Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / Slapstick

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:[[Film/TheThreeStooges https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the-three-stooges-football.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[-WhatCouldPossiblyGoWrong-] ]]
3
4->'''Kevyn:''' Define "funny."\
5'''Doctor Bunnigus:''' When it happens to you, rather than happening to me?\
6'''Kevyn:''' So... My bloodstream is full of slapstick.
7-->-- ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary''
8
9Slapstick is the essence of physical comedy -- people getting hurt or embarrassed in hilarious ways (e.g. slipping and landing face first in dog crap). The defining feature of slapstick is its highly exaggerated nature, combined with a lack of serious physical consequences. ThePratfall is a staple of slapstick humor.
10
11The name comes from a prop in the ''CommediaDellArte'': the ''battacchio'', or "Slap Stick", is two pieces of wood that [[TheCoconutEffect sound more like punching than punching does]], without causing any physical damage; making this OlderThanSteam. It has been a staple of {{Vaudeville}} and {{Burlesque}}; and a consistent thread in many types of comedy, most notably the {{Farce}}. Exemplified in the modern era by artists like Creator/CharlieChaplin, Creator/BusterKeaton, and Creator/LaurelAndHardy; and continued by recent performers such as the British comedy team of Rik Mayall and Ade Edmonson, and Canadian actor Creator/JimCarrey.
12
13While slapstick is present to some degree in many comedic works, examples should be works that depend entirely or predominantly on this form of exaggerated physical comedy for their humour.
14
15An interesting bit of neurological trivia: finding slapstick funny is ''very'' deeply seated in the brain. A study was done of patients who had previously sustained head trauma who were shown comedy clips of varying types. It was found that while many had lost the capacity to "get" puns and higher humor, almost all still found slapstick funny. So while some people still complain that a show like ''Series/AmericasFunniestHomeVideos'' where people repeatedly fall and get hit in the crotch is not amusing, it's not really surprising that the show still continues to be popular across all demographics for well over 20 years even in the face of the infinite spring of funny home videos that are modern social networks.
16
17For the Marvel Comics superhero character, [[ComicBook/TheAwesomeSlapstick click here]].
18
19!!Subtropes:
20[[index]]
21* AmusingInjuries
22* AnvilOnHead
23* AssShove
24* BananaPeel
25* BellyFlopCrushing
26* BlindShoulderToss (sometimes)
27* BloodyHilarious
28* BlownAcrossTheRoom
29* BoomerangComeback
30* ButtBiter
31* ButtSticker
32* ByWallThatIsHoley
33* CirclingBirdies
34* CirclingSaw
35* CoconutMeetsCranium
36* ComedicUnderwearExposure
37* DelayedSafetyFeature
38* TheDoorSlamsYou
39* DopeSlap
40* DropTheCow
41* DropTheWashtub
42* {{Duck}}
43* ExplodingCloset
44* ExtendoBoxingGlove
45* FaceFault
46* FacePlant
47* FailuresOnIce
48* TheFlappingDickey
49* FlowerPotDrop
50* ForgotToMindTheirHead
51* FryingPanOfDoom
52* GardenHoseSquirtSurprise
53* GettingTheBoot
54* GlassSmackAndSlide
55* GroinAttack
56* HardHead
57* HammeredIntoTheGround
58* {{Headdesk}}
59* HeadSmashesScreen
60* HumiliationConga
61* HurtFootHop
62* ImmuneToSlapstick
63* ImpactSilhouette
64* JawDrop
65* KickMePrank
66* KitchenSinkIncluded
67* KneelPushTrip
68* LadderTipping
69* TheLastStraw
70* LiteralAssKicking
71* LiveActionCartoon
72* MegatonPunch
73* MetronomicManMashing
74* NearMissGroinAttack
75* NonFatalExplosions
76* NonSequiturThud
77* NoseShove
78* TheNotCatch
79* OwMyBodyPart
80* PainfulBodyWaxing
81* PainPoweredLeap
82* PeopleFallOffChairs
83* PercussiveMaintenance
84* PianoDrop
85* PieInTheFace
86* PinballGag
87* PlankGag
88* PopGoesTheHuman
89* ThePratfall
90* PressureSensitiveInterface: Hammer those buttons, break some bones, and get that device working better.
91* PullingTheRugOut
92* PunchedAcrossTheRoom
93* PutTheirHeadsTogether
94* RakeTake
95* RightOutOfMyClothes
96* RunningIntoTheWindow
97* SlipperySkid
98* SquashedFlat
99* SquishTheCheeks
100* SpitTake
101* SprayingDrinkFromNose
102* StickySituation
103* SurpriseJump
104* ThereWasADoor
105* ThumbtackOnTheChair
106* TiedTogetherShoelaceTrip
107* TongueOnTheFlagpole
108* TreeBuchet
109* UnraveledEntanglement
110* WatchOutForThatTree
111* YourHeadASplode
112* ZenSlap
113[[/index]]
114
115----
116!!Examples:
117
118[[foldercontrol]]
119
120[[folder:Advertising]]
121* Miller Light's weird "Can Your Beer Do This" campaign: [[https://youtu.be/-CfUHn32XPU One ad]] combines a beauty pageant with hockey, with all the brutality of the latter, done for laughs.
122* ''Advertising/MessinWithSasquatch'': In one commercial, Sasquatch throws a woman into a dirt pile after she pulls a water bucket prank on him.
123* In the Schick intuition commercial, a woman who has her foot balanced on the sink, tries to shave her leg on the sink. But she loses her balance and falls to the floor.
124* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kS9AAviNxoI A Toyota commercial]] shows a young husband and wife trying to kill each other (the commercial is banned in the United States) with cartoon-style traps (likely the reason anyone even greenlighted it). She's just as vulnerable to them as he is, and, to drive the point home, it ends with her having taken the brunt of it.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Animation]]
128* ''Animation/BoonieBears'' utilizes a lot of slapstick humor, [[ButtMonkey Logger Vick]] usually being the target.
129* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'', in its earlier seasons, is about the wolf Wolffy coming up with different schemes to capture and eat the goats residing in Goats' Village, only to be beaten up by his wife Wolnie by way of [[FryingPanOfDoom her frying pan]] whenever he inevitably fails. The series uses a lot of slapstick comedy that often involves the goats or [[ButtMonkey Wolffy]] being tortured somehow, with the frying pan example being one of the most famous but certainly not the only one. This died down in later seasons when they started to focus on less slapstick-y plots.
130* ''Animation/TikTakTail'' is a series about the tiger Tak and his sentient tail chasing after a rabbit named Tik. It utilizes a lot of slapstick humor based around Tak attempting to trap Tik and the latter outwitting the former.
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
134* In ''Manga/AhoGirl'', Yoshiko's stupidity causes her to frequently be the victim of retaliatory {{Dope Slap}}s and the like. In one case male lead Akkun hits her with an OffhandBackhand when ''she'' calls ''him'' the idiot. Akkun even ''suplexed'' Yoshiko at one point.
135* ''Manga/AkazukinChacha'': Every main cast member, male or female, is a frequent target for comedic violence and pratfalls. Chacha herself gets the most because she's the protagonist; [[TwoGuysAndAGirl Riiya and Shiine]] suffer alongside her because they're her closest friends/costars.
136* Hotori from ''Manga/AndYetTheTownMoves'' falls victim to a large number of unfortunate mishaps. A little sneeze sends her face-first into a cup of coffee, and she trips while trying to clean it up, getting a bucket stuck on her head.
137* ''Anime/AngelBeats'' has Hinata's assaults on Yui be played just as much for laughs as hers on him.
138* ''Manga/AzumangaDaioh'' has several slapstick scenes, Yomi and Tomo hit each other, Chiyo and Osaka get bonked a lot, and even Sakaki is always bitten on the hand by cats. Of course, this is all girl-on-girl (or animal-on-girl) slapstick. Yukari-sensei is also placed on the receiving end of some physical comedy courtesy of Tomo. As punishment, Yukari spends the next several minutes slapping Tomo around with a lunch tray in each hand.
139* While Kero and Sayoran are the true {{Butt Monkey}}s of ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'', Sakura herself is frequently victim to cutesy slapstick.
140* ''Manga/CityHunter'': Whenever ChivalrousPervert supreme Ryo Saeba goes "pervert" in the presence of ladies, his companion Kaori Makimura shows up to comically smash his head with a big "100 ton" HyperspaceMallet to calm him down and protect said ladies.
141* Literature Girl in ''Manga/DailyLivesOfHighSchoolBoys'' had one moment in "High School Boys and the Way You are" when her clumsiness caused a long string of EpicFail.
142* ''Manga/DoctorSlump'': The various heroines and villainesses get knocked around quite frequently (though not as much as the male characters). Even Senbei's love interest, Midori, gets boulders dropped on her and temporarily loses a few teeth.
143* Downplayed with Shizuka of ''Manga/{{Doraemon}}''. She has had this happen to her in some episodes. For example, she has been crushed by giant letters (through one of Doraemon's gadgets which is able to solidify screaming onomatopoeia), had a cannon exploding in her face and Nobita pushed her accidentally into a hole once. However, most of the time, we only see the three main boys taking a lot of slapstick pain and amusing injuries, while token pretty girl Shikuza is largely ImmuneToSlapstick, because BeautyIsNeverTarnished.
144* The 1973 manga ''Manga/DororonEnmaKun'' placed the literal ice princess, Yukiko Hime, on the receiving end of a large amount of comical abuse from friends and foes alike. When a monster puts her into a deep sleep, Enma wastes no time attempting to wake her through outrageous beatings and whippings.
145* ''Franchise/DragonBall'':
146** Bulma's a victim of a lot of slapstick towards her, being a ButtMonkey and all.
147** Chi-Chi, especially around Goku. Since she is not as strong as Goku yet [[MadeOfIron strong enough to take physical harm]]; she has been slapped by Goku through the side of their house, through several boulders and a tree, and when he has healed from his heart disease and she went out to greet him, he accidentally threw her high into the air.
148* In ''Manga/DragonHalf'', King Siva drops a huge weight ''on his own daughter Vina's head''. The scene is funny, but it also shows that the two of them are utterly [[EvilIsHammy horrible people]]. [[spoiler:Vina's [[HalfHumanHybrid half-slime]], so she survives because she's NighInvulnerable. She then attempts to smother her father once she escapes.]]
149* While virtually every member of the party gets put into amusing situations, in ''Manga/DeliciousInDungeon'' it's generally going to be Marcille who will be the current issue's ButtMonkey.
150* ''Manga/FairyTail'':
151** The anime/manga doles out some humorous abuse to protagonist Lucy Heartfilia, including a pillow to the face that sends her through a door and into a rock outside, and various evil women like Angel, whose post-battle struggle for survival is a bit of a joke.
152** In [[EstablishingSeriesMoment the second episode]], resident NiceGirl Mirajane is sent sprawling by her brother, [[GrievousHarmWithABody who'd been sent flying from the]] BigBallOfViolence, and she cheerfully continues talking to Lucy about how much fun the brawls are before passing out.
