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9[[quoteright:350:[[Toys/LEGOLifeOnMars https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lom_martians.png]]]]
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12The possibility of life on the planet UsefulNotes/{{Mars}} has fascinated scientists and sci-fi fans since at least the 19th century, though the word "Martian" wouldn't be popularized until the publishing of ''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds1898'', which highly influenced the depiction of Martians in popular culture.
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14In Western media, they are commonly depicted as either TheGreys or LittleGreenMen. In Japan, Martians (called "Kaseijin") are depicted as OctopoidAliens, based on how they appear in ''War of the Worlds''. In most works, Martians possess highly advanced technology, including spaceships (especially [[FlyingSaucer flying saucers]]) and {{Ray Gun}}s, and often use this technology for sinister purposes -- either to TakeOverTheWorld, or [[AlienAbduction abduct and experiment on unsuspecting people]].
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16In RealLife, there is no hard evidence of life on Mars, past or present. There is mounting evidence that life as we know it may have been possible sometime in Mars' past, though as far as anyone can honestly tell, it may have only harbored unicellular life at most.
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18Compare to the aforementioned TheGreys and LittleGreenMen. Related to MarsNeedsWater, MarsNeedsWomen, MarsWantsChocolate, and OnceGreenMars. Not to be confused with ''Film/TheMartian''. Sub-trope of SolarSystemNeighbors.
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20----
21!!Examples:
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23[[foldercontrol]]
24
25[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
26* ''Franchise/SailorMoon'': During the Silver Millenium, Sailor Mars was the princess of Mars and a [[HumanAliens humanoid alien]].
27[[/folder]]
28
29[[folder:Card Games]]
30* The trading card series ''Mars Attacks'' depicts the Martians as MyBrainIsBig-style aliens. Each card depicts another scenario in the Martians' conquest of Earth. The card series was the basis for the 1996 film ''Film/MarsAttacks''.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Comic Books]]
34* In ''ComicBook/BlackHammer'', Martians are tall, red-skinned humanoids who possess innate superpowers, including -- but not limited to -- {{flight}} and VoluntaryShapeshifting. Mark Markz, the superhero known as Barbalien, is a Martian and an {{Expy}} of DC's ComicBook/MartianManhunter.
35* ''Franchise/TheDCU'':
36** ComicBook/MartianManhunter (a.k.a. J'onn J'onzz) and his niece Miss Martian (a.k.a. M'gann M'orzz). While J'onn belongs to the Green Martian race, M'gann is of the White Martian race but presents herself as a green one due to it being more comfortable for her. There also exist a race of Yellow Martians.
37** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1942'': Aphrodite's nemesis [[Characters/WonderWomanAres Mars]] rules the ethereal native Martians who fight Wonder Woman and her allies on Earth, Mars, Venus and the [[{{Lunarians}} moon]]. They most commonly act as invisible corrupters of those actually partaking in cruel actions, but can possess bodies to attack directly.
38* ''ComicBook/LeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'': Mars is inhabited by [[Literature/JohnCarterOfMars Barsoomians]], [[Literature/TheSpaceTrilogy Sorns]], and [[Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds1898 cephalopods]], all of whom have been at war for centuries. Eventually, aided by [[Literature/GullivarOfMars Lt. Gullivar Jones]], the Sorns and Barsoomians band together and drive the cephalopods off the planet, causing them to invade Earth, where they eventually die from exposure to terrestrial pathogens. In the 1950s, Garath Gannz, a mixed-race Martian who could pass for human, spied on Earth in the guise of superhero Marsman.
39* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'':
40** The Martians of H.G. Wells's ''War of the Worlds'' are perfectly real, at least in the alternate reality of ComicBook/{{Killraven}}. Whether they also exist in the main Marvel Universe is a case of DependingOnTheWriter.
41** Other Martians have shown up in minor roles, such as the [[{{Kaiju}} giant monster]] [[Characters/MarvelComicsMonsters Zetora]] and the "Takers" from the ''ComicBook/Marvel2099'' universe.
42* The Martians in ''ComicBook/TrishTrashRollergirlOfMars'' are depicted is a four-armed race of insectoid humans. The second set of arms is lost whenever they shed their skin, and the resulting carapace can apparently be used to make a variety of items. Qiqi makes Trish and her team a bunch of roller skates from her various shed skins, and they use them to quickly become a team with a shot at the championship. [[spoiler:They encounter more Martians in the cache they go into to hide from the Arex Corporation.]]
