Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / ObfuscatingInsanity

Go To

1%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1349015827013080100
2%% Please do not change or remove without starting a new thread.
3%% Image courtesy of Tropers/{{Malchus}}
4%%
5[[quoteright:230:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/FakeCrazy_8867.jpg]]
6[[caption-width-right:230:"Works every time."]]
7->''"Though this be madness, yet there is method in 't."''
8-->-- '''Polonius''', ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}''
9
10It's pretty much a given that no one takes crazy people seriously. It's also a given that a lot of people give crazy people a wide berth lest they flip out on them. A lot of people are aware of this and choose to take advantage of it, although their reasons for doing so vary from one character to the next. Sometimes the apparent nutcase is actually perfectly sane, other times they actually are a little on the {{Cloudcuckoolander}} side (or maybe more than a little) but are aware of their eccentricity and deliberately play it up to the Nth degree so that they appear to be far crazier than they actually are. If they are not the point-of-view character, the question may be left open.
11
12Not to be confused with InsanityDefense. Compare ObfuscatingStupidity, where people pretend to be dumb instead of crazy. Contrast MaskOfSanity for when someone actually ''is'' insane, but able to hide that fact well.
13
14'''Often times, this is a [[TheReveal Reveal Trope]], so expect unmarked spoilers!'''
15
16----
17!!Examples:
18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
21* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'' Urahara loves playing crazy and often goes to great lengths to ham it up. Of course, he still has TheWonka tendencies even when he drops the mask, but that doesn't change the fact he's wearing a mask in the first place.
22* While Ryousuke's mother in ''Manga/BokuraNoHentai'' does have mental health problems brought on by her daughter's death, it's shown she isn't delusional as she seemed. She reveals later on that she knew her crossdressing son wasn't ''really'' his deceased sister.
23* ''Literature/CrestOfTheStars'': Several of the admirals are... eccentric. Sometimes they have crazy ideas that their saner subordinates shoot down; sometimes they have crazy brilliant ideas that pan out. (Or that were good, but don't pan out anyway.) This resonates with a culture of snark, where one suspects they're trying to see how much insanity they can get away with before someone cracks. Bebaus brothers, especially. The Abh even believe that "genius" and "insanity" are two sides of the same coin, and that any genius must by definition be somewhat insane.
24* [[spoiler:Shiro]] from ''Manga/DeadmanWonderland'' is revealed at the end to have been [[spoiler:faking her SplitPersonality.]]
25* ''Literature/FullMetalPanic'': During ''Invisible Victory'', [[spoiler:Tessa shows up in San Francisco wandering barefoot down the highway and is taken to a hospital, where she openly talks about Mithril and Amalgam, saying that after being betrayed by her crew she's just an EmptyShell now. When they move to transfer her to a mental institution, Amalgam tries to kidnap her, only for Mithril to ambush them, revealing the whole thing was a sting operation intended to capture Leonard's "messenger boy" Lee Fowler]].
26* ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'': Toutousai is utterly insane and also senile. Except he's not. Except he might be. Except he probably isn't. Lampshaded in-universe: the characters themselves are completely baffled over where his obfuscating insanity ends and either genuine senility or great wisdom begins. It's very noticeable, however, that he always plays up the insanity whenever he needs to get Inuyasha or Sesshoumaru to do something they don't want to do yet the insanity vanishes completely whenever he needs to explain the detail of a lesson they've just learned. Toutousai's ability to switch between this trope, LetsGetDangerous and OlderAndWiser in a completely unpredictable manner may be the only thing that's kept him safe from the HairTriggerTemper that both brothers possess.
27* [[spoiler:Secco]] in ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' reveals he was doing this after the death of his partner, who was [[spoiler:a MadDoctor who apparently experimented on him at length. Whether or not he actually did at all is unknown, but if he did, it clearly didn't have the results he thought it did.]]
28* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'': When Midoriya first meets Gran Torino for an internship, the elder hero appears to be off his rocker. This throws Midoriya off when it comes time to spar, as Torino demonstrates skills and wisdom befitting a mentor of the world-famous All Might.
29* Many powerful shinobi in ''Manga/{{Naruto}}''. The longer they've been around, the crazier they get; see Maito Gai, Kakashi Hatake, Jiraya, Tsunade, ''Anko Mitarashi''... and underneath all the crazy is someone who could kill you in the time it takes to blink.
30** {{Fanon}} seen in a lot of {{fanfic}} is that high-level ninja tend to develop bizarre quirks as a coping mechanism; the more powerful they are, the more crap they end up going though in using that power, and the stranger the coping mechanism gets.
31** Perhaps best demonstrated with Chiyo, who's laughing like a loon the first time we meet her and her elderly brother, and attempting to attack Kakashi as soon as she meets him. She's crazy powerful, though. Naruto sums it up, "She may be old, but she's good."
32** [[spoiler: Obito's alternate personality Tobi]] can be this as well, combined with BewareTheSillyOnes. This seems intentional, to get enemies and comrades alike to underestimate or disregard him due to his antics.
33* PlayedForLaughs in a chapter of ''Manga/{{Nichijou}}'', where Yuuko tries to hypnotize Mio. The former is so annoyingly insistent in the latter's eyes that Mio pretends to become an idiot, in order to get her friend to stop. It backfires when the rest of the students and teachers fall for it too, and try to have her hospitalized.
34* Xerxes Break from ''Manga/PandoraHearts''. He's a strange ManChild with a CreepyDoll he holds conversations with and a habit of [[StealthHiBye entering and exiting rooms]] from strange places like cabinets or from underneath beds. His in-canon nickname is even "Pierrot", as most people seem to think he's just a little crazy. He probably is, but [[MagnificentBastard not the]] [[TranquilFury funny]] kind.
35* ''Anime/ReignTheConqueror'': Diogenes. Whether this also happened is debatable. Diogenes was more crazy cool. He prescribed masturbation to prevent sexual immorality, then ''demonstrated.''
36-->'''Diogenes:''' If only I could satisfy my hunger by rubbing my belly.
37* Miki accuses Yuki of this in ''Manga/SchoolLive'', though it's unknown if it's true or not. Note that she only came to the conclusion after reading a few pages on Multiple Personality Disorder in a book. Later on it's implied she did have mental health problems however she fits the trope properly, as she still pretends to be delusional and oblivious after she "snapped" out of it. She doesn't do it for malicious reasons though. She knows her happy attitude is what keeps her friends from breaking down due to the difficulties of surviving during a ZombieApocalypse.
38* In ''Manga/VinlandSaga'', [[spoiler:after King Sweyn [[TheVillainKnowsWhereYouLive threatens to attack Wales]] unless Askeladd pledges allegiance to him instead of [[TheUnFavourite Sweyn's son Canute]], Askeladd [[OffWithHisHead decapitates him]], then pretends to have gone mad in order to turn the Danish nobles against himself. Canute catches on to this and kills Askeladd, after which he becomes the new king and calls off the attack on Wales ([[ThanatosGambit just as Askeladd intended]])]].
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Comic Books]]
42* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'': ComicBook/TheJoker. It should be emphasized that just how ''much'' of the Joker's madness is genuine or part of a ploy [[DependingOnTheWriter largely depends on the writer]], naturally. He is quite, ''quite'' mad, but whether he's an out-and-out loony or just a very driven psychopath with a twisted sense of humour changes from story to story.
43** There was a particular story ("Case Study" by Creator/PaulDini and Creator/AlexRoss, from the anthology series ''ComicBook/BatmanBlackAndWhite'') that really explored this facet. The story was told from the perspective of two psychiatrists at Arkham, who had found a psychiatric analysis of Joker that revealed him as entirely sane, but faking insanity to cover his meticulous plans and get into mental institutions where it would be easier to break free. Hopeful that they can use this to get Joker transferred to a prison, they're disappointed to find out that the person who wrote the analysis was [[spoiler:''[[ComicBook/HarleyQuinn Harleen]] [[PsychoSupporter Quinzel]]'', from before she went insane.]]
44** Oddly, this changing personality is ''also'' something that exists in-story, [[spoiler:as noted by the very same Dr. Quinzel,]] after being driven mad. She theorized that he reinvents his personality on a day-to-day basis, so that one day he may be a funny guy with a penchant for stalking the Bat, then the next he's a monster, then the next he's a glibbering loon. [[spoiler:Her madness shows in her conclusion that the only constant is his love for her.]]
45** This theory is also put forth in ''Comicbook/ArkhamAsylumASeriousHouseOnSeriousEarth'' by Ruth Adams who describes it as a form of Super Sanity that may be more suited to the end of the 21st century than the here and now. Her theory implies that the Joker might not have that much control over his reinventions; he might be able to choose his different personalities, but he can't help the irresistible impulse to change it in the first place, since it is essentially a coping mechanism to deal with the insanity of the world at large. In the above, however, Joker would be closer to a variation of Histrionic Personality Disorder- i.e. he is acting up for attention (also, he is a sadistic narcissistic sociopath, but that has nothing to do with why he changes personas, only why each persona is always a violent criminal). It should also be considered that Dr Ruth Adams may be a quack, especially if she thinks it constitutes ''Super''-Sanity (which is an oxymoron) rather than some kind of dissociative disorder.
46** [[ComicBook/{{Robin}} Jason Todd]] once said to the Joker's face that acting so completely insane makes it easier for him to justify his actions. That wiped the smile right off the clown's face.
47* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} also uses this trope to its full advantage, confusing and exhausting his enemies and allies alike with [[TalkativeLoon unstoppable mouth and wacky babbling]]. Like the Joker, Deadpool really is insane (a different kind of insane, though) and knows it, but he plays up and (possibly) exaggerates his insanity for tactical benefit. Also like the Joker, the fact that his personality changes regularly is part of canon. In his case, his healing factor and cancer have combined to leave his braincells constantly in flux. In some stories he's little more than an immature goofball, others he's perfectly capable of committing murders in cold blood that he doesn't even remember afterward. Of course, as a MetaGuy, Deadpool's also the first to admit that the ''real'' reason he changes is [[DependingOnTheWriter who is writing him at the moment]].
48* In ''ComicBook/CerebusTheAardvark'', the CaptainErsatz of [[Creator/MarxBrothers Groucho Marx]], Lord Julius, is a sterling example of this. Cerebus explains it during a croquet game with someone else: "Lord Julius always said that insanity was the last line of defense for the master bureaucrat. It's hard to get a refund when the salesman is sniffing your crotch and baying at the moon. Insanity is a virtually impregnable gambit... but you have to lay the foundation early in the game..."
49-->'''Lord Julius:''' Baskin, my lad! Come in. Whatever it is, I'm against it. Unless I'm for it, in which case the tie goes to the runner.
50* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': Shortly after the Black Cat was introduced, Spider-Man tracked her down ... and discovered she had an insane romantic fixation on him. It turned out a few issues later that she'd realized he was about to catch her and set that up as a cover to get herself locked in a mental hospital rather than prison, as the hospital was easier to escape. But then she found herself [[BecomingTheMask obsessing about Spidey for real]]....
51* In the ''ComicBook/SinCity'' story ''Family Values'', Dwight used this as a ploy. A female cop was investigating the same crime scene as Dwight and Miho. Since Dwight is a wanted man and he had an assassin ready to kill the police officer, he had to think quick. He started off by flirting with her in hopes that she would be offended and leave. Considering Dwight is MrFanservice, she liked the attention and decided to stick around. He then demanded that they go to a hotel where she would spank him and call him Belinda because "that's how Douglas does it." She wonders why she always attracts the loonies and saunters off.
52* ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'': Tom O'bedlam hides his mentor role behind a facade of raving lunacy.
53* This is part of the hook of ComicBook/{{the Creeper}}; Jack Ryder combines an outlandish costume with manic behavior and crazed laughter to unnerve the criminals he fights. That said, some of the later versions of the character really ''were'' insane.
54* ''ComicBook/AgeOfBronze'': Odysseus receives a prophecy that he will not return home for twenty years if he heads for Troy. He must fulfill his sacred oath, but he dreads the consequences. His solution: Faking madness. Unfortunately, Palamedes sees through it.