153** Wendy herself was ImmuneToSlapstick during the first several chapters after her appearance since at the time she was the youngest and most innocent. After the TimeSkip and after [[TookALevelInBadass she grows more badass]], she found herself on the receiving end of this trope more frequently.
154* ''Manga/FoodWars'' has the legendary but ditzy graduate chef Hinako usually on the receiving end of Kojirou's slaps and wrath to dispose of her in funny ways whenever she annoys him, a rare instance where the PlayedForLaughs DopeSlap features a female ButtMonkey on the receiving end of a male {{Tsundere}}.
155* In ''Manga/FushigiYuugi'', [[CoolOldLady Taiitsukun]] is the Goddess ([[PhysicalGod in a sense]]) of slapstick. On one hand, she's among those who send the Nyan-Nyans (who have the looks of little girls) [[ATwinkleInTheSky flying]] [[ButtMonkey when they screw up]], and has hit [[TheDitz Miaka]] (a 15-year-old girl) [[DopeSlap upside the head]] at least once. On the other, it's not like she's less harsh to guys: she's also seen beating up the 17-year-old boy Tamahome once or twice.
156* In ''Anime/GenjiTsuushinAgedama'', a 1991 parody anime, villainess Kuki Rei frequently catches fire, falls down pits, and gets caught in explosions.
157* ''Literature/GonnaBeTheTwinTail'' features protagonist Souji with Aika, a violent {{Tsundere}} for a childhood friend. Unlike most examples, said violence is not directed at her love interest, but HumanAlien Twoearle, either for her [[LovableSexManiac unabashed attempts to get in Souji's pants]] or bringing up [[ACupAngst Aika's chest size]].
158* Guu from ''Anime/HareGuu'' is chopping vegetables in class and ends up cutting her RubberHoseLimbs into pieces. Unfazed she gathers the pieces up and swallows them, quickly growing a new arm much to [[OnlySaneMan Haré's]] horror. In a much later OAV, Guu [[RealityWarper somehow shows]] up in a horror movie and her smirking head gets decapitated.
159* Shiina from ''Literature/HarukaNogizakasSecret'' has a tendency to clumsily stumble into {{Fanservice}}y PantyShot and NotWhatItLooksLike situations that are played for laughs at her expense.
160* Ryuubi, the {{Meganekko}} with huge boobs from ''Manga/IkkiTousen'', regularly finds herself in these situations. If she really is in danger, though, her dragon will come out.
161* ''Manga/KemonoMichi'' features its protagonist Shibata Genzo using ''brutal'' pro wrestling moves to subdue wild demonic beasts, humans, and humanoids alike, regardless of age, gender, or position. His most common victim is Carmilla, a female vampire. Heck, the EstablishingSeriesMoment is when Genzo slams Princess Altena onto the floor with a devastating [[SuplexFinisher German Suplex]] after she attempts to SummonEverymanHero and gets him.
162* Ritsu in ''Manga/KOn'' is a frequent target for Mio's aggression, though some of the other girls have suffered a few bashes on the head (also see CranialEruption). No serious injury has yet occurred from this.
163* The premise of ''Manga/KillMeBaby'' lies in Yasuna being physically abused by Sonya at least OncePerEpisode.
164* ''Anime/LuckyStar'':
165** During the first episode, Miyuki describes some of the things that happen to her for spacing out, such as tripping on her own feet or cutting herself while slicing vegetables, things which Konata then describes as "moe points". The very next scene has her walking into a business sign while pacing back and forth.
166** During episode 7, Konata lays a bar of soap down for Miyuki to slip on while they are bathing at the sentou. It works, but she [[LaserGuidedKarma misses it while teasing Kagami]].
167** There are times when Nanako gives Konata a CranialEruption for sleeping in class. In the manga, this extends to other students she has after Konata and her friends graduate. Including the innocent and physically frail Yutaka.
168** A late scene in episode 11 is all about the main four (and Soujiro) receiving electrical shocks from a doorknob.
169* In ''Manga/{{Magikano}}'', the main male character, Haruo, does take some abuse especially in the form of a mind erasing hammer. But that pales in comparison to what the Yandears who are (unknowingly to him) fighting for his attention do to each other.
170* ''Manga/MajinTanteiNougamiNeuro'' absolutely champions this trope, as Neuro himself frequently abuses his female cohort Katsuragi Yako by stretching her body into unnatural positions, electrocuting her, making her eat grass, and just generally roughing her up. One omake is actually a long list of ways to humorously torture a recently-defeated female villain.
171* LovableSexManiac Kanako Miyamae from ''Manga/MariaHolic'' takes some slapstick pain, including getting trampled by a schoolgirl stampede, which after provides her with the obligatory AmusingInjuries.
172* ''Manga/{{Mitsudomoe}}'' is, put simply, a series with lots of slapstick involving little girls. Mitsuba gets it the worst.
173* ''Manga/MonthlyGirlsNozakiKun'' plays around with a lot of classic Shoujo character archetypes by gender flipping them. This gives us the case of Kashima and Hori, which is the textbook example of "HandsomeLech who flirts with every girl he meets and {{Tsundere}} LoveInterest who physically punishes him" but with the genders changed around, resulting in a guy kicking, grappling with, and throwing objects at a girl.
174* In ''Anime/MyLittleMonster'' Haru accidentally hits Shizuku several times for comedic effect.
175* ''Manga/NagasareteAirantou'' distributes the pain pretty fairly. Though male protagonist Ikuto gets hurt more consistently, girls Ayane, Rin, and Mikoto get knocked around fairly often as well. Ayane in particular gets it so bad that one chapter featured her picking up a broom that caused accidents to happen to whoever used it. She completely failed to notice its effects because they were no different from a regular day for her.
176* In ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', main female protagonist Asuna regularly takes the chance to smack about one or two other girls in their sillier or more lecherous moments, but none so much as ElegantGothicLolita Vampire Evangeline. Although given her insane skill in martial arts, she probably ''lets'' it happen. This being ''Negima'', it's promptly lampshaded:
177-->'''[[RobotMaid Chachamaru:]]''' Asuna-san's the only person who's ever been able to engage with Master in physical slapstick.
178* In ''Manga/{{Nichijou}}'', the protagonist Yuuko ends up on the receiving end of most of the slapstick-related gags in the series. The other main victim is Sakamoto the cat.
179* Nodame from ''Manga/NodameCantabile'' is part of a BokeAndTsukkomiRoutine with other main character Chiaki, and the usual {{Tsundere}} slapstick violence is gender-inverted.
180* ''Literature/NyarukoCrawlingWithLove'' has Nyarko and Cuuko (and more rarely [[AdorablyPrecociousChild Hasta]]) subject to [[{{Tsundere}} Mahiro]]'s punches and {{fork|Fencing}}s whenever they get too annoying. It helps that they're Lovecraftian gods and can take the punishment, but more than a few fans have expressed displeasure with Mahiro, feeling that he comes off as a short-tempered {{Jerkass}}. Worth noting, the "slapstick" label only really applies to the two TV series; in the original light novels (and the ''Nyaruani'' comedy shorts) Mahiro's forks produce fountains of HighPressureBlood.
181* ''Anime/PantyAndStockingWithGarterbelt'':
182** In the first part of Episode 3, the wolf ghost [[BeTheBall compresses the main characters into a ball shape]] and throws them through a basketball hoop, and then the two are briefly seen SquashedFlat afterwards.
183** Panty is hit by a barrage of different humiliating slapstick stunts at the beginning of Episode 13, all in a row, including struck by lightning (complete with XRaySparks) and left with AshFace.
184* Franchise/{{Pokemon}}:
185** ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''
186*** Jessie gets attacked by Pokémon on a regular basis.
187*** Misty is subject to slapstick from time to time. One noticeable example was in "Pokémon Fashion Flash." In the course of that episode, Misty got burned in the face by Vulpix's fire breath, got burned by Vulpix's ''huge Fire Spin'' at the climax, {{A|rsonMurderAndJaywalking}}ND got a ridiculous face paint makeover that looked so bad, it had Ash and Brock (''especially'' [[VitriolicBestBuds Ash]]) laughing themselves half to death when they saw it!
188*** Like the other female companions, May suffers occasional AmusingInjuries. However, a lot of her DamselInDistress moments seem to lampshade her lack of ToonPhysics. Her almost falling down the exact same cliff Team Rocket passively shot down Wile E Coyote-style was completely PlayedForDrama.
189*** Once Lillie overcomes her fear of Pokemon, she snuggles Lycanroc (earning its somewhat painful rub with its stone collar) and then accidentally triggers Turtonator's Shell Trap (something Lana's younger sisters also did in an earlier episode) which left the entire class covered in soot from the NonFatalExplosion.
190*** Most major characters have been zapped by Pikachu at least once.
191** ''Manga/PocketMonsters'' has a ''lot'' of this. In one infamous scene, Charmander attempts to grab Red's Master Ball, but ends up grabbing one of his ''[[GroinAttack testicles]]''.
192%%* Manga/RamenFighterMiki
193* The ComedicSociopathy of ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' is, in large part, defined by the sheer ''amount'' of [[AmusingInjuries physical punishment]] the [[MadeOfIron characters]] can withstand. And almost all of it would be a lot harder to stomach if not for the fact that the majority of them are selfish and petty {{jerk|ass}}s who, more often than not, have it coming.
194* In ''Manga/TheRedRangerBecomesAnAdventurerInAnotherWorld'', [[HotWitch Idola]] is actually the one being subject to slapstick and humiliation the most in the early chapters. Her precious golem is blown to pieces by Tougo, she's covered in monster guts after Tougo sends them flying toward the Ruins of Wakemark, and she's nearly killed by the explosion of his TransformationSequence immediately after he gives her a DeclarationOfProtection.
195* ''Anime/RuneSoldierLouie'':
196** In Episode 7, Merrill tries to stop the clay golem from [[spoiler:taking her precious jar]] with a flying kick and gets sucked into its body. It stops long enough to literally [[spoiler:squat and shit her out]] (seen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RYyc5TAa9Q at 14:27-14:42)!]]
197** Merrill tries [[ShowSomeLeg showing some leg]], which makes it pause long enough to [[WaterfallPuke vomit]] before ignoring her again and resuming its course. Naturally, [[CrossPoppingVeins Merrill is offended]]; especially since [[FunnyBackgroundEvent Louie was nodding in agreement with the golem!]]
198** Merrill finally resorts to trying to appeal to the golem with a combination of tears and [[PuppyDogEyes doe eyes.]] Just when it seems to have worked, it grabs her by the top of her head and nonchalantly chucks her over its shoulder.
199--->'''Louie:''' ''[nods sagely]'' Mm-hm. It would've been different had it been the tear of a ''[[PurityPersonified pure]]'' maiden.
200** In one episode, Merrill steals and eats a bunch of laxative-laced cookies that some of Louie's detractors had given him.
