the desk drawer. He also makes use of it in Season 2 to retrieve some of Ed Pleasance's notes, impressing his daughter Sabina in the process.
194* ''Series/{{Arrow}}'' gets around via Parkour in the first season. Later he relies more on trick arrows.
195* A criminal uses it to evade Booth in an episode of ''Series/{{Bones}}''. [[spoiler:Then when he tries it again at the end of the episode, Booth is waiting for him, and just smacks him in the face. "Not hoppin' around now, are ya?"]]
196* In the ''Series/BroadCity'' episode "The Lockout," Abbi has red eyes from being maced, but tells Trey it was a parkour injury. He makes her go outside and practice while he watches, ruining her opportunity to shower in the locker room.
197* Bryce Larkin uses this in the pilot episode of ''Series/{{Chuck}}''. Chuck picks up some Parkour skills in the intersect 2.0.
198* In an episode of ''Series/CovertAffairs'', Ben Mercer and Jai engage in a short chase through a shipyard that has them both employing some parkour type moves including Ben doing recognizable vaults.
199* Figured in ''Series/{{CSINY}}'s'' season 1 episode "Tri-Borough" where the team investigates the death of a traceur.
200* ''Series/Daredevil2015'' is occasionally shown maneuvering through the city via parkour. Given he doesn't have a motorcycle or fancy car (because he's blind and people might find that odd), we have to assume this is the only way he has of getting around when he's wearing the mask.
201* An episode of ABC's ''Series/TheForgotten'' focuses on this with the VictimOfTheWeek being a murdered traceur.
202* ''Series/GameOfThrones'' uses elements of this in Bran Stark's climbing in the first episode.
203* ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' has Selina Kyle using this to not only get around Gotham City but to skirt the police when needed.
204* ''Series/HoudiniAndDoyle'' has Houdini use this to shoot down a police officer's claim that no human could've broken into the walled property where one of the "Springheel Jack" attacks took place.
205* An episode of ''Series/{{House}}'' opens with police chasing an unnamed fellow who navigates the alleyways using this technique. One of the cops pursuing him discovers Parkour isn't as easy as the suspect on the run makes it look.
206* Parker of ''Series/TheKicks'' is an expert at parkour. In "The Best Defense Is A Good Offense", she easily climbs a tall trophy case without any help. Her skills also come in handy as a goalkeeper.
207* The mysterious [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIrCQjz83TQ "Super Hoodie"]] from ''Series/{{Misfits}}''.
208* ''Series/NinjaWarrior'': PromotedFanboy Levi Meeuwenberg is a professional free-runner, whose skills have made him one of the most successful non-Japanese participants in the history of the program.
209* Callen is seen chasing a slippery traceur in the cold opening of a ''Series/NCISLosAngeles'' episode. Then he wakes up, and it's revealed this a recurring dream of his.
210* Mocked on ''Series/TheOfficeUS'' when Dwight, Andy, and Michael have just discovered the existence of Parkour, which Jim describes as a fad from several years ago. The trio excitedly jump around the office shouting "Parkour!" and generally just knock things over.
211-->'''Jim:''' The goal is to get from point A to point B as creatively as possible... so technically they ''are'' doing Parkour, as long as point A is delusion and point B is the hospital.
212* Has also appeared in the opening of an episode of ''Series/Rush2008'' and several recent episodes of ''Series/TheBill''. Needless to say, they were being chased by the police at the time. Not only that, the villain of the first episode is actually an instructor of Parkour in Melbourne. Part of the Australian Parkour Association.
213* ''Series/TeenWolf'': Just about all the wolves use this, but Derek most commonly.
214* Featured in one episode of ''Series/TopGear'', where James May races a couple of traceurs (May's in a car, obviously) across a city. [[spoiler:The traceurs win comfortably]]. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uNBPQe4dFxk Video here.]]
215* ''Series/{{Treadstone}}'', being set in the same universe as Film/TheBourneSeries, naturally has a lot of scenes of characters running and leaping through urban environments.
216* Subverted in one episode of ''Series/TheUnit'', where Sam [=McBride=], [[spoiler:on the run after attempting to rape Bridget]] runs across a row of parked cars. One of them pulls out just before he reaches, causing him to fall and break his ankle.