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Fan Works]]
46* Mars used to be inhabitated in ''Fanfic/TheNewAgeOfMonsters''. However, it's inhabitants were eradicated hundreds of thousands of years ago [[spoiler:by King Gidorah.]]
47* ''Fanfic/RocketshipVoyager'': The Martians serve as a substitute for Vulcans, albeit with a [[Literature/TheMartianChronicles certain Ray Bradbury influence]].
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
51* In ''WesternAnimation/MarsNeedsMoms'', adapted from the below-mentioned picture book of the same name, the Martians are depicted as RubberForeheadAliens.
52* "WesternAnimation/RocketByeBaby" details the humorous consequences when a green Martian baby and an Earthling get accidentally switched at birth. It turns out that [[spoiler:ItWasAllJustADream on the baby's father's part... [[OrWasItADream probably]]]].
53* ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerryBlastOffToMars'' features Martians as typical LittleGreenMen.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
57[[AC:Examples by source material:]]
58* Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs' "Barsoom" works (see "Literature" section) have been adapted into at least a couple of movies:
59** ''Film/JohnCarter'', the mega-budget Creator/{{Disney}} BoxOfficeBomb of 2012.
60** ''Film/PrincessOfMars'', the much smaller budget DirectToVideo 2009 triumph from Creator/TheAsylum, starring infamous former not-quite adult film star Traci Lords as the titular princess.
61[[AC:Examples by title:]]
62* ''Film/GhostsOfMars'': Humans have colonized an apparently uninhabited Mars, but a scientist accidentally releases the spores of an ancient indigenous alien civilization that take over people's bodies and minds. The film ends with a SequelHook promising a full-scale war between humans and aliens for control of Mars.
63* In ''Film/InvadersFromMars1986'', a remake of the 1953 film of the same name, the Martians are (to quote the TVT page) "huge, ugly, slimy giant Mr. Potato Heads!" In the original, they're much more humanoid.
64* The aforementioned ''Film/MarsAttacks'' features the same kind of MyBrainIsBig-type Martians as the original card game.
65* ''Film/MissionToMars'' depicts Martians as tall, feminine, peaceful humanoids who left Mars to escape the havoc caused by a massive meteorite impact.
66* ''Film/SantaClausConquersTheMartians'' portrays Martians as [[FoodPills food pill-eating]], joyless, humorless, humanoid creatures with metallic-green skin and distinctly robot-like headgear incorporated into their costume design. The dullness of their heavily mechanized lives results in their children getting addicted to joyful, cheery Earthling holiday television programming.
67* In ''Film/WarGod'', a trio of Martians decides to invade earth after our nuclear weapons test begins polluting the stratosphere, which affects the surrounding galaxies, with the aliens demanding humans to have all nuclear weapons disposed of within 48 hours or they'll destroy every major city.
68[[/folder]]
69
70[[folder:Literature]]
71[[AC:Examples by author:]]
72* Creator/RobertAHeinlein:
73** ''Literature/RedPlanet'' starts out as ABoyAndHisX story about a young Mars colonist and his pet "bouncer", a native Martian lifeform capable of mimicking human speech but less intelligent than humans. Then, it turns out bouncers grow into giant tripedal sapient Martians with immense PsychicPowers.
74** ''Literature/StrangerInAStrangeLand'' is about a human raised by Martians forced to adjust to life among his own species after growing up learning the Martians' BlueAndOrangeMorality and PsychicPowers. Strangely enough, he ends up starting his own religion.
75** Although the Martians in ''Red Planet'' and ''Stranger in a Strange Land'' are probably the most famous Heinlein-created Martians (and may, arguably, be in the same "universe"), Heinlein also created several other versions of Martians in various different works, from the frail "perambulator"-bound "pseudo-winged" Martians of ''Literature/BetweenPlanets'' to the propriety-obsessed Martians of ''Literature/DoubleStar''.
76[[AC:Examples by title:]]
77* ''Aelita, or the Decline of Mars'', written by Soviet Russian Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy, portrays Martians as humanoids who are the offspring of both an elder Martian species and of humans from Atlantis. The Martians live in a class society; the workers rise up against the ruling class, but the revolution fails. All the while, Mars is entering a phase of climate change that threatens disaster for the population.