201* ''Anime/SailorMoon'' frequently features slapstick gags with the main female cast as the victims. Usagi was the most common victim, due to her extreme clumsiness getting her hurt and general ThisLoserIsYou nature as a character, but plenty of gags featured the rest of the cast as well. Ironically, Mamoru/Tuxedo Mask, the only male human in the regular cast, was the ''least'' likely to be on the receiving end of the show's physical comedy until the notably more serious and poised Outer Senshi were introduced, suggesting it had more to do with finesse and grace than anything.
202* ''Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'':
203** The series has a scene where Meru (a ShrinkingViolet who can only communicate through abusive text messages) ends up getting forced into a seat with no cell reception and starts spewing BlackSpeech. Kafuka's way to treat this problem is to bash her in the head with a crucifix.
204** There's also a PlayedForLaughs scene where Chiri ambushes {{A|pologizesALot}}i and is implied to brutally murder her, acting on jealousy over Itoshiki-sensei.
205* Sanae from ''Manga/SquidGirl'' gets beaten up a lot by the eponymous protagonist, and she [[TooKinkyToTorture enjoys it]].
206* ''Literature/{{Slayers}}'' often subjects its female characters to slapstick, every semi-important woman that appears in the show, suffers it sooner or later (even [[TheMedic Sylphiel]] was blasted by Lina on one occasion). [[CuteClumsyGirl Amelia]] is a notable one.
207* ''Anime/TanteiOperaMilkyHolmes'', absurd as it is, heaps slapstick on everybody, with the heroines getting it the hardest, though G4 (particularly Kokoro) get theirs too.
208* ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'':
209** Kiyone from ''Anime/TenchiUniverse'' endures constant humiliation due to being partnered with Mihoshi, who is the personification of a ditz.
210** Many female characters in the franchise are subject to slapstick. Particularly Ryoko, Mihoshi, and Sasami as Anime/PrettySammy.
211* Kelly from ''Anime/TransformersRobotsInDisguise'' is most definitely the series' human [[TheChewToy Chew Toy]]. She's not stupid or clumsy, just ''incredibly'' unlucky. Usually the funny stuff happens to her property rather than her, but she's still been the victim of the occasional damage. She is almost always caught up in the conflicts of the (mostly male) Transformers. Not even running to the middle of the world's most remote desert moves her out of the way of the conflict!!
212* Slapstick happens with frequency in ''Manga/UruseiYatsura'', usually featuring Ryuunosuke, Benten, Ran, and the Spice Girls. Lum maybe less so, but her main protagonist status doesn't make her immune. Of course, Ataru still attracts as many mishaps as all of them together, but it's natural for such a severe case of BornUnlucky.
213* In ''Manga/ViolinistOfHameln'', Flute receives a copious amount of slapstick violence, ranging from being beaten up a lot by monsters or abused by the male lead. Luckily for her, she is both a {{Pollyanna}} and MadeOfIron.
214* In ''Anime/{{Yatterman}}'', villainess Doronjo is punished for her failure, with her team, in just about every episode. Punishments range from siccing a horde of pinching crabs on her to blasting her with meteorites and nuclear missiles. The 2008 remake keeps this tradition alive.
215* ''Anime/YuGiOhZexal'':
216** The Duel Coaster had a hazard where a boxing glove would spring out and sock the duelist in the face causing 200 points of Effect Damage; Yuma would be hit with it [[RunningGag several times during the ride]] (given his inability to steer straight), but in one of those times, the glove missed him and hit Kotori. (Despite this, it still deducted points from Yuma.)
217** In one episode, Kathy tricked Katori into hiding in garbage in order to spy on someone. [[spoiler:(Clearly, the end of the series -- the first in the franchise where the protagonist actually "gets" the girl -- was an EarnYourHappyEnding for poor Kotori.)]]
218* Due to the main cast of ''Anime/ZombielandSaga'' being, well, zombies, the lead heroines tend to be on the butt ends of many physical gags. Yugiri, however, zigzags this; while she gets caught up in group slapstick with the others, unlike them she never becomes a specific target of slapstick. If anything, she's the one dishing it out on a couple of occasions.
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Comic Books]]
222%%* ''ComicBook/TheAwesomeSlapstick''
223* ''ComicBook/EmilkaSza'': Maya, the read headed girl spends most of the book being a victim of comedic slapstick. Emilka also get her share of comedy abuse.
224* Spanish comic book series ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon''. Arguably the king of the trope in the entire medium.
225* ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'' is about about a couple of overpowered separatist terrorists defeating hundreds upon hundreds of [[UsefulNotes/TheGloryThatWasRome notoriously powerful soldiers]], but keeps it all child-friendly and cute due to how all the violence is slapstick (such as the iconic scenes of the Gauls punching Romans [[SmolderingShoes out of their sandals]]). The Gauls also pick on [[DreadfulMusician Cacofonix]] like this a hell of a lot.
226* ''Comicbook/MonicasGang'' not only it has plenty of women being subjected to physical comedy, but a wheelchair-bound boy has been on the receiving end of Monica's needy abuse.
227* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'': Secretary Ofelia is on the receiving end as often as everyone. Irma also finds herself on the receiving end in several stories. Minor female characters get targeted as well.
228* ''ComicBook/SamiTheSamuraiSquirrel'': In one story, Sami tries to follow Doug by [[VineSwing swinging on a vine]]. The vine snaps and she lands face-first in mud.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:Comic Strips]]
232* Maggie in ''ComicStrip/BringingUpFather'' frequently ends up falling downstairs, tripping over something, or slipping on a polished floor.
233* Calvin of ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'' dishes slapstick out to Susie Derkins on a regular basis -- water balloons, slush balls, etc. Of course, this is always a ''bad'' thing, and Calvin usually gets punished; [[DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale when it happens to Calvin himself, it's comedy]].
234* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'':
235** Lucy Van Pelt frequently [[DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale bullies her brother or even outright punches him for laughs]], but Linus hardly ever got to get back at his sister, except for the rare times when he decided he wasn't going to take her crap anymore, and [[ShutUpHannibal angrily told her off]]. The one time Lucy was shown with AmusingInjuries, it was only because she'd fallen down while roller-skating. The one exception where Lucy was actually on the receiving end of a debatably ''un''amusing injury is when, [[http://assets.amuniversal.com/51afe620f869013014ce001dd8b71c47 during an early Halloween strip]], she made a snide remark about the similarity between Charlie Brown's head and a pumpkin he was carving at the time. At first, Charlie laughs, making it look like he thought that her remark [[ActuallyPrettyFunny actually was pretty funny]], even chuckling a bit. [[spoiler:Then the final panel shows a loopy-looking Lucy with the remains of the pumpkin that Charlie Brown [[DisproportionateRetribution SMASHED OVER HER HEAD]]!]] If Lucy ever had a justifiable reason for all the crap she does to Charlie Brown in future strips, ''that'' would do it.
236** When Lucy and Snoopy box in ''WesternAnimation/SnoopyComeHome'', both get beaten up rather harshly (for Peanuts standards anyway).
237[[/folder]]
238
239[[folder:Fan Works]]
240* The fanfiction of the movie ''Film/{{Casper}}'' called "[[https://m.fanfiction.net/s/13882976/1/Afterlove-A-Casper-Retelling Afterlove (A Casper Retelling)"]]: Unlike in the movie, the female Ghostly Trio literally laugh off all slapstick involving them and it never seems to slow them up very much. This is directly contrasted with Dean, the only male main character, who goes through even more amusing slapstick situations than his canon female counterpart, including a scene where he is the primary victim of the female Ghostly Trio, rather than his mother, as was the case with the father character in the original movie.
241* ''Fanfic/AngerManagement'': While Lynn's injuries aren't played for slapstick, Ronnie Anne once fell down on her butt while skateboarding.
242* ''Fanfic/TheBoltChronicles'': Exaggerated physical comedy conspicuously occurs in a few stories.
243** In "The Ski Trip", Bolt, Mittens, and Rhino ride up a chairlift without a ticket, snitch a pair of skis, erratically descend down a mountain trail while tearing up its freshly groomed surface, and engage in a [[SnowballFight snowball fight]].
244** In "The Cakes", the three pets engage in an all-out [[{{Foodfight}} food fight]], ruining the pastries Penny's mom had prepared for a bake sale.
245** "The Supermarket" sees the three pets make a mess of the title venue. Bolt and Rhino break eggs and olive jars while juggling; Mittens pushes pumpkins off a shelf to ward off an intruder, knocks over a stacked can display, and scatters apples off a bin she jumps onto; the three pets cause tables offering free food samples to overturn; and Bolt makes a run for the exit door while pushing a cart into assorted food displays and smashing into the front glass door.
246* ''Fanfic/DiscordsNewBusiness'': Rarity, after deciding she's had enough of Discord's sense of humour, decides to leave... and Discord promptly invokes the trope on her.
247--> '''Rarity:''' I suppose I walked right into that one. (Rarity turns to leave and collides with a signpost Discord placed right behind her.)
248--> '''Discord:''' No, you walked right into THAT one!
249* In the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' fics of Creator/AAPessimal, the young Assassin Jocasta Wiggs follows her memorable canonical appearance by ending up -- in every tale where she features -- being liberally smothered in crap. It's now the Wiggs trademark.
250* There is a ''VideoGame/PokemonSunAndMoon'' fanfic called "[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/12422675/1/Lillie-and-Nebby Lillie and Nebby"]] that basically revolves entirely around Lillie suffering on the same level as [[WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry Tom the cat]] and [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Wile E. Coyote]] in her desperate attempts to keep Nebby in her bag while Nebby is none the wiser to her misfortune. Notable incidents include getting attacked by various Pokemon, from Wingull to Beedrill to Ursaring, getting squeezed and hugged by a well-meaning Bewear, getting coated in wet cement, getting reduced to a pile of ashes with eyes, getting frozen solid and mistaken for a caveperson, getting crushed into a cube shape in a garbage truck, falling off of a cliff and bouncing down every ledge, getting hit on the head with a coconut hard enough for the entire thing to get stuck over her head, getting squashed flat on numerous occasions, and getting buried in various different substances (sand, snow, garbage).
251* ''Fanfic/LincolnsMemories'': In "Do You Lana Build a Snowman?", Lana falls over while trying to carry the snowman's midsection.
252* In ''Fanfic/ReactWatchBelieveYikes'', [[PerkyGoth Ruby]], [[LovableAlphaBitch Weiss]], [[CuteBookworm Blake]] and [[CoolBigSis Yang]] go through a lot of abuse for the sake of comedy. It's rather justified, given that they're stuck in school with nothing to do but watch ten seasons of WebAnimation/RedVsBlue.
253* In ''Fanfic/ThisBites'', Cross is not afraid of giving Vivi a conk on the head if she ticks him off too much, especially when she gets over-excessive with the {{Groin Attack}}s.
254* In ''[[Fanfic/UltimateSpiderWoman Ultimate Spider-Woman: Change With The Light]]'', Mary Jane has occasionally been drenched by {{Roadside Wave}}s and CoveredInGunge as part of her ButtMonkey status.