55* In ''ComicBook/TheTransformersMoreThanMeetsTheEye'', Whirl seems to be genuinely a bit loopy, but he's also a lot smarter and more cunning than his BloodKnight antics and general eccentricities lead people to believe. For example, when he's held hostage by a traumatised war hero, most of his lines imply that he's daring Fortress Maximus to go ahead and just kill him, but looked at from another angle, he's getting inside Max's head by continually voicing the most likely thoughts Max is having, leading him to identify with Whirl.
56** MadScientist Brainstorm builds weird stuff like My First Gun, the Early Early Warning System and the [[BreakingTheFourthWall fourth-wall-breaking Meta Bomb]], and most of his weapons on Kimia were deliberately excessive solely to troll the Ethics Committee, making people think that there's an awful lot of "Mad" in there. [[spoiler:His antics conceal both his history of spying for the Decepticons and the fact that he's built a time machine in order to change history and prevent the War from ever happening.]]
57* In ''ComicBook/TheTransformersMegaseries'', the Machination tries to brainwash a captive Hunter. He’s able to resist, but acts like a drooling vegetable to convince them otherwise. Once his unsuspecting captors leave the room, he drops the act and tries to escape.
58* The Roman, a crime boss who ran afoul of Comicbook/{{Wolverine}}, pretends to be a lunatic who dressed up in a dirty toga and rants about the Roman Empire in public as part of an act to keep the law enforcement agents he knows are tailing him from being able to move against him. They strongly suspect he's putting up an act and even take bets as to how far he will take it. One of the agents even wonders if it really ''is'' [[BecomingTheMask just an act]] since The Roman would have to be crazy to keep it up for so long, and his partner responds that The Roman is crazy...crazy like a fox. The Roman takes the act very seriously, hiding out in what ''looks'' like a run-down abandoned building on the outside but is actually a palatial mansion decorated with a Greco-Roman theme on the inside. In private he also ditches his dirty rags to put on pristine and finely-tailored suits.
59* A story arc of ''ComicBook/{{Sturmtruppen}}'' has a soldier try to pull this to [[DraftDodging be discharged on medical grounds]]... Except the first step is convince [[DrillSergeantNasty the sergeant]] he may be crazy, and any and all attempts just got him declared stupid and kept from check up because "[[TakeThat stupids are the backbone of the army]]". He then pulls it off by volunteering to dispose of spoiled nitroglycerine (far more likely to blow up than unspoiled one), thus convincing the sergeant he ''is'' mad and allowing him to claim his discharge for insanity... Except this arc is a ShoutOut to ''Literature/Catch22'' and he just incurred the original Catch22Dilemma, disqualifying himself from the discharge while still having volunteered for a suicide mission. [[spoiler:He actually gets insane out of the sheer terror, and is given his discharge as two orderlies are dragging him to the asylum]].
60* ''ComicBook/GreenLantern'': The Fool's crimes were based on him undertaking schemes that seemed either completely moronic or completely insane.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Comic Strips]]
64* Prof. Bartap from German comic ''ComicStrip/NickKnatterton'', to fool some gangsters who wanted to get their hands on his latest invention, a shaving foam which is also a very effective explosive. "Goodbye, you dummyheads!"
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Fan Works]]
68* ''Franchise/HarryPotter''
69** In ''Fanfic/HarryPotterAndTheMethodsOfRationality'', Dumbledore is widely believed to be using this. It's effective nevertheless, as it not only gives him an excuse to do whatever he wants, it's also impossible to tell the difference between when he's just keeping up the act and when he's executing some brilliant, secret plan right under your nose.
70*** Although it has been theorized in-universe that at some point his apparent insanity [[BecomingTheMask became more than just an act]].
71** In ''Fanfic/OhGodNotAgain'', Harry pulls this for much the same reason as the ''Methods of Rationality'' version of Dumbledore.
72** In ''Fanfic/TheWizardInTheShadows'' a lot of Harry's craziness and {{Cloudcuckoolander}} tendencies are hinted to be put on to get people to think he's fairly harmless. Occasionally, they live to regret it. The author is also an admitted troper and a diehard ''Doctor Who'' fan, which makes comparisons to the tenth and eleventh Doctors all the more likely to be accurate.
73** In ''Fanfic/GeorgeWeasleyAndTheComputationalError'', George does this frequently, for reasons like having him stay at St. Mungo's instead of being tossed in Azkaban immediately to [[spoiler: convincing Voldemort that George is on his side. Sadly, George actually does end up becoming legitimately insane by the end of the story.]]
74** ''FanFic/PartiallyKissedHero'' casts [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Luna Lovegood]] as a ruthless, calculating, [[TheSociopath damn-near sociopathic]] CreepyChild whose apparent spaciness is entirely an act to make people underestimate her.
75* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'':
76** Dumbledore is heavily implied to be putting on at least some of his eccentricity - certainly, he can drop it at a moment's notice [[LetsGetDangerous when necessary]], as proven when Fury and Wisdom both goad him to check.
77** Doctor Strange is one example who blurs the lines between 'obfuscating' and 'insanity' - that is to say, some of it is probably put on, but he is almost certainly at least somewhat crazy. No one knows exactly what the balance is, and he seems to like it that way.
78* In the ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' fanfic ''Fanfic/{{Forward}}'', River deliberately invokes this by pretending to be more unhinged than usual while the crew is preparing a heist, so that they'll leave her off the team. Once they depart, she sneaks away for a personal mission of her own.
79* In ''FanFic/MyStupidReality'' a ''Manga/DeathNote'' AU where L's people are rounding up genius children for some nefarious purpose, Light attempted to stay under the radar by [[ObfuscatingStupidity playing dumb]]. Later, when it becomes impossible for Light to deny that he's a genius he tries to get out of L's program by deliberately failing the psych exam by pretending to be a [[AxeCrazy homocidal maniac]] [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall who believes all criminals should die.]] [[SpringtimeForHitler Unfortunately he failed too well and L knew he was faking.]]
80* In the Franchise/{{Transformers}} fanfic ''[[FanFic/ThingsWeDontTellHumans Things We Don't Tell Humans]]'', [[spoiler:Megatron]] does this to his soldiers after Ratchet (mostly) fixes his gaping head wound and the MindVirus it revealed.
81* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/10849036/3/Rewind-of-Time Rewind of Time]]'' Harry and his friends decide to use this as their opening strategy for dealing with Voldemort and Dumbledore. It works so well in the latter case that one of the teachers decides to get in on the act.
82-->'''Dumbledore:''' I think we need to have a staff meeting. There is something wrong here and we need to figure out what it is. Who are Sponge Bob and Barney? What in the world are Nargles, and what is this about Middle Earth? I am so confused right now.\
83'''[=McGonagall=]:''' Not to worry Gandalf. We will figure it out with you my precious. The reason is because I love you. You love me. Let's get together as a happy family. We can all live together in a pineapple under the sea. Though I think they are right and you should avoid any and all food offered you by Cornelius [Fudge].
84* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/11772125/1/Metroid-Kamen-Rider-Generations-Full-Series Metroid: Kamen Rider Generations]]'':
85** [[Series/KamenRiderDrive Gou Shijima]], of all people, considers himself to be this, only the fact that he's pretty awesome in his own right.
86** [[VideoGame/MetroidPrime3Corruption Gandrayda]] is unpredictably insane for a shapeshifter. She loves playing crazy and goes in further heights to ham it up. She more often plays insanity to get close around Samus or pressing [[spoiler:[[Series/KamenRiderGaim Micchy's]] BerserkButton.]] Gandrayda's ability to switch into this, BewareTheSillyOnes, and AxCrazy CombatSadomasochist is noticable, as noticed in Samus's point of view, even after Gandrayda's [[BackFromTheDead revival]] with no traces of Phazon, she is still AxCrazy by nature.
87* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/13444649/1/The-Demon-Who-Lived The Demon Who Lived]]'', C.C., now reincarnated as Luna Lovegood, abuses her family's reputation of being completely insane to do pretty much anything she pleases without being questioned. When Kallen, now Hermione Granger, asks how C.C. plans to reunite her with Lelouch/Harry Potter without raising suspicions, C.C. retorts that she could introduce Harry to a purple llama she calls Henry the Fifth without anyone batting an eye.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
91* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'', when he first meets Princess Jasmine, Aladdin rescues her from an irate merchant who was about to [[DisproportionateRetribution chop off her hand for taking a piece of fruit]] (Jasmine never having been outside the palace in her life and unfamiliar with the concept of money) by convincing him that [[RelativelyFlimsyExcuse she is his mentally unstable sister]]. Jasmine plays along;
92-->'''Merchant:''' She says she knows the Sultan!\
93'''Aladdin:''' She thinks the ''monkey's'' the Sultan.\
94'''Jasmine:''' ''(getting the hint and bowing before Abu)'' Oh wise Sultan! How may I serve you?\
95'''Aladdin:''' ''(sighing)'' Tragic, isn't it? Still, no harm done. ''(hands the merchant an apple to replace the stolen one)'' Come along, sis, time to go see the doctor.\
96'''Jasmine:''' ''(to a nearby camel)'' Oh hello, Doctor. How are you?\
97'''Aladdin:''' No, no, no, not that one.
98* ''[[WesternAnimation/TheSwanPrincess The Swan Princess: A Royal MyZtery]]'' has Niccolo, one of the villains from ''The Swan Princess: Royally Undercover'', appear to be suffering from a SplitPersonality while incarcerated. It later turns out he was pretending to be cuckoo to throw off suspicions that he was behind the film's conflict.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
102* In any given Creator/MarxBrothers movie, Groucho will spend most of his screen time running ''rings'' around everyone else in the room (except his brothers Harpo and Chico, who are always either crazy enough or stupid enough to follow right along) by ''living'' in this trope. Nobody (but his brothers) can even ''hope'' to keep up with him, and as a result, he easily gets whatever he wants whenever he wants it. Give Groucho a pair of guns, a sword, a mask and the will to kill and he's ComicBook/{{Deadpool}}. Period.
103* ''Franchise/StarWars'': ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack''. Yoda pretends to be a random senile alien, as a SecretTestOfCharacter for Luke when they first meet.
104* Captain Jack Sparrow from ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean''. Exactly how much is obfuscation and how much is genuine is unclear. Just the way Jack likes it.
105* In ''[[Film/AnalyzeThis Analyze That]]'', Paul Vitti successfully fakes insanity to get himself released from prison.
106* Creator/AlPacino as Vincent Hanna in ''Film/{{Heat}}''.
107-->'''Vincent Hanna:''' [[LampshadeHanging Ferocious, aren't I?]]
108* In ''Film/PrimalFear'', Aaron Stampler pretends to be insane in order to get away with murder.
109** In fact, he does such a good job that he's got the psychiatrists fooled [[spoiler:into thinking his mild mannered persona is the real deal and the conniving psycho just a symptom of multiple-personality disorder. Turns out, there is NO mild mannered guy in there at all, just the psycho...]]
110* John [=McClane=] has to fake this in ''Film/DieHardWithAVengeance'', when a madman makes him wear a billboard insulting Afro-Americans while in his underwear. His future partner in adventures saves him by claiming his insanity, and he runs with it. And in general, [=McClane=] has his moments where he appears "unhinged". He does this for various reasons, either to fool and confuse his enemies, or to cope with [[BeingGoodSucks the crap he has to go through]].
111* A similar thing happens in ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'' where the title character, a secret agent, mistakes a group of mourners for jewel thieves. His assistant Bough comes to his rescue and tells the mourners that English is an escapee from a lunatic asylum.
112* In ''Film/MenInBlack3'', Agent J briefly pretends a neuralyzer has regressed him back to early childhood.
113* In ''Film/{{Scum}}'', one of the Borstal inmates[[labelnote:*]]Americans: think "Juvenile Hall"[[/labelnote]] is savvy enough to behave just madly enough for the hard guys and gang inmates to leave him alone as more trouble than he's worth. The warders also treat him carefully, as if he were a hand grenade on a short fuse. This is a known coping strategy for dealing with oppressive all-male institutions such as prison, the military, and boarding school, where those low on the totem tend to get bullied and abused. Unpredictable insanity neatly takes somebody outside the hierarchy.
114* Doctor Edward Bailey in ''Film/Red2'' is locked up in an asylum for the criminally insane. When the team finds him, he is hyperactive and unable to respond rationally to their questions. At the climax, it turns out that was an act to fool them into breaking him out so he could [[spoiler:detonate the doomsday weapon he created, which was the real reason he was locked up in the first place.]]