78* In ''Literature/AlanMendelsohnTheBoyFromMars'', Martians look just like somewhat short humans who wear orange-and-green checkered sweaters and black-and-white bowling shoes. One of them blends in effortlessly at a human school and starts a riot about whether he is one or not, yet others more versed in interplanetary travel can somehow easily visually identify them. They are ruled in part by the Martian High Commissioner Rolzup, who is a highly respected diplomat across planets and dimensions.
79* ''Literature/CharlieAndTheGreatGlassElevator'' asserts that there ''used'' to be creatures on Mars, but the Vermicious Knids (evil aliens from a planet named Vermes) ate them.
80* ''A Conquest of Two Worlds'' by Creator/EdmondHamilton describes Martians as humanoid creatures with stilt-like limbs and large, bulging chests and heads. They live in tribal groups centered on oases and occasionally fight among themselves. After an accidental confrontation sparks war, they are all killed or enslaved by the invading human population.
81* ''Literature/DavidStarrSpaceRanger'' portrays Martians as having [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence ascended]] to incorporeal energy beings with advanced technology and telepathic powers.
82* ''Literature/{{Doom}}'': The "portal to Hell" found on Mars was actually created by malicious aliens bent on conquering the Solar System. They engineered the various monsters based on medieval Christian imagery of Hell specifically to use as a weapon of terror, intent on sending them through the portal when everything was ready. However, humanity reached Mars sooner than they expected and set the portal off early. From the same series, a different faction of aliens has an active base on Pluto where they keep an eye on the rest of the Solar System.
83* ''Literature/JohnCarterOfMars'': Mars, or "Barsoom" as the natives call it, is inhabited by several intelligent races. They range from the [[HumanAliens almost human]] Red Martians to the four-armed and tusked Green Martians to the more psychologically alien White, Black, and Yellow Martians.
84* In ''Mars Needs Moms'', Martians are squat, humanoid beings with antennae and skin color that varies by individual. When they travel to Earth, they wear transparent helmets and a bulbous, ribbed outer garment. In the story, a five-year-old boy learns to appreciate his mother after three Martians kidnap her while he sleeps. The story was later adapted into [[WesternAnimation/MarsNeedsMoms an animated film]].
85* ''Literature/TheMartianChronicles'' depicts Martians as a refined, artistic race of golden-skinned RubberForeheadAliens.
86* ''Literature/OutOfTheSilentPlanet'' has three sapient species on Mars: The otter-like hrossa, fifteen-foot tall séroni, and tapir-headed frog-like pfifltriggi. The human scientists attempting to invade initially mistake them for primitive "savages", but the hapless man they brought with them as a sacrifice to what they assumed was some pagan idol discovers that they are actually quite civilized, without comprehension of sin, and protected by an immaterial fourth species called the eldila [[spoiler:essentially angels, and unfallen ones unlike those on Earth.]]
87* ''Literature/{{Protector}}'': Mars had sapient life to whom water was toxic, until a [[spoiler:human]] Protector crashed a comet into the planet to prevent them ever becoming a threat to his species.
88* ''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds1898'' is about a Martian invasion of Earth. The Martians in the story are a technologically advanced race of OctopoidAliens with [[MyBrainIsBig large brains]] and no digestive tracts. Their main fighting machines are tripod walkers impervious to nearly all form of attack -- [[spoiler:they ultimately get defeated by pathogens, which they have no immune system to]].
89[[/folder]]
90
91[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
92* ''Series/CaptainScarletAndTheMysterons'' depicts Martians as invisible superbeings at war with humans.
93* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
94** The Ice Warriors are the native inhabitants of Mars, though tend to be off-world or in underground colonies due to Mars no longer being habitable for them. They initially antagonized humanity because they wanted [[HostileTerraforming to terraform their world]] into something more comfortable for them.
95** [[PlagueZombie The Flood]] from "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E16TheWatersOfMars The Waters of Mars]]" also count. [[SealedEvilInACan They were sealed away in a glacier]] by the Ice Warriors and when human astronauts accidentally wake them up, they want to hitch a ride to Earth for their water.
96* ''Series/MyFavoriteMartian'' features a [[HumanAliens human-passing]] Martian anthropologist (nicknamed Uncle Martin) who crash lands on Earth and is taken in by local newspaper reporter Tim (played by Creator/BillBixby).
97* ''Series/SesameStreet'': The "yip-yip" aliens are implied to be from Mars. In their first appearance, they're saying "Not Mars; Earth!".