255[[/folder]]
256
257[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
258* ''WesternAnimation/{{Brave}}'': Maudie, and later Bear!Elinor face slapstick humor.
259* ''WesternAnimation/ABugsLife'': Atta gets knocked to the ground twice by catapulted stalks of grain (thanks to Flik) and even falls off the counsel stand in the HilariousOuttakes.
260* ''WesternAnimation/CatsDontDance'': Half the slapstick comes from Danny (and occasionally Pudge). The rest? Surprisingly enough, it comes from Sawyer, who despite being graceful, wise, and snarky is amusingly very accident-prone (though it should be noted that most of her accidents are in some way Danny's fault, but then again, since he's a NaiveNewcomer and very energetic, who can blame him?). Also, all that happens to the films' villainess, Darla Dimple, at the end of the movie.
261* ''Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon'':
262** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bolt}}'': Mittens the Cat is subjected to ''lots'' of AmusingInjuries throughout her journey.
263** The circus elephants from ''WesternAnimation/{{Dumbo}}'' are similarly subject to AmusingInjuries after Dumbo accidentally causes the circus tent to collapse.
264** ''WesternAnimation/TheEmperorsNewGroove'': Yzma, though being unattractive and evil are already two strikes against her. "Pull the lever, Kronk." *Ka-chunk!* "WRONG LEVERRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!" Yzma is possibly Disney's best example of this trope, as much like the rest of the cast the character goes through ''constant'' screwball situations -- especially when she's in the jungle. Case in point, [[https://youtu.be/1MNllfr6wVY there's a scene where she gets covered in grime, then attacked by bees]] (for no discernible reason) within a few seconds, [[FunnyBackgroundEvent running around in the background while her sidekick in the foreground pays no attention]], and then she takes a pratfall into the mud ''again.''
265** ''WesternAnimation/{{Frozen|2013}}'': Anna is subjected to about the same amount of slapstick that Kristoff is subjected to, though significantly less than what Olaf is subjected to. Anna's more slapstick-y moments were briefly an indirect source of controversy, not because nobody wanted to see a female character do physical comedy, but because her animator made a public statement that he found it difficult to animate women, who, as he said, have to go through a wide range of emotions while still looking pretty. A lot of women and artists of both genders were quite pissed.
266** ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'': Shenzi usually suffers the same comeuppances as the other hyenas.
267** ''WesternAnimation/{{The Little Mermaid|1989}}'': Vanessa's wedding is played very comically for slapstick. Birds fly under her dress, pelicans dump water, dead fish and lobsters all over her, starfish cover her body from face to waist, seals bounce her like a ball, she gets thrown on top of her own wedding cake and covered in the frosting head to toe before being sprayed by water yet again. This is particularly notable for the inversion of the hyper-feminine beautiful woman as the target.
268** ''WesternAnimation/{{Moana}}'': Moana is repeatedly thrown off the boat by Maui, with little to no effort to boot, ending up soaking wet every time the ocean puts her back. Moana repeatedly smacks herself in the face with a wet mop of hair when she dramatically spins without registering that her hair is wet.
269** ''WesternAnimation/{{Mulan}}'': Mulan, though most of it happens while she's disguised as a man. Just watch "I'll Make a Man Out of You" and you'll see. This is mostly played straight in the beginning when Mulan still is a clumsy ButtMonkey but toned down after she TookALevelInBadass.
270** ''WesternAnimation/ThePrincessAndTheFrog'': Tiana doesn't run into any slapstick at all... when she's human. Almost as soon as [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman she turns into a frog]], she along with Naveen gets tossed around for laughs, fall over, all kinds of the sort of goofy situations one could stick into a swamp setting. Her [[DumbBlonde slightly ditzy]] best friend Charlotte, on the other hand, takes some pratfalls and makes some incredibly cartoony faces while remaining human the entire time.
271** ''WesternAnimation/TheRescuers'': Averted with Bianca, but Medusa actually takes the brunt of the comedic retaliation of the Rescuers and the Bayou animals, especially compared to her male partner, Snoops.
272** ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'': As a CuteClumsyGirl, Rapunzel sometimes suffers AmusingInjuries. And the male protagonist, [[ButtMonkey Flynn]], even gets it worse in the entire movie, especially during his fight scenes with Maximus the horse.
273** ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'': Jane. The movie makes quite a bit of comedic use out of her inexperience in the jungle, though this eventually dies down as she gets more used to things -- still, chances are if there's a scene where she's in that huge, fancy-looking dress, it's going to be ruined in some kind of slapstick scene.
274* ''Anime/TheGirlWhoLeaptThroughTime'': The protagonist Makoto gets hurt a lot crashing into things due to her clumsy landings doing time leaps. Usually it is PlayedForLaughs, except on one particular occasion when she is badly battered near the climax of the movie.
275* ''WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon'': Ruffnut gets used for slapstick in near-perfect synchronization with her twin brother. The only reason Astrid doesn't is because she's too skilled a badass.
276* ''WesternAnimation/Incredibles2'':
277** While Elastigirl is first trying out her Elasticycle, it revs out of control and slams her into the wall.
278** When Violet is taken to see her love interest Tony as a surprise, Violet is ''so'' surprised that she squirts water out of her nose.
279* ''WesternAnimation/Luck2022'': Sam's [[BornUnlucky bad luck]] often manifests as this. Among other things, she gets squashed into the wall by her fold-out bed, several jars of glitter fall on her, and she falls ''a lot.''
280* ''WesternAnimation/RugratsGoWild'': Siri is only on screen for a little more than five minutes, but is subjected to quite a range of AmusingInjuries; she's whacked in the face with a bamboo cane, falls off a cliff into a thornbush, is [[BirdPoopGag defecated on by an entire flock of parrots]], falls face-first into a puddle of mud, is hit by a rolling log, and, finally, is accidentally launched off a log and into a river while trying to pounce on Spike. ''And that's just during her musical number!''
281* ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretLifeOfPets'': Chloe the gray tabby. She even ends up in a Website/YouTube video where her TraumaCongaLine is shown to the amusement of millions of people in Times Square.
282* ''WesternAnimation/{{Trolls}}'': Poppy is subjected to slapstick, especially through the "Get Back Up Again" montage. She suffers as many humiliations as anyone in the film.
283[[/folder]]
284
285[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
286* ''Film/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians1996'': Unlike in the original animated film, Cruella suffers slapstick just like Horace and Jasper. In fact, she gets it worse than they do, falling into a container of molasses and getting covered in mud.
287%%* ''Film/AdvanceToTheRear'': Involving the bumbling escapades of several Civil War soldiers.
288* ''Film/{{Airplane}}'' is rife with slapstick. Some examples include a brutal bar fight between two girl scouts, ending with one being slid down a bar and head first into a jukebox, an ill girl who repeatedly has her IV knocked out, causing her to convulse, and most notably the "Get a hold of yourself!" scene where several passengers violently shake and slap a HystericalWoman.
289* In ''Film/BabePigInTheCity'', Mrs. Hoggett gets dragged around in pretty undignified fashion.
290* Creator/MelissaMcCarthy's role in ''Film/{{Bridesmaids}}'' was fairly raunchy, since the film isn't afraid to put women on the receiving end of slapstick, particularly at the bridal fitting where half the women puke in the bathroom (and on each other) and the other half experience explosive diarrhea.
291%%* Creator/BruceCampbell.
292%%* Creator/JimCarrey.
293%%* ''Creator/DanaCarvey''.
294* Creator/JackieChan movies were based on Jackie's love of Creator/BusterKeaton and Creator/CharlieChaplin movies, as being silent films there was no language barrier. He came about in the BruceLeeClone era of the '70s, but always felt more interested in physical comedy rather than the more serious MartialArtsMovie. His action scenes are instead based on crazy stunts and ImprobableWeaponUser that makes the audience laugh more than cringe at the pain, such as in ''Jackie Chan's First Strike'' where he fends off an entire mob of enemies using anything and everything at his disposal, including very creative use of a folding stepladder.
295* ''Film/{{Casper}}'': Carrigan suffers slapstick along with Dibs in the up and at'em machine.
296* [[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0167997/bio Dorothy Coburn]] appeared in several Creator/LaurelAndHardy silents, managing to get CoveredInMud, [[CoveredInGunge fall in a cement pit]] and [[PieInTheFace drawn into a huge pie fight]].
297* The oldest surviving slapstick film is ''Film/TheCurtainPole'' (1909), in which Mack Sennett's character attempts to obtain and bring back a very long curtain pole. A curtain pole that is way too long to fit inside the carriage he's riding, thus sticking out both sides. Sticking out both sides of a carriage moving at high speeds. HilarityEnsues as Sennett and his pole strike or antagonize everyone and everything they pass.
298* In ''Film/DeathBecomesHer'' the trio of main characters, Creator/BruceWillis' lone male lead included, suffer from amusing injuries but Helen and Madeline more so because they're undead. Holes in chests, heads snapped on backwards, limbs popping off, you name the lot.
299* ''Film/Desperados2020'': Wesley gets all sorts of AmusingInjuries done to her during the film, such as getting electrocuted, punched, scratched, and even slapped in the face by a dolphin's penis.
300* ''Film/DropDeadGorgeous'' features slapstick comedy with one girl being hit in the head with a falling light, two getting blown up, and countless eating tainted shellfish and barfing everywhere. Tess, however, experiences the most slapstick.
301* The lead female protagonist in the ''Film/FiftyShadesOfBlack'' gets her fair share of beating from a malfunctioning elevator.
302* ''Film/GeorgeOfTheJungle''
303** The film rides on a similar joke as the original cartoon, as despite being a physically fit specimen the title character was actually TheKlutz and while vine swinging would constantly crash into things.
304** George's klutziness tends to put Ursula in slapstick-y situations.
305* In the 1980 ''Series/GetSmart'' movie ''The Nude Bomb'', Agent 22 (Andrea Howard) gets subjected to as much slapstick as anyone else. At one point they have to escape from a wrecked control room but she's lost the use of her legs, so Max vows to carry her out. However, she's an adult woman and he's not that strong, and he can't pick her up. In the course of attempting to drag her out of the room, at one point he's pulling her by the ankles and she's face-down in the dirt with her dress ridden up around her waist. At the end of the film, when the final nude bomb goes off, Max, The Chief and Agent 22 all [[NakedPeopleAreFunny find themselves completely naked]].
306* In the ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|2016}}'' reboot, the protagonists are on the receiving end of slapstick but they make a RunningGag out of the repeated occasions on which Creator/KristenWiig's character gets CoveredInGunge.
307* In ''Film/GoodBurger'', Roxanne is sent by the evil restaurant conglomerate Mondo Burger to seduce and steal Ed's "secret sauce" recipe. Ed and Dexter absolutely adore her (but of course Dexter still doesn't trust her enough to actually give her the recipe). During their double date, she is accidentally injured a few times by Ed's clumsiness, such as getting accidentally hit in her face with a miniature golf club, a golf ball (which knocks her out), and Ed judo flipping her over his shoulder and onto the pavement.