115* In ''Film/{{Signs}}'', Merril and Graham Hess hatch a plan to scare an ominous dark figure off of the roof of their house (who they assume is a trespassing teenager) by running outside, yelling and acting 'insane with anger'. Graham, a soft-spoken former Pastor, doesn't quite give a convincing effort. HilariousInHindsight, considering that Graham Hess is played by Creator/MelGibson.
116* Na-mi from ''Film/{{Sunny}}'' pretends to act [[DemonicPossession possessed]] in order to avoid getting into a fight.
117* In ''{{Film/Nerve}}'', this is heavily implied to be the case with [[spoiler:Ty. He comes off as completely unhinged and unrestrained for most of the film, but then you find out he's trapped in his current situation, and can't leave, meaning he's being ''forced'' to do all these dangerous, illegal, immoral things. When Vee asks for his help in ending the titular game, he instantly agrees. Once he's free at the film's end, while he's obviously shaken up, he seems much more subdued and normal. So, more than likely, the aggressiveness and apparent insanity was just a coping mechanism.]]
118* The Joker in ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' - though it's heavily up to interpretation how much he's obfuscating, much like Sparrow, it's clear that he isn't as crazy as he likes to present himself. For instance, when confronting Harvey, he claims he's "a dog chasing cars" and didn't really have any animosity towards Dent in particular, when later on he admits to being ''entirely'' aware of the impact and meaning of driving Dent to madness. There're also countless points in the movie that involve him having planted the seeds of long-term plans (particularly explosives). In general, he is psychotic, but he's still highly intelligent and entirely capable of long-term plans - he just wants people to think he's completely random because it makes them dismiss him as a foolish thug. (Considering his overall motivations, [[{{Hypocrite}} this is pretty ironic.]])
119* ''Film/SideEffects'': Emily it turns out faked her insanity, with Dr. Sieber advising her on how to do this. It's all part of a plan to kill Emily's husband, blame it on the drug she was taking, and make money after it by short-selling the manufacturer's stock due to the negative publicity driving down the price.
120* One way to interpret Romasanta's claim to be suffering from clinical lycanthropy in ''Film/RomasantaTheWerewolfHunt''. Certainly the Crown Prosecutor believes he is faking it in an attempt to avoid execution.
121* In ''Film/DayOfTheEvilGun'', Indian trader Jimmy Noble feigns insanity as the Indians will not kill a crazy person.
122* In ''Film/BedtimeStory1964'', con artist Lawrence, who is posing as a prince, has his apprentice Freddy pose as his mentally challenged brother Ruprecht, who insists on calling their latest mark "Mother," needs to be spoon fed, sometimes flies into violent rages, and will need constant care, in order to scare her out of marrying Lawrence after he's taken her money.
123-->'''Lawrence''': Thank goodness this will only happen to one out of every three of our children!
124* ''Film/NoTimeToDie''. Ernst Stavro Blofeld has been in solitary confinement in a maximum security prison for so long he's apparently gone mad, holding long rambling soliloquies with himself. Turns out he ''is'' talking to someone, using his bionic eye to see what his henchman Cyclops (who has a [[EyeSpy similar bionic eye]]) is seeing and relaying orders through him, thus [[MightAsWellNotBeInPrisonAtAll running SPECTRE by remote control]].
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Literature]]
128%%* Invoked in ''Literature/CatchTwentyTwo'', though {{defied}} with the eponymous MortonsFork.
129* In the Literature/ChooseYourOwnAdventure novel ''UFO 54-40'', your character has been abducted by aliens. One of your options is to pretend to have a NapoleonDelusion in the hope that they'll reject you as unsuitable and send you back to Earth. It backfires, as the aliens decide to study your strange behaviour more closely in their laboratories.
130* There was an SF story in the '40s or '50s, "Clerical Error", in which a psychiatrist gets himself "accidentally" locked up with an insane patient so he can talk to him.
131* Done by [[spoiler:the ''Sleeper Service'']] in ''Literature/TheCulture''. Basically, the Culture needs a hidden stash of weapons that can move quickly, build quickly and ''not attract attention''. The solution? [[spoiler:Have the ''Service'' pretend to be Eccentric (Culture-speak for utterly insane), prepare its Storage bays to be turned into engines, and have it construct LOTS of warships.]] It works beautifully.
132* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', Diego pretends to be autistic in the hopes of being captured by the New Christians so Robin can follow them and find out where they've taken Diego's sister and Shadow.
133* In ''Literature/TheDiabolic'', [[spoiler:Tyrus pretends to be mad to avoid being bumped off by his grandmother]].
134* ''Literature/DonQuixote'': In Part II, Chapter XI, Don Quixote claims that ''from a child I was fond of the play, and in my youth a keen lover of the actor's art."'' Several critics [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation have toyed with the idea that Don Quixote never lost that passion for theater and behaves like an actor]]: Don Quixote uses this trope because he does not believe to be a knight, but pretends to be one, as if he's on stage.
135* The method used by the Platinum Dragon god Paladine to aid the heroes as Fizban the Fabulous in the ''Literature/{{Dragonlance}}'' novels.
136* In ''Literature/DragonQueen'', the old man acts crazier than normal for him in order to make Trava look irresponsible.
137* In ''Literature/DrFranklinsIsland'', Semi and Miranda are transformed into a fish and a bird monster and find that TheMindIsAPlaythingOfTheBody, as they struggle to keep it together, reluctant to even use their ElectronicTelepathy out of paranoia about it being monitored. It worsens when Miranda is given a radio tag and allowed to fly free, while Semi, trapped in her pool, is given doses of a formula that will make her human again; Miranda becomes more distant and stops responding to telepathic hails and looks and acts more like an animal as she hops around the compound. In the climax of the book, Miranda uses the keypad codes she learned from spying on everyone to open the cages and let out the MixAndMatchCritters, reveals that she could have removed her radio tag at any time, and starts talking again. Semi thinks Miranda was faking it, but Miranda tells her that she really was losing herself and her sense of who she was and didn't think to escape and get help, but she remembered Semi, and was still smart enough to come up with a plan.
138* In the ''Literature/DredChronicles'', [[spoiler:Wills, one of the protagonist's gang members]], pretends to be a lot less stable than he really is, so as to be overlooked. Mind you, his real belief is [[spoiler:worshipping death]], so perhaps he's just insane in a different way than he pretends.
139* Justine of ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' actually ''was'' deeply mentally ill when she was first introduced, but when she eventually recovers, she keeps up the act in order to act as a spy on the White Court for Thomas.
140* Creator/MercedesLackey's ''Literature/{{Firebird|Lackey}}'': Ilya pretends to be a fool to keep his brothers from outright killing him, making out as though the last beating they gave him broke his mind.
141* ''Literature/HumanxCommonwealth'': In ''The End of the Matter'', the plot revolves around a whimsically insane alien named Abalamahalamatandra (Ab for short) who speaks entirely in nonsense rhymes and appears utterly unaware of the concept of danger. Luckily for it, Ab is apparently immune to most forms of harm, including arrows, poison, and electrocution. It is later discovered that Ab is not, in fact, insane, but is instead a five hundred thousand year old construct programmed with several million languages, all of which it attempts to render in the listener's native phonology. It also turns out to be the key to finding and activating a LostSuperweapon.
142* In ''Literature/JeevesAndWooster'', Jeeves sometimes employs a variation by telling people that ''Bertie'' is insane to get him out of trouble. By the end of ''The Inimitable Jeeves'', Bertie estimates that about half of London must now think he's off his rocker.
143* It's implied that [[BadassTeacher Elodin]] uses some form of this in ''Literature/TheKingkillerChronicle''. Rather like a few other examples on this page, just how much is actual insanity and how much is him playing it up is [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation up for debate]].
144* Bartholomew the Village Idiot/Cynic in ''Literature/LambTheGospelAccordingToBiff'', though the "obfuscating" part is... questionable, especially when considering conversations like this:
145-->'''Biff:''' I have to go find Joshua.\
146'''Bartholomew:''' You know he is the Messiah, don't you?\
147'''Biff:''' Wait a minute, you're not a Jew-- I thought you didn't believe in any religion.\
148'''Bart:''' The dogs told me he was the Messiah. I believe them. Tell Joshua I believe them.\
149'''Biff:''' The dogs told you?\
150'''Bart:''' They're Jewish dogs.
151* In ''Literature/TheMachineriesOfEmpire'' it eventually turns out that [[spoiler:Jedao's supposed psychotic break was a planned and premediated thing]] and he's perfectly fine in the head, if too extremist for anyone's good.
152* It's really hard to tell if Iskaral Pust from the ''Literature/MalazanBookOfTheFallen'' is faking his [[ThinkingOutLoud absolutely erratic dialogue]] and cripplingly clumsy behaviour, which includes stating that "she's falling for my clever scheme" to the face of the person he's trying to manipulate, or if he just happens to be both rather bright and ''totally nuts''. He certainly is effective in reaching his goals despite his quirks.
153* The old king in ''Literature/OnceUponAMarigold'' realizes that his evil and ambitious wife is slowly poisoning him. But even though he throws out his daily "medicine", he pretends to be crazy and senile as well as sick so he can keep a watch on her without arousing her suspicions.
154* In ''Literature/PenrynAndTheEndOfDays'', not even Penryn knows how sane her mother is. If the demons and ghosts she keeps talking to are real or due to her paranoid schizophrenia remains unexplained. In ''World After'', [[spoiler:she certainly helped some people who were seemingly dead but actually just paralyzed to stay alive by making them look like part of a satanic ritual. No one wanted to touch them, while all the other victims got BuriedAlive. There is also the pet tracker with the chips sewn into the starburst she sews on every single one of Penryn and Paige's pants "for protection".]]
155* ''Literature/PhryneFisher'': The murderer in [[spoiler:''Death in Daylesford'']] has spent years establishing a persona that would allow him to plead Insanity. Phryne only gets an insight into his true calculating personality when she sees him [[spoiler:playing a masterful strategy in bridge]]. Ultimately, however, he decides it is BetterToDieThanBeKilled and takes a CyanidePill after he is caught.
156* ''Literature/{{Psmith}}'' owes his invincibility to the fact that he acts like a complete {{Cloudcuckoolander}} while always remaining on top of the situation.
157* ''Literature/TheRadix'': Cori's backstory. She was put into the asylum as a part of an experiment, to see if doctors can tell a sane person from a mad. She also fakes insanity when she first meets Adriana Borgia, to pose as a harmless lunatic.
158* In the first ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'' book, Matthias manages to avoid being killed by King Bull Sparra by pretending to be stark raving mad. That said, Bull Sparra, who's no stranger to insanity himself, does seem to figure out Matthias isn't ''quite'' as insane as he pretends to be (even correctly guessing Matthias knows about Martin the Warrior's sword).
159* ''Literature/{{Saturnin}}'': The Grandfather eventually uses this tactic to deal with Aunt Kateřina's ingratiations.
160%%* ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' himself, in "The Adventure of the Dying Detective".
161* In the Literature/SherlockHolmes pastiche ''The Singular Case of the Duplicate Holmes'', Lady Featherstone comments that people aren't particularly cautious about what they say around her, figuring she's too old and senile to understand what is being said. In reality, she's still quite mentally sharp, but she allows people to think otherwise.
162* Wonko The Sane from ''Literature/SoLongAndThanksForAllTheFish''. Maybe. Or possibly he's a weird mix of "Genius" and "{{Cloudcuckoolander}}"; the fact that he behaves ''exactly the same'' when no one else is around implies that the insanity is not ''entirely'' an act.
163* In Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold's HistoricalFantasy novel ''Literature/TheSpiritRing'', the character of Lord Pia--a castellan, now imprisoned in his own castle by the man who slew the Duke whom Pia originally served, and seemingly violently insane (and also obsessed with bats)--seems to be a case of the "maybe more than a little crazy, but also playing it up for effect" variety. Pia's obsession with bats does date back to before his imprisonment (and is perhaps only a harmless eccentricity), but at the end of the book he is described as recovering from the "overstressed dementia" of the days of his imprisonment. He is nonetheless capable, even at his apparently craziest, of making and executing complex plans against his enemies. When he first meets the man one of the protagonists of the book wonders if Pia is really mad, or only pretending, or perhaps both at once.