217* Numerous parkour clips are featured on ''Series/WorldsDumbest'', usually with gravity screwing things up for the practitioners.
218* ''Series/XenaWarriorPrincess'' uses Parkour acrobatics frequently.
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
222* Wrestling/KenShamrock would run on the wall of his "[[GimmickMatches lion's den]]" cage to get into more favorable positions.
223* Wrestling/JohnMorrison and Wrestling/KofiKingston do this at times. Like when Kofi ran up a closed ladder at Wrestlemania 25.
224** Morrison did a Parkour training segment prior to a Falls Count Anywhere match with Sheamus. The match itself also made great use of Morrison's Parkour abilities, as he constantly stymied Sheamus by using the environment to his advantage. Sadly, Morrison did not yell "[[WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment PARKOUR]]!!" each time he one-upped Sheamus in this manner.
225** Taken to CMOA levels during the 2011 ''Royal Rumble'', where Morrison was knocked out of the ring, managed to cling to the security barrier, climb up it, leap to the ring steps, and get back to the ring without touching the floor.
226** Then there's Morrison ''climbing'' up the inside of the Elimination Chamber just so he could land ''on top of Sheamus''. Then later he climbs up on the sides of the chamber just to kick Punk in the face.
227** Kofi one-ups Morrison in the 2012 ''Royal Rumble''. Miz has just thrown him over the top rope and Kofi's on his hands. So Miz just pushes him... only for Kofi to actually do a handstand and ''walk backwards'' until his feet touch the steel steps.
228[[/folder]]
229
230[[folder:Music]]
231* The music video for Music/{{Madonna}}'s "Jump" features two men performing this, but the Parkour is arguably overshadowed by Madonna's sort-of-creepy cosplaying of Mello from ''Manga/DeathNote''.
232* Music/ThreeDoorsDown's "It's Not My Time" video features this, and quite prominently at that.
233* Music/{{Kesha}}'s "Take It Off" video.
234* The remix of Music/DavidGuetta's song Love Don't Let Me Go" by The Egg features a group of twentysomethings practicing parkour in the former London projects of Heygate Estate.
235* Mentioned in Music/TheyMightBeGiants' "I Like Fun":
236-->My excellence at parkour\
237Is not to be discounted\
238As I leap away and disappear\
239My excellence at parkour might be unexpected\
240At the age of 58
241[[/folder]]
242
243[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
244* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' 3.5:
245** Any character with high scores in the Jump, Tumble and Climb skills can do some impressive stunts, especially at epic levels.
246** The supplement ''Cityscape'' introduces the tactical feats "roofwalker" and "roof-jumper", which are clearly inspired by Parkour.
247* Freerunning is the "acrobatics" equivalent skill in ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase''; justified as it's apparently quite useful when the majority of transhumanity is crammed into habitats, and since many of those habs are on Mars or spun to Martian gravity some rather impressive stunts are possible.
248* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'' has the parkour ability in the 4th edition. Which when added to martial arts makes it more along the lines of Combat Parkour.
249* ''TabletopGame/{{Ironclaw}}'' has a "Parkour" Gift that enables running up, down, or along walls.
250* ''TabletopGame/MutantsAndMasterminds'' has a power called "Sure Footed" which reduces speed penalties from obstacles and other uneven terrain. Take enough ranks in it, and any gauntlet of traps, tripping hazards, handrails, obstacles, buildings, etc. etc., is as easily run through as a wide open field. Sound familiar?
251* ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness'' has Parkour as a five-dot general "Athletic Style" Merit, not unlike the Fighting Style Merits, with each dot centering around a new technique or degree of mastery. ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheForsaken'' likewise has the [[PrestigeClass Lodge]] of Spires that gains a discount to buying up dots in Parkour due to a mindset that treats the city as just another hunting ground to be mastered.
252[[/folder]]
253
254[[folder:Video Games]]
255* A bizarre variation occurs in ''[[Creator/ZapDramatic Ambition]]'': after [[spoiler: Ted escapes police custody]], he starts bouncing off the walls as he runs.
256* ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed''
257** Le Parkour-like moves appear in the action game ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedI'' and are practically the game's main selling point. Which is sensible, given that it's from the team responsible for the ''Prince of Persia'' examples above. While it's called free-running (thus not making the distinction on this page's main article), in general the player characters practice ''Parkour'' whenever they need to get around quickly, and the game's racing/courier missions tend to enforce efficiency as the focus. Strangely enough though, somehow every Thief, Agile guard, Robber and Borgia Courier seems to practice ''Parkour'', and Francesco de' Pazzi demonstrates amazing proficiency for a presumably non-athletic man, much less a non-Assassin. (It's implied that for the player characters, their physical aptitude is a "family thing.")
258** The third game introduces the ability to do this with trees instead of just buildings. However, your first controllable character, Haytham Kenway, can't do it, despite being trained as an Assassin. Only his son Connor can, since he couples the Assassin training with his skills gained growing up in a Mohawk tribe. However, at least one other character is shown to be able to do this, namely Myriam the Huntress. Later, she gets pre-wedding jitters and runs away by effortlessly navigating tree branches... in her ''wedding dress''.
259*** Haytham appears to have acquired this skill during his years in New England, however, as in later sequences he is able to follow Connor through the treetops without problems.
260*** Haytham's father Edward was able to do this as well, likely picking up the skill in the Caribbean.
261** The official StrategyGuide's portions on free-running and climbing are clear on the importance of efficiency, suggesting that one adopt the ''traceur'' mindset in the game world, "appraise your immediate environment quickly, identifying all potential points of interactivity," and that "the real challenge lies in picking the most efficient route to your destination." Once the player has a grip on that scaling building will become faster even than climbing the various ladders scattered about.
262* The entirety of ''VideoGame/BetonBrutal'', an indie first-person game where you're a parkour climber scaling a series of increasingly-higher platforms.
263* ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'': Jade uses this frequently, but its most apparent in two instances when escaping from Alpha bases.
264* Some of the swinging/roof-jumping sequences in the 3D ''VideoGame/BionicCommando'' sequel have this feel.
265* ''VideoGame/{{Brink}}'' is a first person shooter with what's called SMART; "Smooth Movement Across Random Terrain". It has a dedicated "Parkour" button, as well as more precise manual controls. Look up at a ledge, hit the SMART button, and you jump and climb onto it automatically. Look down and press the same button, and you slide. Approach a railing and hit the button, and you climb over it.
266* ''VideoGame/ChampionsOnline'' has makeshift Parkour "tracks" on rooftops in Millennium City.
267* Mercs in ''VideoGame/DirtyBomb'' can walljump to get to their destination faster or to climb on to ledges and other areas that can't be reached by just jumping. Notably, the three heaviest mercs are capable of doing this. The ''Springy'' augment allows them to do three consecutive wall jumps.
268* ''VideoGame/{{Dustforce}}'' is built off this, and has a clever mechanic whereby the dust you are sweeping hints at routes and what acrobatics are required to progress.
269* ''VideoGame/DyingLight'' is basically ''VideoGame/DeadIsland'''s first-person zombie bashing with an infusion of VideoGame/MirrorsEdge-style parkour. During daylight hours, this skill is indispensable at evading the clumsy, shambling hordes. During the night, it's even more so: [[OhCrap the zombies gain the ability to free-run too.]]
270* This is Monkey's primary mode of transportation in ''VideoGame/EnslavedOdysseyToTheWest''.
271* ''VideoGame/FancyPantsAdventures'' has Fancy Pants Man preforming much of this throughout each stage, thanks to BenevolentArchitecture.
272* Hermes from ''VideoGame/GodOfWarIII''. Kratos gains this skill after he kills him and steals his [[SprintShoes Boots of Hermes]].
273* ''VideoGame/TheHiddenSource'', a mod for ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'', has the IRIS paramilitary team hunting an invisible, super-strong genetically modified human, Subject 617. 617 has the ability to pounce long distances as well as cling to surfaces, allowing him to easily bypass almost any obstacle and climb surfaces as long as his strength holds out.