308* The 1939 film ''Film/HollywoodSerenade'' is set in the silent movie era, and at one point its star Alice Faye, then one of the biggest stars in Hollywood, is on the receiving end of a pie thrown by Creator/BusterKeaton, whose career was then in serious decline. Ironically, this was one of the few times Keaton ever threw a pie in his movie career; he was normally on the receiving end himself.
309* ''Film/HomeAlone'': A movie with several sequels about a Kid (played by Macaulay Culkin in the first two movies) who is left at home by himself while his parents are on vacation. Two criminals try to break in. The kid sets up [[HomeAloneAntics traps that cause pratfalls, taking out the floors, setting them up with remote control cars, ropes, etc.]] Dropping buckets on them from above. There's even some electrocution as slapstick. By the end the criminals are usually CoveredInGunge, scratched up, battered and bruised, and either completely humiliated or arrested.
310* In ''Film/HomeAlone3'', the crooks are victims of Alex's booby traps during their attempt to break into the house to steal the chip, and Alice, the only female of the foursome, is not an exception. The same goes for Vera in the fourth film and Jessica in the fifth film.
311* As far back as the early 1930s, Thelma Todd was renowned for her skill at slapstick; in ''Film/HorseFeathers'', she falls out of a boat after being serenaded at length by Groucho Marx, and she also starred in a series of short films, first with [=ZaSu=] Pitts, then with Creator/PatsyKelly, the best of which feature some great slapstick: in 1932's [[https://youtu.be/TsJG-MWUgmw ''Alum and Eve'']], Pitts gets jabbed in the ass with a pen and then gets stuck in a hospital trolley. Todd's attempts to extricate her turn into something reminiscent of the stateroom scene in ''Film/ANightAtTheOpera''.[[note]]Later in the same film, which turns on Pitts being mistaken for a hospital patient, two attractive female nurses attempt to undress her. Pitts retaliates by ''undressing the nurses''. [[/note]]
312%%* ''Film/{{Idiocracy}}'': the "Ow, my balls!" ShowWithinAShow
313* Creator/BusterKeaton's and most of Creator/CharlieChaplin's works are built on this trope.
314%%* Creator/KeystoneStudios, the silent-film studio created and ruled by the above-mentioned Mr. Sennett, pioneered most of the listed sub-tropes in motion pictures.
315* ''Film/LadyBallers'': Much of the movie is composed of physical comedy especially during the basketball scenes, with either the main characters or the people they compete with getting hurt in humorous ways. Even outside of the sports scenes, there's plenty of this, like when Rob gets tased by a receptionist and then comedically hits his head on the desk.
316* Creator/LaurelAndHardy had their share of AmusingInjuries, pratfalls, [[EscalatingWar Escalating Wars]], etc. This is one of the things the duo is primarily remembered for -- even after they switched to sound and slapstick began to make way for verbal humor, they still used lots and lots of slapstick in their shorts and features, which is why they are still funny with modern-day audiences today.
317%%* Creator/JerryLewis in all of his most famous films, both solo and with Creator/DeanMartin.
318* Orin's middle-aged female assistant gets hit several times (such as getting punched in the face and slammed by a door) in his VillainSong in ''Film/LittleShopOfHorrors''.
319%%* ''Film/TheMask''.
320* In ''Film/TheManWithTwoBrains'', Creator/SteveMartin hurls Creator/KathleenTurner face-first into a pool of mud.
321%%* ''Film/TheMasterOfDisguise''
322* ''Film/MeanGirls'': All four of the Plastics, despite being gorgeous and fashionable, suffer amusing injuries and slapstick comedy throughout. For example, in a scene where they are walking in the hallway, the main character Cady trips and falls into the trash can with her legs in the air.
323* Creator/JossWhedon's adaptation of ''Theatre/MuchAdoAboutNothing'' has, at one point, Beatrice very obviously spying on Hero and a maid, trying to listen in on whether or not they're saying that Benedick is in love with her. When she first heard their conversation, she suffered a pratfall down the steps. Her immediate move to hide under a nearby table then ended with her bonking her head on it.
324* ''[[Film/TheNakedGun Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear]]'' has then-First Lady Barbara Bush repeatedly on the receiving end of Drebbin's ineptitude.
325* Creator/MabelNormand, heroine for Mack Sennett's Creator/KeystoneStudios during the silent era: Despite her alluring beauty Normand spent her career taking comic pratfalls and [[PieInTheFace pies to the face]] and doing all the other silliness of classic slapstick comedy. Examples include ''Film/MabelsBlunder'', in which Mabel gets the wrong idea about her boyfriend's fidelity, and ''Film/MabelsStrangePredicament'', which featured Mabel hiding under a bed from a violently jealous wife, and also featured Creator/CharlieChaplin in his very first film as TheTramp.
326* ''Film/NotAnotherTeenMovie'': Janey is the brunt of a ''lot'' of comedic violence, and even Priscilla gets punched in the face by Jake (who also knocks out Austin and her [[Film/AmericanBeauty weird boyfriend with a video-camera]]), but poor Ricky gets the worst of it, being hit multiple times, even by a ''bus'' toward the end, with his last shot being getting beaten up.
327%%* ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' films, particularly the later '70s ones.
328* There's quite a bit of physical comedy in ''Film/{{Rags}}'', from Lloyd smacking his head into a microphone to Charlie stumbling backwards into his janitor's cart while talking to Kadee. Kadee herself isn't immune either; she smacks her head into Charlie's and gets shoved off of a bench.
329* The network censor in ''Film/{{Scrooged}}'' is beaten throughout the film by falling sets, carelessly opened doors, and everything else that can get hurled her way. It's very effective at keeping her from doing her job and the smut gets right past her onto the airwaves.
330%%* ''Film/SonOfTheMask''.
331* ''Film/StrangePsychokineticStrategy'' uses slaptick comedy to keep itself entertaining. Watch it in the mind of a series of slapstick scenes held together by a larger (and largely irrelevant) plot, and you'll wet yourself laughing at the cast's loony antics.
332* Film/TheThreeStooges pretty much perfected the art of slapstick in the '30s. Perhaps most famous for the comedic EyePoke.
333* ''Film/TuckerAndDaleVsEvil'' has Allison and her [[RunningGag frequent head trauma]], which turns into a BrickJoke when it ends [[spoiler:with Dale giving her a football helmet as a gift for their first date]].
334* Myrtle in ''Film/WaikikiWedding'', played by comedic actress Martha Raye, is subjected to a lot of slapstick. She has a typewriter slam on her fingers, slumps face-first into a bowl of liquor, hits her head on a bunk, and falls over a lot. Georgia (Shirley Ross), the romantic lead, doesn't suffer any slapstick outside of the one scene where Tony accidentally pushes her off a pier trying to fix the heel on her shoe.
335[[/folder]]
336
337[[folder:Literature]]
338* In ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'', the Fools' Guild has actually ''weaponised'' slapstick in the form of a martial art called ''sloshi'', as seen in ''Literature/MakingMoney''. One historical practitioner famously killed seventeen men with just a ladder and two buckets of paste.
339* ''Literature/HarryPotter'':
340** In ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets The Chamber of Secrets]]'', Peeves chases Moaning Myrtle and pelts her with moldy peanuts. Later, a FunnyBackgroundEvent involves a nameless female student being turned into a badger by mistake in a Transfiguration class (while she's human again when she appears, she still has a white stripe in her hair).
341** In ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire The Goblet of Fire]]'', while trying to stop Peeves from throwing water balloons on the newly-arrived students at the start of the year, [=McGonagall=] slips on the floor and only saves herself from falling by grabbing Hermione around the neck.
342** In ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheOrderOfThePhoenix The Order of the Phoenix]]'', Molly Weasley, after spending an entire morning cleaning a room, sits on a sagging armchair, only to spring up out of it with a cry of disgust, having sat on a bag of dead rats that Sirius had fed Buckbeak the hippogriff with but left behind when he exited the room.
343** In ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince The Half-Blood Prince]]'', Hermione absentmindedly squeezes a telescope, forgetting it was something Fred and George invented for their joke shop, and it punches her in the face. This is PlayedForLaughs entirely. The same goes for Trelawny being tossed out of the Room of Requirement.
344** Katie Bell gets hit with slapstick [[FunnyBackgroundEvent twice in one scene]]. Peeves shoots her in the ear with an ink pellet and, when she retaliates by throwing things at him, he empties an entire bottle of ink over her head.
345* ''Literature/HopOnPop'': The people who play ball on the wall then all fall off.
346%%* Almost everything in ''Literature/HowToSurviveAZombieApocalypse'', which parodies tropes commonly used in zombie apocalypse scenarios.
347* In the ''Literature/JessicaDarling'' series, the protagonist's adolescent klutziness makes her a success as school {{Mascot}} Mighty the Seagull. Since school tradition requires keeping Mighty's real identity secret, everyone is puzzling over who's inside the costume, and everyone assumes it must be a boy. Jessica is annoyed at the [[DoubleStandard sexist assumption]] that girls can't be funny and goofy until realising that she's only funny and goofy [[WhatYouAreInTheDark when her identity is safely hidden.]] This prompts some CharacterDevelopment as she decides to take more risks and not be so afraid of looking silly even when not wearing the costume.
348* In the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' novel ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'', trainee Assassin Jocasta Wiggs is sent on a mission to target Sam Vimes. She ends up treading what she hopes is mainly water in the Ramkin family cesspit, having been directed there by a cunning trap.
349[[/folder]]
350
351[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
352%%* One of the other more common kinds of videos on ''AFV'', usually a GroinAttack.
353* ''Series/AmericasGotTalent'': Adrian Stoica and Hurricane's dog act mostly involve Hurricane getting into all sorts of mischief and knocking her owner flat on the ground. In the auditions, [[GenderBlenderName she]] yanks Adrian off the bed, stealing his hat, then drop-kicking him when he tries to get it back. In the quarterfinals, she entangles him with a hose, then knocks him into a trash can, to get him play with her when he wants to do gardening.
354%%* Series/TheBennyHillShow.
355%%* ''Series/ABitOfFryAndLaurie''
356* BritCom ''Series/{{Bottom}}'' features cartoonish violence, including Eddie Hitler knocking out a lady going door to door asking for donations for domestic violence victims.
357* The "Oh my nose!" scene from ''Series/TheBradyBunch'' features Marcia ([[RuleOfThree Marcia, Marcia!]]) getting struck in the nose with an errant football from when the guys are playing in the backyard. The resulting swelling drives the plot for the rest of that episode, ending with Marcia learning AnAesop about not being too self-conscious about her looks. The scene has also been parodied a few times since by other shows, including the Simspons during a Couch Gag where the family runs through the sets of a couple different classic TV shows.