98* Interestingly, Mr. Spock from ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' was originally conceived as being [[HalfHumanHybrid half-Martian]], but the writers were afraid that [[ScienceMarchesOn astronauts would land on Mars]] during the series run and prove that there are no Martians. Hence, Spock was rewritten as a member of the extrasolar Vulcan race.
99* ''Series/{{Tweenies}}'': One episode has the characters go to Mars and meet some yellow worm aliens.
100* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'': "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S2E28WillTheRealMartianPleaseStandUp Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?]]" centers around some troopers trying to figure out which of the patrons at a diner is a Martian. They fail, and when they're taken out by a bus crash the Martian set up, he reveals that he has a third arm and that more are on the way to colonize Earth. [[spoiler:In keeping with the twists that the show loves to throw at its viewers, it then turns out that the diner's cook is, in fact, from Venus, and that his race has intercepted the Martians and intend to colonize Earth too, with the cook revealing that he has a third eye under his hat.]]
101* ''Series/WizardsOfWaverlyPlace'': In "Disenchanted Evening", Max is working on a Mars project that involves a box of sand and an alien mask. When his teacher hates the project, Alex ends up zapping him (along with herself and Justin) to Mars. At the end of the episode, after they finally go back to get Max, it's revealed to the audience that the Martians Max kept talking about actually did exist.
102* ''Series/TheXFiles'': Martians are a ghostly creature capable of possesing others and flout through space. They built the "face of Mars" and are sabotaging the space program because they don't want humans to know about their existence.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:Music]]
106* Both Music/{{Eminem}} and Music/LilWayne regularly describe themselves as Martians in songs, as a metaphor for them both being [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} lunatics]] with genius-level rapping ability.
107[[/folder]]
108
109[[folder:Pinballs]]
110* ''Pinball/AttackFromMars'' and ''Pinball/RevengeFromMars'' both featured [[MyBrainIsBig oversized-wrinkled-cranium]] Green Martians.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
114* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Mars'' has four main versions of Mars, two of which have Martians: On Superscience Mars, they're giant insects with RaygunGothic technology straight out of B-movies. On Dying Mars they're mostly-nearly-human-looking warrior tribes straight out of Edgar Rice Burroughs.
115* ''TabletopGame/UrbanJungle: Astounding Science'': Martians are tall, spindly humanoids with silvery fur. They are innately skilled engineers but have no interest in ''inventing'' anything: show them a machine, and they can figure it out; ''don't'' show them a machine and they'll do without it. It's believed there are ancient machines somewhere on Mars from before they developed this philosophy, which at the very least alerts them to incoming spacecraft, but no non-Martian has ever seen them.
116* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Mars is the homeworld of the Adeptus Mechanicus Machine Cult, entirely devoted to industry and science (or rather the religion that is science). While there are no indigenous aliens there, the [=AdMech=] are so augmented that it's hard to think of them as human, and there's an unimaginably powerful star vampire known as the Void Dragon trapped somewhere under the surface (by the GodEmperor, making him as the original Myth/SaintGeorge).
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Toys]]
120* ''Franchise/{{Lego}}'':
121** ''Toys/LegoLifeOnMars'', as stated in its title, is about humans discovering the native inhabitants of Mars. Unlike many other depictions of Martians, these Martians are largely friendly towards the humans. However, they weren't always this way; the radio drama ''Radio/TheWarOfTheWorlds1938'' was actually a true story, and even in modern day there is TheRemnant still holding onto their violent past.
122** Subverted by ''Toys/LegoMarsMission'', in which the aliens encountered on Mars are not actually Martians and are [[InsistentTerminology never referred to as such]]; ''VideoGame/LegoBattles'' makes it explicitly clear that they aren't native to Mars. While the friendly Martians of ''Life on Mars'' are sadly nowhere to be seen, ''LEGO Battles'' does hint at the existence of Martians by showing ancient ruins on the planet, dating back long before the arrival of the aliens or humans.
123* As the name implies, the molding kit ''Martian Matter'' from Creator/{{Hasbro}} has various alien shapes you can cast to make your own toys with which are supposed to be Martians.