164* ''Literature/SwordOfTruth'': Temple of the Winds: A powerful wizard/sorceress combo are captured by a [[AntiMagic magic nullifying]] savages who want to sacrifice them. Solution? Pretend to be completely insane so the tribe won't consider them a proper sacrifice. Instead, they are sold to slavery... where their lack of working skills gets them sold again... to cannibals. [[spoiler:Though said cannibals turn out to be their friends the Mud People so it's actually a good thing.]]
165* ''Literature/TreasureIsland'': [[http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/services/treasure/book/chars/char8.html Ben Gunn]]. Lived alone on the island for three years after being marooned, found at least one dead body of a possible former shipmate, had the murderous living nightmare of his life return, and knew that if he didn't cut a deal with Livesley's group, the pirates would cut him down. Yet he managed to prove a firm ally, [[spoiler:helped retrieve Jim from the pirates, sail the ship to a safe port, and had moved the treasure to a new hiding place!]]. He's still obsessed with cheese, though.
166* Creator/JohnChristopher's YA SF ''Literature/TheTripods'' series. The hero and his cousin are first informed of the resistance's existence by a wandering man who appears to be crazy. He informs them of the resistance in a speech to them that includes the phrases "And I was born on a rainy morning" and "My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings..." as camouflage.
167* [[spoiler:The White Queen]] in ''Literature/TheUnexploredSummonBloodSign'' gives the initial impression of being a psychopathic {{Yandere}} obsessed with the main character Kyousuke. Among other things, she claims to want to murder any girl whose name Kyousuke says in front of her. However, it soon becomes apparent that she's far more composed than she claims. At one point, [[spoiler:she disguises herself as someone else, and doesn't react to Kyousuke repeatedly interacting with other girls in front of her. When she reveals herself, she speaks cordially with one of the girls in question, even though there's no more need for the act, confirming that this isn't actually a BerserkButton for her]].
168* Subverted in ''Literature/TheWitchesOfWorm'' where Jessica tries faking a disorder to get out of trouble, but quickly learns that when a child starts acting a little bit crazy, the reaction is often more toward drugs and institutions and of forgiving them their offenses.
169[[/folder]]
170
171[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
172* Liz Lemon of ''Series/ThirtyRock'' has gotten out of jury duty multiple times by cosplaying as [[Franchise/StarWars Princess Leia]] and claiming to be a hologram. Sadly, this doesn't quite cut it in [[WorldOfWeirdness New York]].
173* ''Series/{{Arrow}}''. In [[Recap/ArrowS1E19UnfinishedBusiness "Unfinished Business"]], the drug Vertigo is back on the street so Oliver Queen goes to visit The Count only to find him a gibbering wreck, languishing in a mental hospital. However he then escapes, making it seem like he was faking. Then it's revealed that the escape was faked by a member of the hospital staff who worked out how to synthesize Vertigo and was posing as The Count to conceal his actions (though the Count recovers and escapes for real in a later episode).
174* ''Series/TheATeam''
175** Murdock was eccentric and likely did suffer from some form of PTSD, but was definitely (maybe) not mad. His team had to break him out of a mental institution in almost every episode. However, at times he faked more extreme insanity to get ''into'' an asylum in order to break someone else out, or take down a gun smuggling ring or something. Of course, he might have exaggerated the problem more regularly for the free accommodation and the nurses, or just to irritate B.A. When the situation called for it, Murdock could act completely sane(-ish) and coldly competent.
176** In one episode, his psychiatrist even calls him out on it that he knows Murdock is sane and simply putting on a VERY good act. Faking insanity not only gave him free room and board at the VA, but also could be a safeguard against any criminal charges. Most of his "insane" actions seemed designed more to deliberately irritate B.A.
177*** At the end of the episode in question, though, Murdock's psychiatrist is taken away by orderlies. He had gone mad and released all of his patients
178** In the Season 5 premiere episode, Murdock delivers a pair of hired goons, handcuffed, to General Hunt Stockwell -- who'd sent them after Murdock. Murdock says that their buddy will check in as well, once he checks out of the local emergency room. Stockwell smiles and says that the psychiatrist who diagnosed Murdock as insane should have his licences permanently revoked.
179** In season 5 he was declared sane. The issue of whether he was ever insane was intentionally blurry. It's best summed up by his answer to the question "are you OK?": "That has never been satisfactorily determined". He had some very lucid moments in that episode.
180* In the ''Series/{{Blackadder}} Goes Forth'' finale, Blackadder plans to try this to get out of the Big Push (putting his underwear on his head, sticking pencils up his nostrils, and answering every question with the nonsense word "wibble"), but [[DefiedTrope is forced to change his plans]] when he overhears General Melchett say [[DisproportionateRetribution he had to shoot an entire platoon for doing the very same thing (via the very same method)]]. Melchett walks in to find Blackadder mid-sentence: "... and the other thing they used to do in the Sudan was get dressed up like this and pretend to be mad." For further DramaticIrony, he tries to cash in a favor from General Douglas Haig himself to get out of the offensive [[HopeSpot and all Haig cares to provide is the advice to do that same thing Blackadder tried at the beginning before hanging up]]. As he later tells Baldrick just prior to [[DownerEnding going "over the top"]], it was bound to fail anyway:
181-->'''Blackadder:''' I mean, who would have noticed another madman 'round here?
182* In the first episode of ''Series/{{Bottom}}'', Eddie and Richie avoid incurring the wrath of a man whose wife they just hit on by pretending to be "mere loonies".
183* ''Series/TheBrokenwoodMysteries'': In one episode, a man living in a dementia care home turns out to have been exaggerating his senility, using his status as a dementia patient to escape suspicion about the threatening notes he was leaving at a man’s doorstep.
184* On ''Series/{{Bull}}'', Hazel Diaz has been a major drug lord for almost 30 years. She brilliantly acts in public like she's mentally ill, even talking to thin air and wild acts. Thus, any time she's arrested, her lawyer argues she's not fit for trial, she goes to a mental ward for a bit then back on the streets. When he's called in for her latest case, Bull is both impressed and amazed at how Diaz has been pulling this act off for so long (as he points out, she's showing ''too'' many symptoms to be real) and accepts the challenge of proving she's a fraud in court.
185* This is played with on ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}''. A witness in a cold case from 1978 really does believe that it is still TheSeventies and flies into rage whenever someone confronts him with the truth. After a hitman tries to kill the witness, Castle and Beckett decide that the only way to get the witness to open up is to have everyone pretend that it is 1978 and dress and act accordingly. However, the murder attempt actually shocked the witness back into reality and he quickly pieces together what really happened in 1978. He pretends to still be insane and plays along with the cops' charade so he can get close to the man he thinks killed his best friend in 1978.
186* In ''Series/ElChavoDelOcho'', Don Ramón decides to feign NapoleonDelusion so his his landlord wouldn't ask him for rent. He even anticipated him to expect this to be a ruse, so he started acting priveatly at his home (but with his windows wide open) knowing he would be seen eventually.
187* In Season 2 of ''Series/{{Community}}'', [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Abed]] is cornered by Chang when the study group invites a number of their classmates to a mixer to select a new member. When Chang demands to know why he wasn't invited, and refuses to believe Abed's excuses, Abed starts [[MadnessMantra repeating himself]] [[BrokenRecord like a glitching robot]] until Chang leaves. He then stops and mutters to himself, "Works every time." Given that this is [[AxCrazy Chang]] we're talking about, it's actually quite a feat to act crazy enough to make him uncomfortable.
188* ''Series/{{Devs}}'': Lily fakes a schizophrenic episode as part of a ploy with a friend to steal some security camera footage from her company. This comes back to bite her when the company follows up by giving her a mental health screening, forcing her to pretend to be schizophrenic to a licensed physician and thus putting her mental illness on record, giving the company deniability against any of her accusations.
189* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
190** The Doctor, particularly in his fourth and eleventh incarnations. He's very much of the genuinely a bit nutty variety — his eighth incarnation, in the [[Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels]], has difficulties remembering that TV is not RealLife and consequently runs the risk of being DrivenToSuicide by ''Series/EastEnders''. However, no matter just how capriciously, adorkably batty (or occasionally [[TheMentallyDisturbed twistedly, obsessively deranged]]) the Doctor is, there is always that moment when he goes ''deadly'' serious, and then you remember that this seemingly flighty alien is capable of bringing thousands of alien ships to a standstill, is responsible for multiple genocides and has saved countless billions of lives and — oh yes — ''the very fabric of the universe itself''. He doesn't look quite so [[KillerRabbit adorable]] now, does he?
191** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS15E6TheInvasionOfTime "The Invasion of Time"]]: The Doctor spends most of the plot acting like a manic, mood-swinging, power-crazy, {{Evil Laugh}}ing backstabbing tyrant, without even letting his companions in on what he's doing. Of course it's as part of a complicated BatmanGambit to save the Time Lords from an invasion (while also, hopefully, scaring them into drastically changing their political system — or at least [[EvilIsHammy getting a good time out of it]]).
192** The uncompleted story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS17E6Shada Shada]]" had a unique variant of the trope: [[spoiler:Salyavin]] does this to himself, where he locks away that part of his mind and pretends to be the harmless, slightly barmy [[spoiler:Professor Chronotis]].
193** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E12TheStolenEarth "The Stolen Earth"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E13JourneysEnd "Journey's End"]]: [[spoiler:Dalek Caan]] does this in order to prevent [[spoiler:the other]] Daleks and Davros from destroying the whole of creation. It is possible that he is still mad, [[spoiler:as he gives off most of the MadOracle tropes,]] but he is much more in control of his actions — and, for that matter, everyone else's — than anyone expects until it is too late for anyone to do anything about it.
194** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E2TheBeastBelow "The Beast Below"]]: The Doctor, having noticed something odd about Starship UK, grabs a glass of water off a table and puts it on the floor. He gives the following "excuse" to the people sitting at said table:
195--->"Sorry, checking all the water in this area. There's an escaped fish."
196* ''Series/ElleryQueen'': Lamont Franklin in "The Adventure of the Eccentric Engineer" appears to have gone senile, wanting to do nothing else but play with his electric trains all day. It's all an act; he's merely pretending to have gone crazy so that he can work on his revolutionary new invention in peace.
197* ''Series/{{Farscape}}''
198** Stark was pulling this off when John first met him. He was slightly off to begin with but played up his mental state to fool his captors. As the show progresses and the traumas pile up his genuine insanity becomes far worse than his initial pretense ever was.
199** Crichton is also on the brink of insanity, but except for the actual, uncontrollable consequences of Scorpius being inside his head, he's mostly faking insanity, and sometimes ''running with it.''[[note]]The time the crew was brainwashed by an insufferable jerk to hate each other, while they were all relatively fighting it, John decided to actually go insane and finish the quarrel, one way or another.[[/note]]
200*** Also worth noting is the time that he gatecrashed a summit between two rival empires both of which had previously [[MindRape mind-raped him]] and would like to try again. Then started dancing on the table. With a nuclear bomb strapped to his hip. The degree to which they decided to treat him as a dangerous lunatic just helped his plans.
201* The 2020 miniseries ''Series/TheHead'' involves several murders among the winter-over crew of an Antarctic research station. [[spoiler:A young woman who survived is suffering from Polar T3 syndrome, so the details have to be slowly coaxed out of her. When she gets on the helicopter to return home however, her hands stop trembling and we get TheReveal that she's actually the killer, though as she then hallucinates one of her victims it's left ambiguous as to whether she really did go crazy.]]
202* ''Series/{{Himmelsdalen}}'':
203** Enzo faked having sociopathy, thinking he'd get better treatment in a mental institution vs. prison. This ended up just [[GoneHorriblyWrong backfiring however]], as now he may never leave, and every attempt to prove he's not a sociopath has been taken as sociopathic manipulation.
204** Dr. Fisher turns out to have multiple "in beds" (psychiatrists undercover) within the patients. [[spoiler:"Margot", real name Jane Taylor, turns out to be one.]]
205* ''Series/JackOfAllTrades'' had King George act insane to throw off Napoleon.
206* Not exactly insanity, but in ''Series/JustShootMe'', Elliot's brother Donnie fakes being mentally handicapped to leech off everyone else.