358* ''Series/TheBrittasEmpire'': Helen in particular gives birth to twins in the middle of the street, headbutts a woman in the face for being called a bad mother, has all her muscles seize up, gets puked on, gets an embarrassing tattoo, is sent to an insane asylum, gets electrocuted, gets chased by a shark, falls out of a plane, falls into a pile of elephant shit and tries to murder a reporter with an axe. Not to mention all her mental breakdowns and drug abuse which are all PlayedForLaughs.
359* Part of the reason for the DawsonCasting in ''Series/ElChavoDelOcho'' is to employ comedic violence. Beating up an 8-year-old kid? DudeNotFunny. Beating up a middle-aged guy ''playing'' an 8-year-old kid? Hilarious!
360* ''Series/LeCoeurASesRaisons'' isn't finicky at all about who gets to suffer: basically everybody went on the receiving end of slapstick situations, though Madge and Brenda get the bulk of it.
361* ''Series/TheFastShow'' features a sketch about the fictional country of Republicca -- a country that is based upon combining parodies of common Briton vacation spots, most notably Spain, Germany, Italy, and Greece -- where the plot of the soap opera, "El Amora Y El Passionna" had a wife discover her husband's transgressions. When the wife slaps him for his actions, his response is to punch her in the face, resulting in her instant forgiveness and rushing to the kitchen to fix the husband a sandwich, while the husband wears a very smug look on his face.
362%%* Series/TheGoodies.
363* Most of the handyman segments on ''Series/HomeImprovement''. Tim's AmusingInjuries from DoomItYourself modifications always resulted in chaos, but was said InUniverse to be a big appeal of Tim's cable show "[[ShowWithinAShow Tool Time]]." Some examples include a high powered vacuum or wood lathe ripping shirts off the hosts, or making a TwentyOneGunSalute using nail guns but also putting it on a turntable.
364%%* Creator/LucilleBall in many of the classic ''Series/ILoveLucy'' episodes, for example Lucy and Ethel in the chocolate factory.
365* ''Series/IncredibleCrew'': In one sketch, Shauna is whacked by an elephant's trunk and struck by lightning. In another, she breathes fire during a spelling bee and runs away. In one sketch, Chanelle has her tongue pinched by a lobster at a party. In another, and during the same spelling bee as Shauna's, Chanelle cartoonishly inflates like a balloon and flies away.
366* Imogene Coca's "Shad" on ''Series/ItsAboutTime'' tends to suffer from more slapstick misfortune once she returned with the astronauts to the present, especially in the episode "To Sign or Not to Sign" where she joins a gym.
367* Dee from ''Series/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphia'' is just as liable to have her leg broken by homeless people, or her face smashed in by a metal folding chair as the rest of the guys, and has been poisoned the most out of them all. Frank intentionally threw a match into a building full of kerosene while Dee was inside, setting her on fire for a fake news story.
368%%* ''Series/{{Jackass}}''.
369* The Creator/{{Studio100}} series ''Series/KabouterPlop'' is mostly focused on slapstick with each of the characters. Mainly from Klus's pranks.
370* ''Series/LaverneAndShirley'': Both Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams were made honorary members of the Hollywood Stuntman's Guild for all the slapstick and the beating that they took to do it.
371* ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'': Expect Nellie Oleson to be drenching wet or covered in mud courtesy of Laura. Her mother Harriot is also sometimes a victim of slapstick as well and later on, Nancy.
372* ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'': Peg has had both Al and a fat woman fall on her and been spun around on a game show wheel, Kelly has been bitten by poisonous insects, hit in the head with a frisbee, and roller-skated into a door, Marcy's been running over with a shopping cart and bitten by a poisonous rodent that turned her into a hunchback. All three of them have gotten electrocuted and fallen down the basement stairs. They've also all beaten up various female extras in one episode or another.
373* In ''Series/TheMick'', Mickey (short for Mackenzie) is the butt of most of the show's slapstick humor. This includes getting hit by a car in two different episodes. Also, Jimmy once [[ItMakesSenseInContext got into a brawl with an entire women's soccer team]].
374* ''Series/TheMightyBoosh'' loves exaggerated comedy violence, usually directed at Howard, who is often hit with something equivalent to a stick.
375* ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' has Joy constantly falling over when she drinks too much. Also, right after the second time Earl gets run over by a car, it turns out to be Billie. She proceeds to get run over by another car when she tries to help Earl, and the paramedics take care of her first.
376* ''Series/TheNanny'': C.C. Babcock is the most abused character, and most of it comes at the hands of Niles, the butler. He'll hand her a scalding hot teapot, squirt lemon juice in her eye, "forget" to tell her he just mopped with ''very'' slippery floor polish, slam a door on her head, the list goes on and on.
377* ''Series/NedsDeclassifiedSchoolSurvivalGuide'' features a lot of characters going through sometimes over-the-top AmusingInjuries in almost every episode.
378* ''Radio/OurMissBrooks'': Miss Brooks sometimes is the victim of slapstick gags. For example, in "Business Course" where she gets covered in oil and "Vitamin E-12" where she gets covered in goop. Miss Enright also suffers an oily fate in "Business Course." In "Secondhand First Aid" Miss Brooks wraps Miss Enright in bandages and rips her dress.
379* ''Series/OrangeIsTheNewBlack'': Among those who are subject to slapstic are the main character, Piper (especially in the first season), Blanca (who electrocutes herself and lands on a bunch of tacks), and Alana Dwight, who constantly has her nose broken, and it's always played for laughs.
380* ''Series/SabrinaTheTeenageWitch'':
381** The AlphaBitch Libby often becomes the victim of many of Sabrina's spells. Whether it would be to teach Libby a lesson or for Sabrina's own amusement.
382** Despite being an OnlySaneWoman, Zelda has many NotSoAboveItAll moments which often results in slapstick.
383** Sabrina herself is frequently subject to slapstick. Many roles played by Creator/MelissaJoanHart feature her getting some slapstick.
384* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'':
385** In the sketch "Hollywood Dish", co-host Brady Trunk (Creator/BillHader) invariably asks the celebrity guest what she thinks of the most recent episode of a reality TV show, whereupon he and co-host Anastasia Stix (Creator/KristenWiig) sip beverages and await the answer. The guest then replies "I don't really watch reality TV", at which Brady, goggle-eyed with shock, turns and spits his mouthful of beverage directly into Anastasia's face.
386** In the ''Digital Short'' [[https://youtu.be/l6vS99dEexI "I Broke My Arm"]], Creator/EmmaStone plays a schoolgirl who's broken her arm after slipping in a patch of grape jelly, and is rapping about it ("Hey everybody, did you hear the news? / I broke my arm! (''She broke her arm!'')"), delighted that she can get loads of attention and have everyone sign her cast. Unfortunately, while singing and dancing about it, she slips in the jelly for a second time and breaks her other arm. She gets a second cast, and starts rapping about that too ("Hey everybody, did you hear the news? / I broke ''both'' arms!") but then slips again and breaks her leg. She comes in again, rapping about her latest injury, but then slips in the jelly ''again'' and immediately breaks several more bones before finally entering in a wheelchair, only able to speak by means of a [[MachineMonotone computer]].
387** When Creator/MelissaMcCarthy hosted the show, one sketch has her playing a Creator/MaeWest expy attempting to shoot a Hollywood film, only to ruin multiple takes by [[StaircaseTumble falling down the stairs]].
388* ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'': Elliot trips over and hurts herself a lot, especially from Season 2 onwards. She's the main one besides J.D. that is involved in the physical comedy.
389%%* Michael Richard's as Kramer in ''Series/Seinfeld'' often employs physical slapstick humour
390* Terrible things happen to the immaculately dressed police detective Sergeant Dori Doreau in ''Series/SledgeHammer''. Her tailored suit shrinks by three sizes after Sledge drags her into a sauna to interrogate a perp. In order to detain a perp whose day job is mud wrestler, Doreau is dragged into the arena -- in her trademark business suit -- and deluged in mud and indignity as she wrestles the woman into the mud. And wins.
391%%* Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer engage in moments of grotesque slapstick in ''Series/TheSmellOfReevesAndMortimer'' and ''Series/ShootingStars''
392* ''Series/StrangersWithCandy'': The protagonist, Jerri, suffers several amusing injuries throughout the show's run, including, but not limited to: having her head slammed against a locker repeatedly, being tasered, being savagely beaten by her teachers and principal, dropping a bar weight on her throat, and getting in a bus accident.
393* ''Series/ThatsSoRaven'': The main character, Raven, gets involved in a lot of slapstick, usually on the receiving end. The sequel series ''Series/RavensHome'' continues the tradition.
394* In ''Series/VousLesFemmes'', the very visual aspects of the comedy dictate that both Judith and Olivia are on the receiving end of some serious indignities, frequently. Olivia finds herself naked in a rugby team's changing room and has to bluff her way out; or else she finds herself, in a very short summer dress with a bare back, getting into a sports car where the leather seats have been exposed to a baking hot South of France sun, and having to really contort herself to minimise the discomfort. Judith might have a WardrobeMalfunction just before a job interview.
395%%* ''Series/XenaWarriorPrincess'' and ''Series/Hercules'' also use this technique often, mixing fight scenes with classic slapstick.
396* ''Series/YouCantDoThatOnTelevision'' features characters getting slimed, drenched, pied, or otherwise humiliated, although cast members with seniority have some veto power over who got hit each episode.
397* ''Series/TheYoungOnes'', as well as its Spiritual Successors ''Series/FilthyRichAndCatflap'' and ''Series/{{Bottom}}'', all featured healthy amounts of (mostly) Creator/RikMayall getting punched, stabbed, mutilated, electrocuted, falling down stairs, dropped off rooftops, set on fire, having all his teeth punched out and getting killed in funny ways. Notable for pushing the envelope even on British TV and getting some ire from MoralGuardians.
398[[/folder]]
399
400[[folder:Music Videos]]
401* The videos for Music/TwistedSister's "I Wanna Rock" and "We're Not Gonna Take It".
402* Russian FolkRock band Music/OtavaYo's video for ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIa7ZfJUeGU The Street Cleaners]]'' is set in St Petersburg sometime pre-1914, and is deliberately presented as a silent movie comedy short, in which a LoveTriangle plays out while the band take on the roles of lowly snow-shovellers watching and acting as a chorus on the action. Indignities happen to the female lead.
403[[/folder]]
404
405[[folder:Pinballs]]
406* In ''Pinball/{{Hurricane}},'' making key shots during Clown Time frenzy will show clowns performing assorted slapstick antics.
407[[/folder]]
408
409[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
410* The Wrestling/BellaTwins once each got a PieInTheFace in a fancy restaurant, although this was less for humiliation than to show what insensitive jerks Wrestling/{{Carlito| Colon}}, Primo, Wrestling/JohnMorrison, and Wrestling/TheMiz had become.
411* Wrestling/BobbyLashley (who, again, was portraying a face at the time) once ripped off Lilian Garcia's skirt, [[ComedicUnderwearExposure leaving her in her underpants]]. But that wasn't even the most humiliating part. The most humiliating part was that ''Wrestling/VinceMcMahon[='=]s [[ItMakesSenseInContext bald head was shoved between her thighs]]''!