274* Speaking of Franchise/MarvelUniverse games, ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'' can also pull the same wall-running/climbing, sprinting and jump-charging tricks in ''VideoGame/TheIncredibleHulkUltimateDestruction'' to largely the same effects. He performs air dashes instead of web-swinging, though. And his variation of Le Parkour is more or less going through everything in his way.
275* ''VideoGame/InFamous'' is largely realistic in its use of parkour, aside from Cole never taking falling damage and eventually throwing gliding, grinding and turbo-jumping into his repertoire. There are side-missions based around getting to a series of points in order as quickly as possible, and if you want to complete them you ''will'' have to hone your ''traceur''-sense (and your reflexes).
276* ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsII'' has this to some extent with the [[ActionCommands reaction commands]], but it's then there's the "flowmotion" mechanic introduced in ''VideoGame/KingdomHearts3DDreamDropDistance'', and elevated further still with refinements to those mechanics in ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsIII''. The latter even includes a section during the final level that's purely a test of the player's parkour skills, with no combat at all as they navigate a large and complicated three-dimensional structure.
277* ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'': Talon can quickly traverse the map thanks to his third ability, ''Assassin's Path''. Using it will make him quickly jump over terrain, be it part of the map (like walls or turrets) or created by players (like Ornn's ''Volcanic Rupture'' or Taliyah's ''Weaver's Wall''). While the skill has a very short cooldown, it can't be used on the same piece of terrain for a long duration.
278* [[InTheHood The Hunter]] from ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' not only moves in this style and can even be made to do Parkour moves by the more skilled Versus player, but was given the duct tape on its arms and legs not just because [[RuleOfCool it looked cool]], but also because it was apparently [[http://accelagirl.deviantart.com/art/Left-4-Dead-Hunter-Part-2-107838271 based on Parkour style.]] (It's to eliminate the air pockets that would naturally occur in the jacket, making the person more aerodynamic, and prevents the jacket from getting caught on things.)
279* Speaking of ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'', Samus herself can be can be considered a free-runner with all the flipping she does. She also wall jumps, and does one-handed cat-leaps to get to where she needs to be. The physics of ''VideoGame/SuperMetroid'' make it possible to do some actual Parkour stuff with what you have, especially with Mock-Balling which lets you get places really fast, especially really small places.
280* ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'' has entire adventure maps centered around this, up to and including at least one ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed'' themed map. You can also try it during a normal game, though it's [[LavaPit not]] [[NotTheFallThatKillsYou recommended]].
281* The whole point of ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdge'' and ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdgeCatalyst'' is Parkour. The plot and other game elements are built entirely around it. It's also done completely in first-person. It even has the crane scene from ''Film/CasinoRoyale2006''.
282* ''VideoGame/{{N}}'' is nothing but this, since you play as a {{ninja}} whose only power is wall-jumping.
283* The Xbox ''VideoGame/NinjaGaiden'' series. It gets rather over-the-top when Ryu can chain wall-runs by jumping from wall to wall so that he can ascend a tall shaft, but hey, the titles are adherents of RuleOfCool. Also, {{Ninja}}.
284* In ''VideoGame/NinjaPizzaGirl'', due to massive urban congestion, the only way Gemma can deliver the pizza to its destination on time is by running, jumping, and sliding across building scaffolds and rooftops.
285* ''VideoGame/{{Persona 5}}'': Dungeon traversal now has you jump between chandeliers, leap out windows, launch yourself over BottomlessPits, and leap and dash between various forms of cover.
286* The ''Franchise/PrinceOfPersia'' series since ''VideoGame/PrinceOfPersiaTheSandsOfTime''.
287** In fact, Sands Of Time sparked [[FollowTheLeader a whole slew of games]] with more realistic platforming elements (as realistic as running on walls and endless wall-jumping can get, anyway) that rely heavily on parkour.
288** Even the original sidescroller sometimes had elements of this, such as a section where you need to rapidly navigate three rooms filled with traps, tricky jumps, and spikes (which you'd probably navigated in the other direction over the course of several minutes) at a dead run in the space of about ten seconds, then leap down to a door three screens below and dash through before it closes.