207* In the ''Series/KraftSuspenseTheatre'' episode "That Time in Havana", artist Conrad Easter, an American living in UsefulNotes/{{Cuba}}, seems to be an [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]] {{Cloudcuckoolander}}. Actually, [[spoiler:he's working with a cell of anti-[[UsefulNotes/FidelCastro Castro]] guerrillas, and he convinces the protagonists to hand over their million dollar stash so the rebels can buy guns and feed their families.]]
208* ''Series/LawAndOrder'' played this for drama.
209** One person tried to get the InsanityDefense by acting like an actual insane person (voices in head, very erratic behavior, etc.) but wasn't able fool the prosecution's psychologist.
210** There's a ''Series/LawAndOrder'' episode that, of course, [[RippedFromTheHeadlines mixes this plot up with Henry Hill writing]] ''Film/GoodFellas''. A mob guy in Witness Protection is killed, and the Don who's supposedly responsible is currently in the grips of Alzheimer's. That is, until the prosecution discovers a passage in the mob guy's novel where said Don said that if he ever found himself prosecuted, he'd fake mental illness....
211* On one episode of ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'', Detective Goren faked insanity in order to go on an unauthorized investigation of a mental institution suspected of abusing its inmates. It works a little ''too'' well... not only does he become a victim of the abuse himself, but when he's finally busted out, the department responds by placing him on indefinite psychological leave, thinking he might not have been faking it.
212* ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'':
213** A defendant on ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'' almost got away with it, until they found the books that she had obtained just before her crime about the very disorder she was faking.
214** Stabler once pulled this in court, pretending that he was [[MushroomSamba high on mushroom vapors]] to stop a FalseConfession.
215** Munch also pulls this once, pretending to be a homeless madman in order to draw out a gang of thugs who attack the homeless.
216* ''Series/LegendOfTheSeeker'': Zeddicus Zul Zorander (Zed) is known as 'that crazy old guy who talks to his chickens'. As it turns out, he saved the Titular Hero's life as a baby, broke through a magical barrier, and brought him to a loving family. He's also a very powerful wizard.
217* A small one on ''Series/NCISLosAngeles'' when Kensi is searching for their suspect in a nightclub; as a beautiful woman, she sits at a bar and lets the men approach while her team checks them out behind the scenes. When she gets the word to cut them lose, this is the ploy she uses to scare them off. It's effective and she gets to keep the free drink.
218* Corporal Klinger of ''Series/{{MASH}}'' is all about this trope, spending the first six seasons of the series attempting to secure a Section 8 discharge through a variety of methods (most notably by [[DisguisedInDrag donning women's clothing]]).
219** The closest he came was by pretending to not be aware that he was in the Army or in Korea. Colonel Potter was filling out the discharge papers and Klinger still kept up the act... [[spoiler:Until Potter asked him his rank and he automatically replied "Corporal".]]
220--->'''Potter:''' ''(gleefully)'' GOTCHA!
221** Hawkeye pulls this in a bid to get an R&R pass to Tokyo in "Bananas, Crackers and Nuts".
222* It's debateable how much of this is deliberate, but Merlin from ''Series/{{Merlin 2008}}'' is known around the castle as "that weird manservant of Arthur's who isn't quite right in the head" and to most of the cast is a complete {{Cloudcuckoolander}}. In reality, he's not even an IneptMage, and is in fact smarter than most of the rest of the cast combined.
223* ''Series/MidsomerMurders'': In "[[Recap/MidsomerMurdersS11E7 Talking to the Dead]]", the murderer pretends to have gone gibberingly mad; having been driven into a dissociative state by something he encountered in the woods. His act is very convincing, and it takes Barnaby some time to rumble him. By the end of the episode (after the murderer confesses), Barnaby starts to think he may no longer be acting and may be genuinely going mad.
224* In ''Series/NedsDeclassifiedSchoolSurvivalGuide'': In the "Bullies" episode, Gordy advises Ned to act crazy so Loomer will be too scared to beat him up. It works to a degree; Loomer isn't scared, but too weirded out to beat Ned up.
225* Dave on ''Series/NewsRadio'' feigns insanity whenever he wants Matthew out of his hair. He then passes the tip on to Lisa, who passes it on to Beth, who tells Matthew, who wonders if anyone's ever done it to him.
226* ''Series/TheOfficeUS'' used this in the episode "Murder", [[FridgeLogic calling into question]] Michael's characterization for much of the series. In season 6, the office is being co-managed by [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Michael]] and [[OnlySaneMan Jim]]. When rumors spread that the company is about to go bankrupt, the workers begin to panic that they will lose their jobs. Jim's solution is to insist that everyone just keep working and not worry. Michael's is to drag everyone into a murder mystery role-playing game. As the news worsens, Jim gets more aggravated, and Michael tries more desperately to keep the game going. Eventually, Michael seems unable to break character, leading the others to fear that he's snapped. But after Jim ends up being the only one to know just how bad the situation is, the episode ends with these [[ConfessionCam confessionals]]:
227-->'''Jim:''' I think today was a good day to have two managers, because if you're a family stuck on a lifeboat in the middle of the ocean, one parent might want to just keep rowing. But if the other parent wants to play a game, it's not because they're crazy. It's because they're doing it for the kids, and I get that now.\
228'''Michael:''' [in character] There has been a lot of murder, and a lot of intrigue. My little heart can barely take it no more. [breaking character] Today is the hardest I have worked in a long, long time.
229* On ''Series/OrangeIsTheNewBlack'', Piper assumes that fellow inmate Flores is crazy because every day she goes to the bathroom and has animated conversations with "Diablo". [[spoiler: It turns that "Diablo" is her boyfriend and she is talking to him with a contraband cell phone.]]
230* William Giles in ''Series/{{Oz}}'' really did have Alzheimer's, but was more lucid than he let on. When asked to choose his method of execution he requested to be stoned to death, knowing that his execution would be stalled by lawsuits from outraged civil rights groups and he would likely die of old age before it could be carried out.
231* Jarod feigned insanity in an episode of ''Series/ThePretender'' in order to get himself thrown in the loony bin as part of his plan to bring down the villain of the week.
232* In ''Series/{{Psych}}'' episode "Shawn Interrupted", Lassiter ''thinks'' a suspect he arrested is doing this to serve his sentence in a mental hospital instead of prison, but Shawn figures out that not only is the man genuinely insane, he didn't commit the murder in the first place.
233* ''Series/{{Rome}}''. [[BrainlessBeauty Jocasta]] mentions doing this as a response to Cleopatra's GodSaveUsFromTheQueen moments. Given that she's something of a TalkativeLoon (especially during that scene) there's no doubt that she could pull off the deception brilliantly.
234* Helen Magnus pulls this in the ''Series/{{Sanctuary}}'' episode "Veritas" by actually making herself a bit crazy with the aid of some AppliedPhlebotinum.
235* In the mini-series ''Shogun'' (based on the [[Literature/AsianSaga novel by James Clavell]]), Toranaga is being smuggled out of his castle in a litter. Someone gets suspicious and goes to look inside, so Blackthorne pretends to suffer a fit of madness [[WeNeedADistraction as a distraction]], which nearly gets him killed but is ultimately successful.
236* ''Series/TheSopranos'':
237** Old mafia widow Livia Soprano engineers a hit on her son Tony, and though she is definitely somewhat senile, it's heavily implied that she's playing it up to give herself some plausible deniability after the plan fails.
238** When Uncle Junior getting a concussion after a nasty fall that leaves him mentally dazed for a day, Tony concocts a scheme to play up Junior's senility as advanced dementia, to get his court case dropped due to no longer being fit to stand trial. Junior is happy to play along, but later on he gets dementia for real...
239* ''Series/SpartacusVengeance'' has a tricky one, since Lucretia often appears insane to the viewers, but to the Romans she appears perfectly sane. [[spoiler:She's faking the whole thing to get vengeance on Ilithyia. But she is at least a little crazy]].
240* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': in "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E2TheEnterpriseIncident The Enterprise Incident]]", Kirk pretends to be insane so that when he orders the Enterprise to cross the Neutral Zone, if everything on the mission goes to hell, Starfleet [[PlausibleDeniability won't be blamed]] because it was clearly the action of a madman.
241* A season 5 episode of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' has Sam and Dean break into an insane asylum by [[SarcasticConfession telling their life story]].
242* Lord John Marbury in ''Series/TheWestWing'', although it's unclear whether he's this trope played straight or a {{Cloudcuckoolander}} who pretends to be even crazier than he actually is.
243* Mulder of ''Series/TheXFiles'', thought to be brilliant but insane by his peers for his belief in the paranormal, tends to react this way when confronted by his closed minded colleagues. For example, in "Squeeze":
244-->'''Agent:''' So, Mulder, whaddaya think? This look like the work of little green men? \
245'''Mulder:''' Gray.\
246'''Agent:''' What?\
247'''Mulder:''' Gray. You said "green men". A Reticulian's skin tone is gray. They're notorious for their extraction of terrestrial human livers, due to iron depletion in the Reticulum galaxy. \
248'''Agent:''' You can't be serious.\
249'''Mulder:''' Do you know how much liver and onions go for on Reticulum?
250** He explains in the same episode that he runs into so many hostile people who can't open their minds to extreme possibilities that he can't resist messing with their heads, even if it means they think he's insane.
251[[/folder]]
252
253[[folder:Manhua]]
254* In ''Manhua/GoddessCreationSystem'' [[spoiler:crown prince Jun'er]] pretends to have gone mad [[spoiler:after his uncle's coup]]. He pretends to mistake rainwater in a jug for wine and dances on rooftops until someone says the magic words: [[spoiler:Mentioning Xiaxi.]]
255[[/folder]]
256
257[[folder:Music]]
258* In Arlo Guthrie's "Music/AlicesRestaurant", he describes attempting this during his UsefulNotes/VietnamWar draft registration.
259-->"I went up there, I said, 'Shrink, I wanna kill. I mean, I wanna kill. Kill. I wanna see blood and gore and guts and veins in my teeth. Eat dead, burnt bodies. I mean, kill. Kill. KILL! KILL!' And I started jumpin' up and down, yellin', 'KILLLL! KILLLL!' And he started jumpin' up and down with me, and we was both jumpin' up and down, yellin' 'KILLLL! KILLLL!' And the sergeant came over, pinned a medal on me, sent me down the hall, and said, '[[SpringtimeForHitler You're our boy]].'"
260* "Mad John", from Music/TheSmallFaces album Music/OgdensNutGoneFlake.
261--> ''There was an old man who lived in the greenwood''
262--> ''Nobody knew him or what he had done''
263--> ''But mothers would say to their children beware of Mad John.''
264--> ''John would sing with the birds in the morning''
265--> ''Laugh with the wind in the cold end of night''
266--> ''But people from behind their curtains, said he's not quite right.''
267[[/folder]]
268
269[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
270* According to ''Literature/TheTrojanCycle'', [[Myth/GreekMythology Odysseus]] really did not want to go to war in Troy, and attempted to invoke this trope by sowing and ploughing his fields with salt. Palamedes saw right through the ploy and tested Odysseus by putting his newborn son Telemachus in the plough's path; when Odysseus swerved to avoid him, it proved that he was perfectly sane. [[Literature/TheOdyssey Considering what happens to him afterwards, though]]... The worst part is that in some versions, ''he'' gave Menelaus the idea and authority to draft everyone else should Helen be abducted.
271* In ''Literature/TheBible'':
272** David (of David and Goliath fame) was forced to flee (from Saul) into exile at the court of the [[OhCrap King of Gath]] ([[DavidVersusGoliath Goliath's]] hometown), who happened to be an enemy of Israel. When the King of Gath recognizes him as an anti-Philistine guerrilla warrior, David pretended to be a raving madman, causing the king to think him harmless.
273** Several Hebrew prophets were instructed by God to act in seemingly crazy ways to illustrate various parables. [[Literature/BookOfIsaiah Isaiah]] walked barefoot and half-naked for three years to symbolize the Israelites' coming captivity; [[Literature/BookOfEzekiel Ezekiel]] lay on a stone to represent the captivity of Jerusalem; [[Literature/BookOfHosea Hosea]] married a prostitute to symbolize God's love for faithless Israel.