412* In 2004, when ''Raw'' hosted its second Diva Search contest, the winner, Wrestling/ChristyHemme, was awarded a WWE contract -- and the losers had their evening gowns [[CoveredInGunge splattered with a big pot of chili]].
413* Wrestling/AngelinaLove running into a closed door after realizing Wrestling/TheBeautifulPeople's ambush on then [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] newcomer [[Wrestling/LisaMarieVaron Tara]] was [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere starting to go south]].
414* Wrestling/StacyKeibler, [[Characters/WWECommentators Lilian Garcia]], Wrestling/MariaKanellis, and other Characters/WWEDivas have all been beaten up by men on some occasions. Sometimes there is an undertone of (politically incorrect) comedy, but more often it's just a way for [[KickTheDog a heel to show how much of a bullying asshole he can be]]. Worst of all was probably the time Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin -- ''while a {{face}}'' -- knocked Stacy unconscious -- while she was ''also a face'' -- [[DisproportionateRetribution because she declined his offer of a beer]]. Not only did the crowd [[ComedicSociopathy laugh and cheer]], not only did the ''Raw'' commentators (weakly) try to justify Steve's actions, not only did Steve [[KarmaHoudini get off without any punishment at all]] but ''Stacy herself'' [[EasilyForgiven quickly forgave him]] and [[ExtremeDoormat never even confronted him about the incident]]! On the other hand, when Wrestling/RandyOrton knocked out Wrestling/StephanieMcMahon and [[DudeShesLikeInAComa creepily kissed her unconscious form]], the fans were practically calling for his head on a pike.
415* In her later years, Wrestling/MaeYoung (1923-2014) made a career out of being an IronButtMonkey. She went so far as to ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNMZwS3gKoU slap Bubba Ray Dudley]]'' when he cushioned the blow while powerbombing her off the stage onto a table. She ordered him to treat her as OneOfTheBoys the next time he smashed her through something.
416[[/folder]]
417
418[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
419* In ''Series/LazyTown'', Stephanie, Trixie, and Bessie Busybody all have their fair share of AmusingInjuries on the same level as the guys.
420* ''Series/TheMuppetShow'':
421** A deliberate homage to the days of vaudeville. Jim Henson also famously opined that if you couldn't think of an ending for a sketch, have a character [[StuffBlowingUp blow up]] or [[ImAHumanitarian eat the other.]]
422** Miss Piggy is usually more likely to dish slapstick out to others, but she does frequently end up on the receiving end of a lot of physical humor, usually the result of her falling off of something, or one of her karate chops backfiring.
423* A "Theatre/PunchAndJudy Show" is a very old (dating back to at least the 17th century, and with roots in 16th century Italian live theatre) type of puppet show that ''lives'' on grotesquely exaggerated violence for the sake of humor.
424[[/folder]]
425
426[[folder:Theatre]]
427%%* A staple of circuses, from Ringling Brothers to Creator/CirqueDuSoleil, via their clowns.
428* Arlecchino, or Harlequin, is a member of the UniversalAdaptorCast of CommediaDellArte, known for carrying the stick [[TropeNamer which gives this genre its name]].
429* "The Fox Has Left His Lair" [[note]]an old music revue sketch; [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff for whatever reasons seems to be especially popular in the Netherlands]][[/note]] features: three very expressive huntsmen and TheDitz that permanently [[AmusingInjuries stands in the way of the expressiveness.]]
430* Slapstick is an important element in any {{Pantomime}}.
431* ''Theatre/OneManTwoGuvnors'' had a lot of physical comedy, especially during the dinner scene. As did ''Theatre/SchoolOfRock''. Both had Cal [=McCrystal=] credited as the "Physical Comedy Director".
432* In ''Theatre/PeterPanGoesWrong'', absolutely ''no one'' is spared. Lucy breaks both her legs, Annie is electrocuted, and Sandra is regularly dropped by the faulty fly system.
433[[/folder]]
434
435[[folder:Video Games]]
436* Every time the eponymous protagonist of ''VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' gets squashed by anything round, we can see a nice slapstick animation, in which she gets [[SquashedFlat flattened]] in the "paper leaf" type. However, [[VideoGame/Bayonetta2 the sequel]] does not offer any round objects or enemies to squash her, due to its DarkerAndEdgier approach.
437* ''VideoGame/TheBindingOfIsaac'': Characters turn themselves into living power outlets, drug themselves off pills and shrooms, stab themselves with a rock/metal, and be subjected to the game's heavy BlackComedy as any of the male player characters (though it's heavily implied that the female and male player characters are just Isaac in [[WholesomeCrossdresser different outfits]]).
438* ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' doesn't shy away from characters being caught in unfortunate, painful, and embarrassing situations. [[CuteMonsterGirl Makoto]] especially winds up in physical mishaps, including being blown up (twice), forced to eat [[LethalChef Noel's cooking]] and being an unwilling participant in one of [[MadScientist Relius]]' experiments [[note]]And by experiments, we mean Relius' joke ending, not Makoto's bad ending, where she ends up as the subject of one of his experiments and the situation is ''most certainly not'' PlayedForLaughs[[/note]].
439* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'':
440** Coco Bandicoot and Nina Cortex are subject to the odd AmusingInjuries, albeit not nearly as much as [[IronButtMonkey Crash and Neo]]. Coco even has her own ascending angel death animation in ''VideoGame/CrashBandicootTheWrathOfCortex'' just like her brother, though she doesn't have anything near the more over the top deaths he gets from other things.
441** With Coco being a playable character in standard levels of the ''VideoGame/CrashBandicootNSaneTrilogy'', many of the [[TheManyDeathsOfYou strange and wacky fates]] that could befall Crash in the original games can now occur to her, as well. Of course, even the first time she was playable in ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot3Warped'', her exclusive levels did feature some comedic ways by which she could lose a life, such as being stranded in the ocean while being pecked at by an angry seagull, but not as much as what could happen to Crash at the time.
442** Tawna and the Trophy Girls now are playable characters in ''VideoGame/CrashTeamRacingNitroFueled'', as the Nitro Squad, which means that not even the series' resident supermodel beauties are exempt from being hit by ''CTR'''s various explosive items, getting squashed by and/or falling into obstacles. Tawna does [[MajorInjuryUnderreaction take it all]] [[DeadpanSnarker in stride]], though.
443** Tawna's other dimension counterpart in ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot4ItsAboutTime'' is the first time she is playable in some form in a platformer, which means that she can be flattened, incinerated, electrocuted, eaten, and she also gets her own ascending angel death animation. Keep in mind that this is the version of her that's [[ExperiencedProtagonist established as a certified badass]] in the absence of Crash and Coco.
444* No one is spared over the top, comical injury in ''VideoGame/DarkStalkers'', least of all the game's mascot and most well-known character, [[SuccubiAndIncubi Morrigan Aensland]].
445* In ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong64'', [[CuteBruiser Tiny Kong]] gets squashed to the ground as well as the other Kongs if you fall from high heights (and [[MonsterClown Mad Jack]] doesn't hesitate to stomp her).
446* ''VideoGame/EarthwormJim'': Princess Whatshername is crushed by a cow at the end of the game. And turns into a cow in the sequel.
447* ''VideoGame/GoGoHypergrind'' is a cartoonish skateboarding game whose focus is trying to inflict as much pain on your skater as possible.
448* Two of the animated shorts for ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' feature the beautiful Goddess Palutena facing a variety of culinary mishaps from an oven exploding in her face to getting a giant pumpkin stuck on her head. Pit remains entirely unaffected by, and oblivious to, the harm that's befalling his beloved goddess throughout the skits.
449* Princess Rosella suffers from slapstick deaths in ''VideoGame/KingsQuestVIIThePrincelessBride'', including [[LavaPit falling off a railroad into lava]] and being [[SquashedFlat squashed by a dragon's tail]].
450* ''VideoGame/KirbyStarAllies'': With all the goofy hazards in the Kirby games, characters are subject to comedic punishment
451* ''VideoGame/LauraBow'' is a two-part Sierra adventure game with a female protagonist, and, in the same fashion as other games from the company, she is subjected to [[TheManyDeathsOfYou lots of deaths]], averting also the BeautyIsNeverTarnished trope. Some of these include hilariously falling from stairs and high places, being hit by a car, burned to ashes, stomped by a bell, crushed by an elevator and a chandelier... the poor girl even gets ''chopped in half by an axe onscreen''. All of these are, of course, PlayedForLaughs, being a Sierra game after all.
452* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
453** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheWindWaker''
454*** The series is generally devoid of slapstick, having a subject matter that leans more towards seriousness, with the occasional comic relief being more [[SurrealHumor surreal in nature]]. However, ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheWindWaker Wind Waker]]'' uses slapstick generously, which goes well with its cartoony aesthetic. At one point, a group of pirates attempt to sneak Link into the BigBad 's compound via ''catapult''. It goes about as well as you'd expect, with Link smashing against a wall and losing his sword. This Link in particular is very prone to falling and getting in all sorts of funny accidents.
455*** In the game, you have to solve a few puzzles involving picking up [[BirdPeople Medli]] and throwing her so she can glide to otherwise unreachable spots. If you accidentally (or [[VideogameCrueltyPotential on purpose]]) throw her against a wall, she'll get dazed for a moment and occasionally [[NonSequiturThud say nonsense]].
456** ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess Twilight Princess]]'' features [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Yeto]]. He's a [[GentleGiant very nice, generous guy]], really, but he also has a habit of [[DoesNotKnowHisOwnStrength knocking Link on his ass]] whenever he takes something from him.
457* ''Franchise/MassEffect'' gives us Khalisah bint Sinan al-Jilani, a tabloid reporter who tries to do a smear job on your character. One of the available dialogue options is to punch her in the face. In the second game, you not only get to do it again (or do it if you didn't the first time around) but video clips show her getting similar treatment from members of the alien races, including the harmless-looking and generally comic-relief volus. By the third game, she's wised up a little; attacking her will result in her dodging the blow, and lamping Shepard to the floor with a counterattack unless you go on to headbutt her into a wall.
458* ''VideoGame/MetalSlug'' features characters getting electrocuted, burned or even dissolved or eaten alive by aliens or man-eating plants. A notable one is in ''[[VideoGame/MetalSlug Metal Slug 4]]'': if you get caught in the explosion at the end of the final level, your character, regardless of gender, ends up covered in AmusingInjuries. And there is also a notable aversion in the third game, played for {{Fanservice}}.
459* The ''VideoGame/RavingRabbids'' franchise is practically ''programmed'' around the word slapstick, since much of the games' humor revolves around the [[AmusingInjuries cartoonish, physical abuse the titular Rabbids receive]] as a cause of either a punishment from other characters or objects in the game, the player himself, or sometimes even from each other.
460* ''VideoGame/SakuraWars'' tends to have characters on the receiving end of slapstick, usually from other female characters, tripping over stuff, or having things [[NonFatalExplosions blow up in their faces]].