289* ''VideoGame/{{Prototype}}'' is the SpiritualSuccessor to the ''Hulk'' game and often involves running up whatever surface will accommodate you. While Alex can climb up on vertical surfaces ComicBook/SpiderMan-style, simply sprinting vertically upwards on the same surface is generally faster, even if he's carrying someone in one hand. He can even run sideways on vertical surfaces in complete defiance of gravity. Then there are the numerous smaller tidbits like backflipping off walls, vaulting over cars, ''dodging sideways in mid-air''... And while the soldiers react to him playing Spider-Man almost instantly, they don't even bat an eyelid while he's doing Parkour tricks, even if he's disguised. In fact, their reaction can be summed up as pointing in Alex' general direction and exclaiming "[[WhatTheHellPlayer You seeing this shit?!]]"
290* ''Videogame/ResidentEvil'''s character Leon seems to be capable of this to an impressive extent, almost always waiting for the climax of the [[Anime/ResidentEvilDegeneration Film]]/[[VideoGame/ResidentEvil6 game]] to pull off some tricks. [[http://youtu.be/NxqnvdqYHqQ?t=31s Check this out]]
291* This is the main mode of travel for ''VideoGame/SlyCooper'', along with RoofHopping.
292* Quite a lot of ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog'' characters can do this, especially [[SuperSpeed Sonic]] himself. {{Wall Jump}}ing, RoofHopping and InASingleBound are also invoked, [[CutscenePowertoTheMax but are much less capable in gameplay.]] Sonic certainly is a traceur in spirit. He wall jumps, wall-runs, runs and leaps at amazing speeds... all the while choosing the one path (among several choices per level) that may potentially get him to the finish line as quickly as possible. In some recent titles, Sonic will move forward on his own and will only stop if the player makes him, so you only have to keep him away from obstacles.
293** In ''VideoGame/SonicLostWorld'', Sonic gains some new gameplay elements that resemble Parkour, such as running alongside walls on the side and straight up walls facing him to get to ledges.
294* The ''VideoGame/SpiderMan2'' video game gives Spidey and the player plenty of moves to run around the city with. Aside from the obvious web-swinging and {{Wall Crawl}}ing, Spider-Man can run up walls, swing on poles and, with a combination of sprinting and his chargeable jump, easily leap from roof to roof without even needing to use his webs. The game actively encourages you to be creative with how you move around the city.
295* Not necessarily used by ''VideoGame/SplinterCell'''s Sam Fisher, who prefers silent approaches, but slowly added to the repertoire of the Shadownet spies throughout the series.
296* The Snorks from ''VideoGame/{{STALKER}}'' for a more mutant example.
297* ''VideoGame/SunsetOverdrive'' has this as one draw to the game. You can scale buildings and navigate rooftops with ease.
298* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
299** The titular hero was already the running and jumping master. So, when ''VideoGame/SuperMario64'' came around and they decided to expand on his repertoire of feats of agility, it was natural that a bit of parkour was thrown in with wall-kicks, slides, long-jumps and the like. In more recent games, Galaxy especially, this trope is played very straight. Mario's mastered the wall-jump, hops over lower ledges to keep momentum, flips off of poles, scales walls, etc. There's also a {{Mockumentary}} advertisement for ''VideoGame/NewSuperLuigiU'' called [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wplnqlqUD4 Finding Luigi - Legend of Parkour]].
300** ''VideoGame/MarioPartyAdvance'': The minigame Flippin' Out has a solo player moving rapidly across a dungeon by hopping between pegs in each section to reach a gold-colored peg that grants access to the next section. The other pegs are either static (green), prone to appear and disappear periodically (red), or subject to move among rails (blue), so learning to deal with each of them is vital to avoid falling into the lava. Each time the player reaches a new section, extra seconds are added to the current time limit. If that time expires or the player falls onto the lava, the minigame ends (it's endless, however, so the challenge is based on how far the player will go). In Shroom City mode, the player simply has to clear a section by reaching its gold-colored peg.
301* ''VideoGame/TorinsPassage'': Dorky as he is, the titular protagonist Torin has some pretty amazing acrobatic skills. He can swing, leap and shimmy his way past just about anything. Emphasized on the central tree in the Lands Above.