274** In the New Testament ''Literature/BookOfCorinthians'', the apostle Paul mentions "foolishness for Christ" on several occasions:
275--> "We are fools for Christ's sake, but ye are wise in Christ; we are weak, but ye are strong; ye are honourable, but we are despised." (1 Corithians 4:10 KJV).
276* The "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foolishness_for_Christ Holy Fool]]" or ''yurodivy'' in Orthodox Christian tradition is a figure who acts insane in public to preserve his humility while providing a cover for secretly doing good works. They are known to go around half-naked, homeless, and speaking in riddles, often acting wild and disruptive, and only doing charity or working miracles out of public view. Similarly to a CourtJester, their feigned insanity can also [[MirthToPower let them get away with making social commentary]] that would get other people in trouble. Famous examples include [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simeon_the_Holy_Fool St. Simeon of Emesa]] (the PatronSaint of holy fools), Brother Juniper (an early follower of St. Francis) and St. Basil Fool for Christ (who is so revered in Russian Orthodoxy that the iconic [[UsefulNotes/{{Moscow}} St. Basil's Cathedral]] is named for him).
277** One story tells of a monk who tells his abbott that he would like to become a Holy Fool, but by this time enough people know that Holy Fools are only feigning their insanity, so they look down on them as self-righteous fakers. The abbott ponders this and then advises the monk to go ahead and become a Holy Fool anyway, since being condemned as a self-righteous faker when you're not is just as good a way to cultivate humility.
278[[/folder]]
279
280[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
281* Pro wrestler Wrestling/BrianPillman is a prime example of this. He developed his "[[WildCard Loose Cannon]]" gimmick of behaving incredibly erratically, not just at shows, but everywhere he could, to make people genuinely believe he was a nut, in order to get WCW, the company he was working for, to "fire him for real" (as in, send him a real release for a fake firing), which he immediately signed and jumped ship. As his body was deteriorating, particularly his ankle due to a car crash in 1996, it was a way to keep himself on TV in [[{{Wrestling/ECW}} ECW]] and [[{{Wrestling/WWE}} WWE]] without him having to wrestle. Before his death, he only let a handful of people he truly respected in on how deep into character he was, and not actually insane.
282[[/folder]]
283
284[[folder:Radio]]
285* ''Radio/BleakExpectations:'' At the end of series one, Agnes Bin reveals at least some of her grief induced madness has been an act, mainly to stop Mr. Benevolent forcibly marrying her. As to why she never told her son this when they were alone together... well, it's a comedy.
286* ''Radio/HowGreenWasMyCactus'' had treasurer Paul Bearer wearing a chicken on his head as a means of deflecting questions about the economy. While he was wearing a chicken on his head, not a single person thought to ask him a question about the economy.
287[[/folder]]
288
289[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
290* ''TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade'': Clan Malkavian uses two different levels of this.
291** First, all Malkavians are innately insane, but most of them also have psychic visions of the future. But those who do obscure their visions by acting so crazy that only their allies who are in the know would trust any of their rantings.
292** Secondly, the majority of them exaggerate the degree of their crazy -- for example, a Malk with mild hallucinations will pretend to be wildly schizophrenic. This is so that their fellow vampires won't take them seriously or see them as a threat until they suddenly turn incredibly calm and lucid. The only vampires who have caught onto the Malkavians' Obfuscating Insanity are those of Clan Tremere, and the Malkavians are aware of that.
293-->"They. Are on. To us."
294** ''Players'' of Malkavians also exploit this since people are less likely to expect you to account for your actions if you're playing a Malkavian, which can make for a smoother gaming experience. Bad players doing so can gain reputations as {{Cloudcuckoolander}}s.
295[[/folder]]
296
297[[folder:Theatre]]
298* The title character of ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}''. Among his tactics were [[OpinionFlipflop absurd self-contradictions]], irrational and sudden tirades, and [[ObfuscatingStupidity general oddness]]. ''How much'' of his insanity is simulated, is the [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation subject of some debate]].
299* Hamlet's predecessor Amlaeth is much less ambiguous, largely because the Norse audience of the saga were fully aware that the insane were regarded with superstitious respect and nobody dared kill them and had no problem with a man on a quest for revenge succeeding in his plan and living happily ever after. Shakespeare either did not understand why Amlaeth's plan actually is a clever way to avoid being killed and needed to rewrite the ending into a tragedy, and so wrote Hamlet as much more of an erratic idiot, or understood perfectly well, but understood that for an audience that did not have a superstitious dread of the insane, the story would be much more powerful and affecting if it were more ambiguous as to whether Hamlet were insane.
300* Titus in ''Theatre/TitusAndronicus''. Knowing that he's having a sanity slippage, his enemies, the Roman Queen and her two sons, dress up as spirits and pretend to make a deal with him so he would think it's for his benefits. He comes out and interacts with them quite cordially... aaaaaaand captures the two sons. He was insane but he wasn't fooled one bit.
301* Edgar's masquerade as "Tom O'Bedlam" in ''Theatre/KingLear''.
302* After first meeting Freddie in ''Theatre/{{Chess}}'', Molokov decides that he must be insane, and therefore easy to beat, but Anatoly thinks he's trying to pull this trope: "That's the problem -- he's a ''brilliant'' lunatic, and you can't tell which way he'll jump. You can't dissect him, predict him... which of course means he's not a lunatic at all." It turns out that Freddie is [[DysfunctionJunction just as screwed-up as all the other characters are]], if not moreso.
303* Petruchio from ''Theatre/TheTamingOfTheShrew'', already somewhat eccentric, puts everyone under the impression that he's stark staring mad as part of his plot to tame Katherina.
304[[/folder]]
305
306[[folder:Video Games]]
307* [[spoiler:The Infohut Guy]] from ''VideoGame/DeadlyRoomsOfDeath'' acts like his mind has snapped, (which is something you can't really blame him for) but he certainly knows what's what. Case in point, [[spoiler:when Beethro asks how to get to the bottom of a three-mile-deep pit, Infohut guy implies jumping in. When Beethro tries to put it bluntly, Infohut guy calls Beethro out on how stupid the idea is and shows him a three-mile rope]]. It's pretty likely that he doesn't do this on purpose.
308* Ormus the mad mage in ''Videogame/DiabloII'' is a ThirdPersonPerson who speaks almost entirely in obtuse riddles, and is strongly implied to be a lot smarter than he wants people to think he is.
309* Similarly, Covetous Shen in ''Videogame/DiabloIII'' tends to wander off into old-man ramblings, repeatedly gets lost in underground sewers, and frequently talks about nonsensical tangents, to the point that the Nephalem eventually either dismisses the conversation or gives up on the whole thing. It does a good job of hiding the fact that [[spoiler: he's actually a minor god who knows far, far more than he lets on.]]
310* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls''
311** Sheogorath, the [[OurGodsAreDifferent Daedric Prince]] of [[MadGod Madness]], is ''definitely'' insane. There is no denying that. But since he consistently seems to be [[XanatosSpeedChess ten steps ahead]] of everyone else, it's likely that Sheogorath plays up his madness to hide the fact he's ''far'' more on the ball than he lets on. Further, After the [[spoiler:[[PlayerCharacter Champion of Cyrodiil]]]] [[AGodIsYou assumes the mantle]] of Sheogorath, it raises the question if his behavior in ''Skyrim'' is due to [[BecomingTheMask inheriting the mantle]] of Sheogorath, or if it's merely [[BeneathTheMask an affectation]] for when he deals with mortals.
312** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', Jarl Idgrod Ravencrone of Morthal is "gifted" with premonition, and some people think she's crazy. She doesn't give the [[PlayerCharacter Dragonborn]] the impression that she is, however, she does give the impression that she is no stranger to faking her visions, coupled with the fact that she's old, and "an old woman can get away with anything", she's the perfect person to arrange a distraction [[spoiler: at the [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Thalmor]] embassy party]].
313* ''VideoGame/FarCry3'' has an interesting variation of this trope explained to Jason (our protagonist) by the main villain Vaas near the middle of the game. Vaas explains in a rather eloquent fashion that insanity is defined as repetitious cycles of behavior done with the expectation that a different result will come from it. When he first heard that he thought it was "bullshit" and even shot the guy who told him that. Actually taking time to look at people around him, Vaas realized that insanity is the norm for humanity because people really do have everyday moments of insanity that they don't even realize that they commit, so in actual fact Obfuscating Sanity is the fake persona because [[HumanityIsInsane deep down everyone is insane in some way]]. A major theme of the story is the idea that men being left to their own devices without civilization to bog them down will become immoral animals and do whatever they want. [[WordOfGod It is explicitly pointed out by the developers]] that Vaas is supposed to unsettle us because it makes us wonder if it's true that we might become something vile like him if we were left to our devices.
314* In ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'', Berserker Eric Bloodaxe is apparently only pretending to be an insane ScreamingWarrior to avoid conversation, out of faithfulness/[[ClingyJealousGirl fear]] to his wife. Since it's [[MythologyGag normal for Berserkers to be insane and unintelligible anyway]], nobody ever questions it.
315* Played with in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX''. No one believes that Tidus is really from 1000 years in the past; they think he is suffering the effects of exposure to Sin's toxin. Rather than try to get people to believe his story, Tidus goes along with this explanation, though he often forgets his cover and blurts out the truth.
316* Some people believe that [[AxCrazy Trevor]], one of the protagonists in ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoV'', does this. While he is not exactly sane, he just might be faking some of the craziest actions we see; most notably, during a meeting, he eats some stew (presumably) made from people, yet vomits it back out after everybody has left, indicating that he did it to intimidate. Additionally, while his text messages to other protagonists are badly written, his messages to his right-hand man Ron are much better written.
317* In ''[[VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic Heroes Chronicles]]''' Dungeon campaign, [[TheHero Tarnum]] occasionally uses this to prevent his AlwaysChaoticEvil servants from figuring out he's actually a ''good'' guy.
318* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'', it certainly appears that Anju's grandmother is quite senile, mistaking both you and Anju for Anju's ''father'', as well as mistaking you for Kafei's father if you wear the Kafei Mask. However, if you read her diary, you find out that she's faking it in order to get out of having to eat Anju's [[LethalChef terrible cooking]]. The facade slips briefly during a conversation in the first day when she sighs in relief that Anju has bought her act, [[VerbalBackspace and immediately backtracks]] before Anju can catch on.
319* ''VideoGame/LikeADragon'': Goro Majima, [[RedBaron the Mad Dog of Shimano]], presents himself as a cackling madman [[HairTriggerTemper ready and able to go nuts]] on friend or foe at a moments notice, but later developments establish this is a façade he uses to keep himself from being under anyone's thumb but his own, and [[BeneathTheMask his exterior hides a remarkably intelligent and deep person within]]. Truly, Majima is a calculating and savvy man: he helped turn two failing clubs in the 80s into the biggest moneymakers in Sotenbori in ''VideoGame/Yakuza0'', outmaneuvered an attempt by Terada to put a YesMan in the captain's seat in his side campaign in ''VideoGame/YakuzaKiwami2'' through using the man's own rules against him, and even managed to run a successful and productive construction company without having any construction experience whatsoever, building one of the largest buildings in the entire city. [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness When he drops the façade completely]], it's always a sign that [[TranquilFury something has gone]] ''[[TranquilFury very]]'' [[TranquilFury wrong]] (and the bad guys [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge are in for a world of hurt]]).
320* [[spoiler:Falitza]] from ''VideoGame/TheReconstruction'' fits this trope to the T. She allegedly destroyed her mind by "[[ThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow peering into the unknown]]", but it was all because [[spoiler:she was sick of being "little miss perfect" all the time.]]
321* ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic'': It's difficult to tell if the Sith classes (particularly the formerly enslaved Inquisitor) are genuinely cracked in the head or playing it up to {{Troll}} their many enemies.
322* In ''VideoGame/TearsToTiara2'' As [[TheHero Hamil]] is being taken over by [[WarGod Mel]][[AxCrazy qart's]] BloodLust, he pretends that he's already taken over so that Tart would kill him before he's taken over and kills her. She sees through it right away and chooses to be eaten alive rather than kill him. This prompts him to try to kill himself instead.