124* The (octopoid) Martian was added to the ''Uchuu Daisakusen Chocovaders'' line-up with the third wave as figure #25.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Video Games]]
128* ''VideoGame/DestroyAllHumans'' parodies this by having the main character Cryptosporidium, who resembles TheGreys and has most of the stereotypical Martian traits and weapons but hails from a different planet entirely, often be referred to as a Martian, which irks him [[BerserkButton almost as much as being called a]] [[LittleGreenMen little green man]]. As a matter of fact, his species fought a GuiltFreeExterminationWar against the actual Martians and won. [[spoiler:[[VideoGame/DestroyAllHumans2 The second game]] reveals the ''real'' Martians of the setting: warmongering [[GiantEnemyCrab giant lobster men]] known as Blisk.]]
129* ''VideoGame/JamestownLegendOfTheLostColony'' takes place on British and Spanish colonies on Mars, which is already inhabited by OctopoidAliens, some of which have allied with the Spanish forces to attack the British colony in the first level.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Webcomics]]
133* The "Martians" arc of ''Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic'' is about three Martians (the ones from ''Toys/LEGOLifeOnMars'') attempting to invade Earth despite the fact they're really inept and, well, [[OddlySmallOrganization there's only three of them]].
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Web Originals]]
137* ''WebOriginal/HarDeshur: Visions of an alternate, slightly more habitable Mars'' is a SpeculativeBiology project that tries to imagine what a whole Martian biosphere would look like if the predictions from before Mariner-4 had turned out to be true. While complex, multicellular life does now exist on the surface in this reality, most of it is small and adapted to extreme conditions, while intelligent life is absent.
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Western Animation]]
141* ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius'': The episode "King of Mars" has [[RockMonster rock monsters]] who live on Mars and plan to destroy the Earth because they're sick of them sending probes and satellites. Fortunately, they're [[WeaksauceWeakness weak to rain]].
142* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': Mars is depicted as inhabited, being the place where [[GreatGazoo Magic Man]] and and Grob Gob Glob Grod come from. The inhabitants live under a dome, though whether this is because the rest of the planet is inhospitable or not isn't stated.
143* ''WesternAnimation/ButtUglyMartians'' depicts Martians as big-headed, blue-skinned, [[FourFingeredHand four-fingered]] [[HumanoidAliens humanoid creatures]].
144* ''WesternAnimation/BuzzLightyearOfStarCommand'': The green, three-eyed toy aliens from the ''Franchise/ToyStory'' films are {{retcon}}ned into being Martians.
145* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'': The Native Martians are basically [[FantasyCounterpartCulture pastiches of Native Americans]], and the episodes they appear in are thinly veiled allegories of American settlers' treatment of real-life Natives.
146* ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'': Zim discovers [[spoiler:that Mars is actually a [[PlanetSpaceship giant spaceship]] as the Martians converted their homeworld into one. They're not around anymore, having overworked themselves into extinction trying to make their ship [[RuleOfCool look cool]]]].
147* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'':
148** Marvin the Martian, who has black skin and a featureless face aside from two large eyes, and his green Martian dog Commander K-9. There are also bird-like "Instant Martians".
149** ''WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers'' features the aforementioned Marvin the Martian and K-9 as well as new Martian characters Queen Tyr'ahnee and General Z-9.
150** The ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' episode "Duck Dodgers Jr." introduces Marcia Martian, the niece and young apprentice of the aforementioned Marvin the Martian.
151* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS6E12HomerTheGreat Homer the Great]]", we briefly see a Martian whom the Stonecutters "keep under wraps".
152[[/folder]]
153
154[[folder:Real Life]]
155* Before the Viking probes landed, it was thought that Mars had canals and possibly even intelligent life. While research has shown Mars is a cold desert with a thin atmosphere, a number of structures on the planet [[OnceGreenMars were formed by water]], and it's thought Mars was habitable billions of years ago. There's some evidence suggesting liquid water (and maybe even life) might exist underground where there's enough heat and pressure to do so due to the presence of methane, which usually is produced either by volcanic and geological activity (which Mars doesn't seem to have) or some form of life[[note]]Also, as we've studied ''in-situ'' just a very small part of Mars' surface (its entire surface area is larger than all continents combined) there's still the possibility albeit very unlikely at best of some small, hardy, lifeforms (e.g. microorganisms or something equivalent to lichen) existing where conditions are more hospitable[[/note]].
156* Back in [[TheNineties 1996]], scientists thought that they had found bacteria-like fossils in the Martian meteorite [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Hills_84001 ALH 84001]] making headlines worldwide. However, evidence was controversial, and the current scientific consensus is that such "fossils" are actually the product of abiotic (not related to life) processes in the early Mars.
157[[/folder]]

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