302* In ''VideoGame/UrbanDead'', the Free Running skill lets you enter normally inaccessible buildings, and move from building to building without having to go outside.
303* ''VideoGame/{{Vector}}'' is built entirely around using parkour to move through a futuristic city and evade an armed pursuer, with special moves that are accurate reproductions of actual free-running tricks.
304* The Tenno from ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'' can all use parkour to slip past obstacles and find alternate routes in the event that raw firepower doesn't carry them to victory right away. Gratifyingly, "Rescue targets" in {{Escort Mission}}s all have basic parkour training as well, so there's not much risk of leaving them behind on accident.
305* Marcus, the protagonist of ''VideoGame/WatchDogs2'' is quite the traceur in addition to being a world-class hacker.
306* ''VideoGame/Yakuza0'': In his EstablishingCharacterMoment, Chinese assassin Lao Gui does this after shooting at [[spoiler:Kiryu and Tachibana]] from a rooftop, using a series of stylish walljumps to quickly reach street level to pursue his targets.
307[[/folder]]
308
309[[folder:Web Comics]]
310* Elliot of ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'' apparently knows a few parkour techniques. For example, he was once seen [[http://www.egscomics.com/index.php?id=1731 performing a wall run]] to get around a crowd of people and return a dropped cell phone to its owner.
311* Robot S13 of ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' does this in his temporary body in Ch 25. The author's comments {{lampshade}} S13's outfit's resemblance to the Hunter from ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' (see Videogames, above), though this was [[http://twitter.com/gunnerkrigg/status/5362290445 unintentional]].
312* Max of ''Webcomic/{{Paranatural}}'' has shown prowess in this art, having grown a passion for it by watching a TV show, and skill by training with his friends.
313* Kareem and Ciro's movements in ''Webcomic/{{Project 0}}'' are based off of Parkour moves. Ciros' [[AllThereInTheManual character bio even describes]] him as a traceur.
314* In ''Webcomic/SandraOnTheRocks'', when Aaina mentions using parkour in passing, and subsequently demonstrates ''formidable'' skill, it's one of the first hints that the lady has significant HiddenDepths.
315* ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' features a martial art called "Parkata Urbatsu", which is described as a descendant of Parkour, free-running, and "Youtubing". It appears in "Mallcop Command". However, since it's on a space station, you have to take into account the fact that the station is rotating whenever you jump. Inevitably, to catch their targets [[spoiler:(who turn out to be pro Parkata Urbatsu enthusiasts illegally filming their stunts)]], the mercenaries have to master it via a crash course by Commander Shodan. With emphasis on the ''crash'' part. Schlock got really good at it, and now he sometimes uses it just for general moving around. Shodan actually asked one of the Mallcop Command perps to help him "un-teach Schlock Parkata Urbatsu" (she declares Schlock an artist and refuses).
316-->'''Trevor:''' Kathryn once said she trained Schlock in Parkata Urbatsu. [[HoodHopping The advanced katas include using vehicles as stepping-stones]].\
317'''Elf:''' And?\
318'''Trevor:''' Kathryn is a pretty good teacher, but I think Schlock just performed a doctoral dissertation.
319* In ''Webcomic/SnowByNight'', Blaise [[http://www.snowbynight.com/pages/ch1/pg19.html does this]] to evade three disgruntled rooks. His pursuers are rather taken aback.
320* Avril's preferred method of travel in ''Webcomic/SoulToCall''.
321* Wren of ''Webcomic/WhiteNoise'' uses a Parkour Tic-Tac to leap from one wall to the top of another, amongst other Parkour movements.
322* Rhiys of ''Webcomic/WooHoo''! demonstrates Parkour skills throughout the comic and is identified by others as "Vegan Parkour Guy".
323* In ''Webcomic/TheZombieHunters'', at least one "hunter" zombie is depicted in this way. The author described them as "urban ninjas" but without human inhibitions, like pain, tiredness, or fear of death.