323[[/folder]]
324
325[[folder:Visual Novels]]
326* [[spoiler: Yanni Yogi]] from ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorney'' did this, but having to keep the act up for so long [[spoiler:particularly losing his wife to suicide as a consequence]] strained him immensely and [[spoiler:he eventually snapped]].
327* Anghel Higure from ''VisualNovel/HatofulBoyfriend'' actually does suffer from hallucinations of an alternate reality along the lines of a (terribly cheesy) fantasy manga, but the Legumentine's encounter does leave the player character wondering how much of it he's faking to avoid embarrassing himself in front of peers. He also inverts this trope by carefully (and effectively) feigning sanity to his mother.
328* In the novella for ''VisualNovel/SpiritHunterNG'', Yasuko is fully aware that the children and fetuses she steals from the hospital aren't hers, but she pretends to delusionally believe it so that the police's judgement of her will be less severe.
329[[/folder]]
330
331[[folder:WebAnimation]]
332* ''WebAnimation/EtraChanSawIt'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvNa44OLSKs Hiiragi]] manages to save Tsutsuji from Akamatsu and Tachibana by taking out a knife [[spoiler: and stabbing his own hand while laughing like a maniac. After they run away, he reveals it's just a trick knife and that he covered his hand in fake blood.]]
333* The GrandFinale of Season 1 of ''WebAnimation/InanimateInsanity'' reveals that [[spoiler:Taco]] had been completely lucid the entire time. And she deliberately pretended to be a babbling loon just so she would be regarded as TooQuirkyToLose.
334* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': Tyrian Callows is an AxCrazy, serial killing BloodKnight under the personal employ of [[BigBad Salem]]. Despite his evidently blood-thirsty nature, he's repeatedly shown to be far more cunning (by disguising [[spoiler:his venomous scorpion tail]] as a belt before requiring it in combat), manipulative (as seen when he [[spoiler:goads Qrow into pulling an EnemyMine against Clover]], resulting in the latter's death), and perceptive (by tearing apart [[spoiler:Mercury]]'s reasons for working for the BigBad) than he seems on the surface.
335[[/folder]]
336
337[[folder:Webcomics]]
338* ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'': [[http://wiki.drowtales.com/index.php/Mel%27arnach_Val%27Sarghress Mel'arnach]] may be a [[CrazyCatLady crazy spider lady]] and notorious lesbian, but she is NOT nearly as AxeCrazy as her reputation suggests. The fact that [[spoiler:she's actually the protagonist Ariel's biological mother]] and the later revelation that this is an act specifically so she'll be left alone is part of the overall reveal that she's one of the most complicated characters in the entire story.
339* ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick''
340** Lord Shojo, ruler of Azure City, deliberately pretends to be senile so that his enemies don't try and assassinate him. If he does what they want, they assume that they manipulated him, while if he doesn't do what they want, they assume that he is being manipulated by one of their enemies. He also uses this so that his paladins don't get suspicious if he takes actions that would break the Sapphire Guard's restrictive code of honor if people thought he was making them lucidly. His legal adviser, Mr. Scruffy, is [[RightHandCat an ordinary housecat]].
341** In the Stick Tale [[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} "The Tragedy of Greenhilt, Prince of Denmark"]], Prince Greenhilt (Hamlet, played by Roy) and Shojonius (Polonius, played by Shojo) both pretend to be crazy. Gets a big lampshade after Greenhilt kills Shojonius.
342* Ed from ''Webcomic/{{Paranatural}}'' [[http://paranatural.net/index.php?id=190 hints at this]] - to cover up his ability to see ghosts, he pretends to be even more of a goofy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} than he actually is.
343* ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'': In "Mohkadun", Gwynn gets her mind magically switched into the body of Queen Siphaniana of Mohkadun in the far past. Not even knowing the local language, she's thought to be insane at first, and as she learns the language and figures out what's going on, she continues to feign insanity to the king with the help of Elder Soco who was given the task of healing her, because she doesn't want to either play the part of the king's wife or to be beheaded for not being her.
344* In ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'' Cutter [[spoiler: secretly the [[MadScientist Black Tongue]] Delicieu]] hides beneath the mask of a whimsical rhyming lizard an equally crazy but far more calculating and controlled personality.
345* In [[http://wapsisquare.com/comic/it-went-phbbbbbb/ one strip]] of ''Webcomic/WapsiSquare'', Bud uses this method to keep police officers from asking questions about a loud boom and flash of light. It was actually caused when she threw an object into the sun.
346[[/folder]]
347
348[[folder:Web Original]]
349* In ''WebVideo/KateModern: The Last Work'', [[spoiler:Joseph]] does this to fool Gavin into thinking he's harmless.
350* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': Dr. Clef is unable to be photographed, gives his name as a chord on a ukelele (making him a [[{{Pun}} habitual lyre]]) and is perhaps most adequately described in an interview where he freaked out the psychiatrist. He's also a senior agent and a MagnificentBastard, so don't mess with him. He also sometimes claims to be TheDevil -- though immediately proceeds to go over the top until this is dismissed completely--and has just enough of suspicious incidents to make this hypothesis plausible.
351* Music/DoctorSteel: "Hello, my name is Dr. Phineas Waldolf Steel and I'm crazy. At least that's what they tell me. It's a real load off of my mind, too. I mean, you can get away with pretty much anything if you're bonkers. It really relieves a lot of pressure and responsibility for me."
352* ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest'': When she first appears on the island, Liz Polanski's first actions are to make herself appear as AxCrazy as possible to ward off potential attackers. How does she do this? By, among other things, smearing her face with make-up and severing the head off one of her classmates' corpse and [[AlasPoorYorick carrying it around for a while]].
353* In the ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'', there are a few cases of this. Generator intentionally plays up the crazy aspect, wearing both a pacifist and ultraviolent armband, and coming up with insane (yet workable) plans like Radioactive Condor Girl. In the Bad Seeds, though, one has Cheese, someone who plays up the utter lunatic aspect to its full extent. GenreSavvy as most of the Seeds are, though, [[SubvertedTrope the smarter ones are absolutely terrified of him.]]
354* David Thorne, faced with $82 of late fees for some [=DVDs=], [[http://www.27bslash6.com/blockbuster.html rambles them down to a replacement fee]]. [[spoiler:And then immediately finds them without dropping the act, so he'll drop them off later and call it even.]]
355* ''WebAnimation/{{Dreamscape}}'': Ethan acts like a total loon...''acts''. Its all to unnerve others.
356-->'''Dylan:''' But how the hell did you-! Wait...are you FROM that parallel universe?!\
357'''Ethan:''' AHAHAHAHA! BINGO! You got it! Now I know why my sister enjoys toying with you so much, perhaps I WONT outright kill you after all!
358** His sister, Curien, is the same.
359-->'''Curien''': Ahahahahahaha! Oh this'll be FUN!
360[[/folder]]
361
362[[folder:Western Animation]]
363* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender''
364** [[spoiler: Iroh]] pretends to go insane when he's imprisoned, to a rather disturbing effect. He does drop the act for one particularly friendly, kind guard - but when nobody's looking, he's actually [[spoiler: [[TookALevelInBadass bulking up]] to prepare for his escape.]]
365** King Bumi, on the other hand, is exactly as insane as he appears. It's just that he is [[BunnyEarsLawyer also as competent as he is crazy.]]
366* [[VillainousHarlequin Harley Quinn]] from ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries''. Sure she's [[CloudCuckooLander nutty]] but when she needs to turn serious and act sane and competent, such as to impersonate a lawyer to bust a criminal out of jail early, slip undetected into a high security museum to steal a $10 million diamond, or to fake a HeelFaceTurn to lure Batman into a trap ([[spoiler:he ''falls for it'', by the way]]), she doesn't seem so looney. It's also worth pointing out that she was a criminal psychologist before, as Robin put it, "she went bonkers".
367* ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'': The episode “Bill-iever” is about Cricket trying to convince Bill that aliens are real so that he won’t get blamed for destroying his garden. At first, it doesn’t work. Eventually, Cricket poses as an alien in front of Bill, and this seems to have done the trick. Now, Bill is acting incredibly crazy, as he is wearing nothing but his underwear and a TinfoilHat, climbs his roof and repeatedly shouts how aliens are real. Eventually, not wanting his father to be humiliated, Cricket admits that he destroyed the garden. Bill, however, reveals that he knew that the “alien” was Cricket the whole time, and he intentionally humiliated himself so that he would admit to what he did.
368* Van Kleiss from ''WesternAnimation/GeneratorRex'' pretends to go insane after being forced to work for Black Knight to retrieve the remaining Meta-Nanites. [[spoiler: Turns out he was faking his insanity to gain all the power for himself all along.]]
369-->'''Rex:''' I knew he wasn't crazy!\
370''everyone else looks at him''\
371'''Rex:''' Okay, [[spoiler:he's crazy]], but not [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} that kind]] of crazy.
372* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/DrawnTogether'' states ([[CrowdSong in song, no less]]) that this is the case for ''every single Alzheimer's patient''. They fake a mental illness so that they're free to do whatever they want when the orderlies aren't around, which works out just fine for Toot until she blabs the secret to the rest of the cast. Although the cast doesn't believe her because they still think she has Alzheimer's, but the other patients decide to kill her anyway.
373* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' episode "Insane In the Mainframe" sees both Bender and Fry being sent to "[[BedlamHouse The HAL Institute for Criminally Insane Robots]]" after a successful InsanityDefense (the human asylums being overcrowded after poverty was declared a mental illness). While Fry [[SanitySlippage slowly goes insane]] in this environment, Bender enjoys it and happily fakes insanity.
374-->'''Bender:''' ''[[NapoleonDelusion Je suis Napoleon!]]'' Heh heh heh heh. No, seriously, I'm not.
375* ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls''. Subverted, with Old Man [=McGucket=], the resident toon loony. Dipper thought [[spoiler:after discovering a possible link between him and the Journals]] that his insanity was an act. In reality, it was genuine [[spoiler:''and'' largely self-inflicted after [[TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow witnessing something terrible]] while working with the author, and subsequently trying to erase his memory, causing brain damage. After the Society of the Blind Eye is shut down and his memories are returned to him, it's played straight. He keeps up the kook facade even though he's regained enough of his sanity to speak seriously if he needs to]].
376* Lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold''. Arnold does this to avoid a fight with Harold. He tells him that he's crazy and that he shouldn't hit a crazy person.
377* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'': In ''WesternAnimation/HareBrush'', Elmer Fudd apparently thinks he's a rabbit, while Bugs Bunny (who'd been lured into taking his place in the asylum) is "cured" to think that he's Elmer Fudd. The cartoon ends with Bugs-as-Elmer being hauled off to face tax evasion charges, after which Elmer-as-rabbit [[AsideComment tells the audience]], "I may be a screwy wabbit... but ''I'm'' not going to Alcatwaz!"
378* ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'': In "Commuted Sentence", a postal worker on a crowded subway car says he's feeling [[GoingPostal disgruntled.]] The other passengers immediately clear out, only for the postal worker to start swinging around since he wanted space.
379* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. One episode has Homer befriending an obese, white mental patient who claims he's Music/MichaelJackson and talks and acts like him. At the end of the episode, he reveals his name is actually Leon Kompowsky, he's perfectly sane, and he just does the impersonation of Jackson because people enjoy it. Leon's speaking voice was actually performed by Michael Jackson credited as "John Jay Smith" for contractual reasons, with Kipp Lennon providing his singing voice, and Creator/HankAzaria as his normal voice.
380* Subverted with Screwy Squirrel. He breaks out of an asylum then brings watchdog Meathead out. He asks Meathead if he's the one in charge of chasing all the wacky squirrels that break out. When Meathead says "yes," Screwy replies, "Well, you better chase me, chum! I'm nuttier than a fruitcake!"
381* ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'': The Green Goblin is initially presented as a LaughingMad {{Cloudcuckoolander}} villain but proves to actually be TheChessmaster. This is because his true identity is [[spoiler:the very sane CorruptCorporateExecutive Norman Osborn, who drops the Goblin's quirky mannerisms and voice when finally unmasked]].
382* In season 4 of ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'', General Trayster tells Hunter Gathers that his office is trashed because he's been turning into a Hulk following gamma ray therapy for his cancer. [[spoiler:In truth he's well aware that agents Carholder and Doe are trying to {{gaslight|ing}} him into thinking this so that the government will think him insane and remove him from OSI leadership, leaving them both in charge. He's been manipulating events so that Gathers will take his place once Doe and Cardholder get exposed as moles.]]
383[[/folder]]
384
385[[folder:Real Life]]
386* UsefulNotes/RichardFeynman, at least according to his [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surely_You%27re_Joking,_Mr._Feynman! autobiography]]. Well, he was first diagnosed as "mentally defective" by an army psych, then decided to play along a little. Not that this opinion wasn't mutual -- he would have a good chance to be elected as the PatronSaint of "HardOnSoftScience" movement.
387* According to at least one history book, a descendant of Sun Zi (Sun Bin) was arrested and imprisoned because of a jealous rival (Pang Juan) and feigned insanity, eventually to the point of faking his own death [[note]]However, Sun Bin did not escape unscathed. See that "Bin" in his name? It's actaully a term used to describe torture involving the removal of the kneecaps.[[/note]].
388* Another assassin in approximately the same era also feigned insanity to get close to his target. (He got called on his bluff and didn't make it.)
389* Some animal species hunt by jumping around like crazy to confuse and distract their prey, slowly getting closer to them as they jump around until they can strike. Weasels and some foxes do this.
390* Creator/LewisBlack invoked this trope in his special "Red, White, and Screwed" on how to deal with terrorism. Paraphrasing: "The only way to defend against crazies is to scare them by acting crazier than them. I should know: we New Yorkers do it all the time." His solution to out-crazy Islamo-terrorists? [[RefugeInAudacity Elect a dead President]]: preferably UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan.
391* Elizabeth Van Lew, a Union spy during the American Civil War who acted like a crazy homeless person so that the Confederates would leave her alone.
392* There's a a theory about why UsefulNotes/UlyssesSGrant didn't object too much to people slandering him as a drunken bum--sometimes the reputation caused people to underestimate him, and he may have used this to his advantage.
393* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Bianchi Kenneth Bianchi]], one of the Hillside Stranglers (the other was his cousin, Angelo Buono), tried faking multiple personality disorder to get out of standing trial for his crimes. It didn't work. A ''doctor'' believed he was the genuine article, but a real multiple (the famous "Eve") spotted him as a phony.
394* More than one prisoner-of-war has attempted an escape by means of faking insanity; P. R. Reid's book ''The Colditz Story'' tells of one officer whose acting was so flawless that Reid's successor as "Escape Officer" ''did not believe him'' when Reid reported the attempt-in-progress. (This may have been the inspiration behind an episode of ''Series/{{Colditz}}'' depicting such an attempt; according to Reid, the officer in question was never repatriated and eventually gave up the ruse.)
395* Even before he was the [[UsefulNotes/TheMafia boss of the Genovese family]] from 1981 to 2005, Vincent "the Chin" Gigante exploited this and the WanderingWalkOfMadness tropes by feigning insanity to stymie any indictment[[note]]other methods included using front bosses to hide his true role, rarely leaving his home unoccupied, and ordering other mafiosi not to mention his name as he feared his name could be caught on bugs. Instead, they were to rub their chins, [[SpeakOfTheDevil use codenames like "this guy" or "Aunt Julia,"]] or make a "C" shape when referencing him[[/note]]. Among other things, he jaywalked around Greenwich Village by dressing shabbily, mumbling gibberish, and urinating in public. It actually worked for many years up until other mobsters stated that the whole thing was a hoax. With the cat now out of the bag, Gigante finally admitted it was faked.
396* Creator/AlanMoore:
397** He allegedly wrote up false reports of himself being a child murderer and other horrible things, then sent them to magazines under a fake name so people would think he's insane and won't approach him if they encounter him in public. Creator/RobLiefeld, on the other hand, thinks that Alan is doing this ''all the time''.
398** And then there was Alan's 50th birthday where, instead of boring his friends by going through a midlife crisis, Alan decided to go completely mad and declare himself to be a ''magician''. He still refers to himself as one and is introduced as one in interviews. It helps his case that he believes art to be synonymous with magic, and as an artist, he really is performing magic by telling stories.
399** In one interview, Alan Moore explained how he flatly rejected boatloads of cash offered by Hollywood to make more big screen adaptations of his stories with his name in the writing credits. This actually worried the execs because, as Moore put it: "How can this guy not want money!? What '''does''' he want??".
400* The first woman reporter, Nellie Bly, pretended to be crazy so she could get committed and write about lunatic asylums from the inside. [[GoneHorriblyRight It worked too well]]; when she wanted to leave, she couldn't convince the doctors she was sane, so her editor had to come in with a couple of lawyers. She wrote about brutality, beatings, unsanitary conditions, ice cold baths, lousy food and all the ways that the inmates were denied any sense of self-respect or humanity. [[http://librivox.org/ten-days-in-a-madhouse-by-nellie-bly/ The book she wrote is still in print]].
401* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenhan_experiment The Rosenhan experiment]]. Psychiatrists and students tried to do what Nellie did almost 100 years later. Like her they had no trouble getting in, though leaving was less of a problem. It's partly the reason the DSM-III (''Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders'' edition III) was introduced. There's a lot of stuff in that book that [[http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/05/the-real-problems-with-psychiatry/275371/ reformers argue]] is normal behavior that has been designated as crazy so insurance companies would pay off. Every edition is bigger and more complex. Currently, they're up to version V. Some of the editors for the DSM-V have come out with concerns that the DSM-V diagnoses relatively normal behaviour as well. It has gotten so nutty in the "bureau of who's sane and who isn't" that many [[http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23487-psychiatry-divided-as-mental-health-bible-denounced.html respected psychiatric organizations have officially abandoned the DSM]].
402** As a note, the people involved with this were treated rather humanely, unlike the first, but it took them six weeks or so to get let out. This is also used as an example of why anyone studying psychiatry shouldn't be arrogant.
403** Furthermore, the staff at the hospitals never noticed that the "patients" were phonies...but the other patients saw right through them.
404* After his arrest, Russian serial killer [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrei_Chikatilo Andrei Chikatilo]] tried this, acting absolutely batshit in front of investigators and in court, though when alone, he acted completely normal.
405* World War I pilots sometimes used a technique called "jinxing" -- flying like you have no idea what you're doing. In addition to any possible psychological edge it offered, jinxing made you unpredictable and thus harder to shoot down. This caught on to such a degree, it evolved into the concept of jinking, a series of quick, evasive dodges and turns specifically designed to avoid gunfire.
406* A Soviet man avoided being drafted to fight in Afghanistan by studying textbooks on mental illness, and then faking it. It worked, but in a textbook case of GoneHorriblyRight he wound up feeling crazy in a [[BedlamHouse Soviet mental hospital]]. He eventually wrote a memoir about it, ''Teach Yourself Madness''.
407* It's possible that Libya's former dictatorial leader, Moammar Gaddafi, [[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/22/AR2011022207257.html was doing this.]] He was known to behave very bizarrely and might also have been ObfuscatingStupidity, but Wikileaks cables reveal that he was quite the ManipulativeBastard, playing off any number of rivals, subordinates, and his own family members against each other. Nothing prevents him from having been both completely nuts, yet still politically savvy. He wouldn't have been the first ruler to combine the two traits.
408* In 1200, the English village of Gotham ([[Franchise/{{Batman}} not that one]]) in Nottinghamshire learned that King John wanted to build a hunting lodge nearby. This meant that the road through the village would be a royal highway, which would mean anyone travelling on it would have to pay more tolls and taxes. So the entire village pretended to be mad, by attempting to imprison a cuckoo by building a fence round its tree, drowning an eel, and trying to rake the moon out of the village pond. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] by the fact that in the MiddleAges, insanity was believed to be contagious, and therefore a) the idea of an entire village going mad was perfectly believable and b) no-one in their right mind would go anywhere near the place. The hunting lodge was never built.[[note]] This would have lasting consequences for the village, however, as Gotham subsequently became a byword for folly and insanity. Several hundred years later, this would inspire Creator/WashingtonIrving to dub New York City "Gotham" in a satirical essay, leading to it becoming a nickname for the city -- which, in turn, would ultimately inspire the name of Batman's hometown. One ''Batman Chronicles'' story claims that Gotham City was named in-universe after Gotham... because it was originally planned as a lunatic asylum.[[/note]]
409* Similarly, during Queen Elizabeth the First's trip around England, one household feigned madness en masse in an attempt to avoid the large price of hosting the Queen. It worked.
410* UsefulNotes/RichardNixon called this the Madman theory: "I want the North Vietnamese to believe I've reached the point where I might do anything to stop the war. We'll just slip the word to them that, "for God's sake, you know Nixon is obsessed about Communism. We can't restrain him when he's angry—and he has his hand on the nuclear button" and Ho Chi Minh himself will be in Paris in two days begging for peace." How effective the tactic was is debatable. The North Vietnamese did eventually make a peace deal acceptable to the Nixon administration in 1972 (3 years after Ho Chi Minh's death), albeit probably for more complex reasons than just this. The deal itself is much more favorable to the Vietnamese.
411** Nixon based this on his experience as UsefulNotes/DwightEisenhower's Vice President. Eisenhower threatened to use nuclear weapons during the UsefulNotes/KoreanWar, which many argue forced China and North Korea to the negotiating table. The reality's a bit more complicated, but Nixon certainly believed it.
412** Kim Jong Un is possibly exercising this tactic himself in order to draw concessions from the U.S. and its allies.
413* TabletopGame/{{Poker}} professional Mike Caro used this during his heyday in the 1970s and 1980s to appear so insane as to frighten or annoy his opponents into poor play. He [[RedBaron earned the nickname "Mad Genius"]] by adopting [[https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTk_6sEJGdB3n9kJMzmqN-O1IQb8Q0WUj7ZAvi5CYktrcQGSm1K the look and mannerisms of a schizophrenic bum]], doing things like [[MoneyToBurn setting money on fire]] at the poker table, making strange noises or cackling when winning a pot, and [[MotorMouth chattering non-stop]]. Underneath the facade is an exceptionally sharp analytical mind, and one of the world's foremost experts on poker tells.
414* In his non-fiction book ''Defending the Guilty'', Barrister Alex [=McBride=] tells how he was assigned to handle a bail application for a junkie who was pretending to be insane. He was too inexperienced at the time to realise he was being conned, until the junkie's stream of gibberish was [[DistractedByTheSexy interrupted by the sight of an attractive blonde lawyer bending over to pick up her pen]], whereupon the junkie exclaimed: "Gawd, can I have her defending me?"
415* One of UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli's opponents spent time in prison, and Ali exploited the fears he'd picked up during his stint by pretending to be AxCrazy.
416* The Medieval Arab scholar Alhazen was invited to Cairo by the Caliph al-Hakim in order to realize a project to regulate the flooding of the Nile. Upon arriving in Egypt, Alhazen quickly discovered that A) he had vastly underestimated the scope of the task,[[note]] perhaps he had been in [[{{Pun}} denial]] [[/note]] which was completely impossible; and B) al-Hakim was not a man who took kindly to disappointment. According to legend, Alhazen got out of this predicament by pretending to be insane for ''eleven years'' until al-Hakim died in 1021.
417* UsefulNotes/MalcolmX pretended to be mentally disturbed in order to [[DraftDodging avoid being drafted]] during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.
418* Princess Alice of Battenberg used this to her advantage when hiding Jewish refugees in occupied Greece during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. The Gestapo questioned her several times. However, since she was (genuinely) deaf as well as a diagnosed schizophrenic, she simply pretended not to hear them and acted like a dotty, senile old lady. It worked; and Princess Alice was posthumously named Righteous Among The Nations by Yad Vashem.
419* Supposedly the story behind [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_Manifest this]] bizarre incident in Australia in 1991, in which a man who was arrested at a Chinese restaurant was recorded shouting wild things such as "This is {{democracy|IsBad}} manifest!" and "[[AbominationAccusationAttack Get your hand off my penis!]]", as well as sardonically asking if he was being charged with "eating a succulent Chinese meal". Almost 30 years later, a man named Jack Karlson identified himself as the man in the video during a media interview, and claimed that when he was arrested, he decided to pretend to be mad in the hope that a mental asylum would be easier to escape from than prison.
420[[/folder]]
421

Top