324[[/folder]]
325
326[[folder:Web Original]]
327* In ''WebVideo/FiveSecondFilms''' "Quick Moves", a guy and his girlfriend are held up by a robber. He then reveals to his relieved girlfriend that he knows parkour, [[{{Jerkass}} and then uses it to get away himself]].
328* Jace from ''WebVideo/DeagleNation'' is obsessed with parkour, despite having little knowledge of what it actually is.
329* In ''Literature/EnginesofCreation'', the character of Boomer is quite adept at Parkour.
330* Parodied with ''[[https://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=E473145B00A4DB5D Pourquoi]]''.
331* ''WebVideo/SMPLive'': There's a bamboo parkour course set up inside the arena. Connor struggles with it, to Schlatt and Michael's amusement.
332* ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest''
333** Guy Rapide and Montezzo Valtieri of version three are described as having been avid Parkour practitioners, Guy as a sport while Montezzo does it to work on his speed.
334** Many v4 characters, for some reason, also tend to have an interest in Parkour. It's reached the point where it's starting to become a profile cliché right alongside knowing martial arts and having fired a gun before.
335* ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'': the Parkour Hooligans is a semi-official club on campus, founded by BadassNormal range instructor Erik Mahren. The story "Parkour Jam Hooligans", covers their trip to an actual ''public'' Parkour event in a Boston. Interestingly, they baselines at the Parkour Jam had no problem with them, even though they knew that they were mutants. The city's LawfulStupid superhero, Lamplighter, was a different story.
336* Mentioned a couple of times in Creator/JossWhedon's [[SarcasmMode heartfelt 2012 endorsement]] of Mitt Romney [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6TiXUF9xbTo here]].
337* In ''WebAnimation/XRayAndVav'', X-Ray claims that he's a parkour master. He's not.
338[[/folder]]
339
340[[folder:Western Animation]]
341* One of the trademark talents of the hero of ''WesternAnimation/AeonFlux'', although her movements are more step-by-step than the free-flowing use of momentum that Parkour encourages.
342* Subverted in ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' episode "The Countdown". With seconds to get to school, Darwin hoofs it while Gumball insists on using Parkour ("It's the fastest way to get from A to B."). He's not athletic so it actually slows him down.
343* Done in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' where Stan and Francine start hanging out with a younger, more active couple and pretend to be young themselves to maintain the friendship. There's a pretty neat scene where they go free-running; Francine does quite well for a first-timer, while Stan (despite his CIA training) messes up, gets his head caught in a banister, and ends up landing so hard on his leg that it makes his shin bone protrude through his skin. [[{{Squick}} Ouch]]. PlayedForLaughs later in the episode when Stan and Francine's attempt to make their friends slow down [[GoneHorriblyWrong goes horribly wrong]]. After a fight, the wife throws her ring into the husband's face and free-runs away, screaming angrily.
344* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arcane}}'': All the street rat kids in Zaun are shown to be able to make it across the urban jungle by leaping roof to roof with Vi boasting that her sister could do it as young as seven. [[FairCop Caitlyn]], less so.
345* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender''
346** Aang commonly rides on a spherical column of air to accomplish it, though he is capable of executing it with his own swiftness and agility.
347** Azula is quite agile on her own and [[spoiler:with the help of some of her minions from the Dai Li, she was able to elevate it to the level of SheFu.]] A little while later, [[spoiler:she invents a way to use firebending to ''launch herself around like rocket''.]]
348** "The Boiling Rock" shows us that [[spoiler:Suki is the Parkour champion of the Avatarverse when she runs across the heads of a bunch of people in a crowd, and climbs up several walls in just a couple seconds.]]
349** Zuko's used it a couple of times, notably in "The Firebending Masters" when he ran along a wall to avoid a spike pit.
350** Also, in one episode during the Ba Sing Se arc, Team Avatar make a straight run toward the Earth King's Palace, using [[ElementalPowers bending]] to clear some obstacles, namely the [[{{Mooks}} palace guards]].
351* In ''WesternAnimation/BarbieAFashionFairytale'', this is one of the hobbies that Franchise/{{Barbie}}'s aunt Millicent considers taking up after her fashion house closes.
352* Blake ''WesternAnimation/GetBlake'' is skilled in Parkour as he uses it to get away from the Squalliens chasing him.
353* ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'', used occasionally by friends and foes alike.
354* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' takes place in a "{{steampunk}} metropolis" and uses a lot of parkour-style fighting and chase scenes. This helps represent the way the Avatar world's societies have begun moving away from more traditional, form-based bending styles as society industrializes. And as with the martial arts in both ''Korra'' and [[WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender its predecessor]], they've [[ShownTheirWork hired a parkour expert to assist them]].
355** However, the more traditional martial-arts based forms of bending are still practiced, especially by [[TheMentor Tenzin]], the last real practitioner of Air Nomad culture on the planet until his three (soon to be four) children grow up. This helps set up the "tradition versus progress" conflict that forms part of the story's core.
356* Being a superhero series set in Paris, ''WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug'' naturally features a lot of this. Chat Noir is particularly fond of one parkour vault known as the ''pas de chat'', or "cat pass", probably just for the sake of the pun.
357* Referenced in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' of all shows, where the ColdOpen of one episode has Angel Bunny practicing for the "Ponyville Parkour Contest" before injuring his foot.
358* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'': In "Happy New Year", Candace runs from a New Year's party back to her house to attempt to bust Phineas and Ferb one last time before the year ends, and ends up doing some impressive parkour maneuvers.
359-->'''Candace''': Huh. That parkour training must've really paid off.
360* ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' has ''finally'' added this to Spider-Man's repertoire, making his RoofHopping and {{Wall Crawl}}ing action sequences a lot more interesting. Meaning Parker can now [[{{Pun}} Parkour]]?
361* Heavily parodied in the Bounty Hunter episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. Flanders chases Homer across Springfield, leaping over obstacles. Homer gets into an elevator and bounces off the walls as he waits to arrive at the top. Then the two steal horses, which proceed to practice Parkour themselves, jumping off cars and springing off walls.
362* Lance does this in the second episode of ''WesternAnimation/SymBionicTitan'' to catch up with Ilana, believing that she needs someone to protect while she ''goes to the mall''. He actually does building hop, car hop, etc.
363* The various ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'' animated series has just about everybody pulling this every time they go up on a rooftop.
364* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wakfu}}'''s season 2 features some good examples with Evangelyne and Remington chasing each other over Rubilaxia, a magical TravelingLandmass covered in damaged buildings that keep soaring or crumbling without warning.
365[[/folder]]
366
367[[folder:Real Life]]
368* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEeqHj3Nj2c Some examples for your entertainment]].
369** And for the crueler of us (Or for those who need to see why you need to be careful doing this), [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hcp_2HB5MCE The top 10 Parkour fails]].
370* OlderThanTheyThink? [[http://www.thearma.org/essays/fit/RennFit.htm This article]] talks about how knights would practice "wall running", which means running and leaping through various obstacles at the same time.
371* Daniel Ilabaca. Has been called [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U508ayKY87M the most complete Parkour athlete.]]
372* {{Banned|InChina}} in parts of great Britain because it may be a cause of concern and duress to people who see it in action, as well as for the more mundane reasons that a) it's technically trespassing if you're doing it in most urban areas, and b) people can and frequently do injure themselves while doing it, and retrieving maimed ''traceurs'' from improbable places several storeys off the ground gets old quite quickly.
373* Cats don't seem to care about the law of gravity that much.
374* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXElh_VM0Uc Parkour Dog from Ukraine]] will give them a run for their yarn.
375* [[ScrewballSquirrel Squirrels]] are also naturals at Parkour, which makes sense for tree-dwelling rodents. If anything, they put most species to shame at it since they can wall-run indefinitely on rough enough surfaces.
376* Goats, whose wild ancestors lived on rugged mountainsides, can clamber up canyon walls, climb trees, and jump up to perch atop slat fences with an agility that's almost unbelievable, particularly in an animal with hooves.
377* ''Draco volans'', the Flying Dragon, is a lizard that can climb up surfaces, then glide across gaps by unfolding skin flaps, like a flying squirrel. Geckos are also decent at wall- and ceiling-running, but don't do much jumping.
378[[/folder]]

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