461* ''VideoGame/SegaSuperstars'':
462** In ''Sega All-Stars Racing'', expect to see Amy, [[VideoGame/SpaceChannel5 Ulala]], or [[VideoGame/HouseOfTheDead Zobiko]] get squished, hit with flying boxing gloves, or hit with missiles.
463** In the sequel to ''All-Stars Racing'', [[VideoGame/SpaceChannel5 Pudding]], [[VideoGame/JetSetRadio Gum]], [[VideoGame/SuperMonkeyBall Meemee]], and [[RogerRabbitEffect real-life racer Danica Patrick]] join the party. And in addition to being flattened and hit with stuff, they also get [[XRaySparks electrocuted in cartoonish fashion]] too.
464* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
465** ''VideoGame/SonicTheFighters'' is a game with lots of cartoon-style slapstick, and some of it can definitely happen to Amy (or the infamous Honey, who is now playable in the HD re-release).
466** In ''VideoGame/SonicRiders'', each character has a different attack they can perform on someone, nearly all of which are comical and played for laughs.
467** One of Amy's attacks in the first ''VideoGame/{{Sonic Advance|Trilogy}}'' is basically a sliding pratfall on her face.
468* The ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'' series is built on the entire foundation of comedic slapstick to match its very cartoony nature. The main gameplay involves [[GoombaStomp jumping on enemies]](namely Goombas) and [[SquashedFlat squashing them flat]], knocking them over by bashing blocks or kicking Koopa shells at them. That's not even going into the other forms of combat, [[VideoGame/SuperMarioBros2 like grabbing and throwing objects at enemies]], the various Mario RPG's don't have typical "RPG" weapons, but [[ImprobableWeaponUser rather mallots and parasols]] to whack enemies with. The ''Mario Kart'' series is full of WackyRacing with items and banana peels and explosives as weapons. And the ''Mario Party'' series goes above and beyond in terms of slapstick, where characters punch, kick, blow each other up, smash each other flat, set each other on fire, beat each other with mallots, knock each other off of platforms, and much more. No one in the series, no matter who, is immune to the hijinks.
469* The ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' series contains are great deal of slapstick which has been refined over the course of the series. Some fighters such as Villager and Bowser Jr. have a number of moves based on slapstick, while the more serious fighters act better as StraightMan {{Foil}}s for them. Items include [[VideoGame/MarioKart banana peels]], [[VideoGame/AnimalCrossing hives that cause a swarm of bees to pursue whoever they're thrown at]] and [[Franchise/{{Kirby}} curry so spicy it makes anyone who eats it run around uncontrollably while breathing fire]]. Opponents are sent flying through the air when hit, and you score knockouts by making them fly [[ATwinkleInTheSky all the way off]], or [[CameraAbuse into]], the screen. Older games in the series also included a PaperFanOfDoom, which is a staple of Japanese slapstick comedy.
470* ''VideoGame/TalesSeries'':
471** ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'': Colette is a bit of a klutz, and has a tendency to trip and fall through walls, leaving a Colette-shaped hole in them. Sheena also has a habit of falling into deep holes, which is PlayedForLaughs, especially in [[VideoGame/TalesOfSymphoniaDawnOfTheNewWorld the sequel]].
472** ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss'': The game is generally low on slapstick, but one early scene features an enemy, monster-tamer Arietta the Wild, sending her griffin to capture player characters Luke and Ion. Luke gets grabbed, but Ion's bodyguard Anise (whom Arietta heartily dislikes) shoves Ion out of the way, getting caught herself in the process. Arietta's response to this is to have the griffin drop Anise from high in the air, causing her to faceplant on the ground. Anise gets rather annoyed with Arietta for this but suffers no injury.
473** ''VideoGame/TalesOfGraces'': Pascal suffers more than her fair share of mishaps. In fact, she's introduced trying to hug [[PintSizedPowerhouse Sophie]] and getting blasted into a cliff wall for her trouble. And one of her [[LimitBreak Mystic Artes]] involves riding a robot directly at the enemy she's firing upon, getting caught in the resulting explosion, and flying through the air and crashing into the ground.
474** ''VideoGame/TalesOfXillia'': Two post-victory bits have Milla spinning around her sword in an impressive manner before striking a badass pose, and Leia seeing this and trying to imitate her with her staff. In the [[https://youtu.be/y3NVSAjoyqw first one]], she accidentally whacks herself on the back of the head. In the [[https://youtu.be/9lSLt_RbssU second one]], she ends up hitting Milla in the ass.
475** ''VideoGame/TalesOfBerseria'': Magilou is frequently on the receiving end of the physical comedy in skits, including but not limited to being shoved into a drainage canal, being force-fed [[GargleBlaster sale'tomah]], getting body-checked off stage in her own comedy routine, and being [[DopeSlap smacked to shut her up]].
476* ''VideoGame/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesShreddersRevenge'': Thanks to her promotion into playable status, April O'Neil can be affected by the same kinds of iconic AmusingInjuries as the Turtles and other male characters, such as getting squished, burnt or bitten by a Mouser.
477* ''VideoGame/WarioLandShakeIt'': Wario has no qualms with grabbing Queen Merelda and nonchalantly throwing her off-screen (with an audible crash!) so he can get to taking the bottomless coin sack.
478* In ''VideoGame/TheWonderful101'', the irresistibly cute Wonder Pink can get flattened by enemies, and failing certain [=QTEs=] that require the use of her whip will result in all sorts of comical things happening to her, such as being poked in the butt by a spike, or getting smashed by a robot hand (followed by a tiny little angel floating away after the hand smashes her).
479* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'': Nia is constantly on the receiving end of slapstick humor, from being electrocuted by Electra to getting smacked around by Nopon.
480[[/folder]]
481
482[[folder:Visual Novels]]
483* ''VisualNovel/LuxPain'': [[GenkiGirl Mika]] [[IntrepidReporter Nozaki]] is the only female among the main cast to consistently be abused by Rui. And it's funny.
484* Franchise/{{Nasuverse}} in general doesn't shy away from putting its female characters in slapstick situations, especially if your name is [[VisualNovel/FateStayNight Taiga Fujimura]].
485* ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneyDualDestinies'': Athena Cykes [[StaircaseTumble falls down the stairs]] in her opening scene, gets attacked by the prosecutor's RazorWind and hawk just as much as Phoenix and Apollo, and has expressions as exaggerated as the other protagonists. This is especially noticeable when compared to the last playable female character Mia Fey, who avoids comical injuries and still looks dignified despite being insulted in her playable appearances like every other playable character.
486[[/folder]]
487
488[[folder:Web Animation]]
489* ''WebAnimation/TheBigDadWolf'': When [[TheProtagonist Holan]] decides he wants to be with his wife at his child's birth [[spoiler:regardless of his lycanthropy]], he slams open the door of the room he was hiding in... right in the face of a female orderly, knocking her out cold.
490* ''WebAnimation/CampCamp'': Nikki is rarely without scrapes as a result, Ered often crashes into or through things thanks to her extreme sports bent, Gwen gets put through hell by the campers, and Tabii [[spoiler:[[EyeScream gets a]] ''[[EyeScream fork]]'' [[EyeScream thrown into her eye]] in the second season.]] To say nothing of how ''everyone'' gets chased by wild animals at some point or other.
491%%* WebAnimation/EddsWorld
492* ''WebAnimation/HappyTreeFriends'' exaggerates slapstick and accidentally hits the button marked [[{{Gorn}} "Blood Spray"]].
493* ''WebAnimation/PorkchopNFlatscreen'' has the protagonists Mai and Ayane, as well as the resident AlphaBitch Mina Kim, end up on the receiving end of many, many physical gags.
494* In the ''Toon Sandwich Life'' segments of ''WebAnimation/ToonSandwich'', which features the real-life CreatorCouple Joe and Rita Bauer, Rita is equally prone to slapstick injuries as much as her husband, Joe.
495[[/folder]]
496
497[[folder:Webcomics]]
498* The titular characters from the MLP fancomic ''Webcomic/DiamondAndDazzle'' are equally subject to physical comedy. One comic features Diamond getting yanked off-panel by her tail due to some device set up by Dazzle. She somehow came back into the panel to make sure Dazzle was yanked along with her.
499* Given that the series averts MenAreTheExpendableGender and is an example of GenderIsNoObject, it's little surprise ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'' features slapstick, especially in the end of chapter chibi parodies, where female characters are just as ([[ImprobablyFemaleCast if not more]]) likely to be on the receiving end of slapstick violence as male characters.
500* In ''Webcomic/{{Narbonic}}'', the cartoonist made it a point to have Helen and Mell do their share of physical gags, due to the mentioned double standard. Helen was the only character getting injured by her own ur-gerbils.
501* ''Webcomic/{{Precocious}}'': One strip even features a MeleeATrois where Bud, Roddy, and beauty pageant queen Dionne took turns double-teaming each other or having a free-for-all.
502* In ''Webcomic/SomethingPositive'', Davan comments several times that he "doesn't hit women," but has hit Aubrey or Peejee several times, and once "magically" slapped a pretentious witch on the head with a ruler.
503* In ''Webcomic/{{Matchu}}'' Amber takes tons of physical punishment and humiliation, while Gina the Psychic has been smacked in the face with her own crystal ball twice.
504* Kimiko of ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' has a tendency to get caught up in slapstick jokes. One running gag in her earlier appearances was that she tended to trip while serving coffee, either hitting a hapless customer in the face or pouring the coffee on their lap. While trying to calm down a drunk and freaked out Largo, she also tripped while chasing him and then got puked on by him.
505* ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'': Most human(oid) are naturally the subject of plenty of slapstick. Presti is especially subject to it, in Level 6, to TheChewToy level, and Mimic and the Doogan brothers can attest to being subject to it.
506* Tiffany of ''Webcomic/TiffanyAndCorey'' is on the receiving end of physical comedy, be it [[CoveredInGunge a face full of popped bubble gum]] or exploding cigars.
507[[/folder]]
508
509%%[[folder:Web Original]]
510%%* {{Deconstructed}} by ''Website/TheOnion'' [[http://www.theonion.com/articles/man-gets-into-mess-usually-reserved-for-stars-of-s,2639/ here.]]
511%%[[/folder]]
512
513[[folder:Web Videos]]
514* Website/ChannelAwesome:
515** WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick will often get caught up in cartoonish violence, particularly in her joint review of ''WesternAnimation/FernGullyTheLastRainforest'' with WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic and in ''WebVideo/{{Kickassia}}''. This is most likely due to the site's views on gender equality and feminism.
516** In the [[WebVideo/TGWTGYearOneBrawl Anniversary Brawl]], the Chick, WebVideo/MarzGurl, and That Chick With the Goggles all were beaten up plenty. Most notable was when the Critic asks Goggles if she was on his team or not and, when she said she wasn't, he promptly punched her in the face.
517* On ''Blog/DasSporking'', female sporkers are just as likely as male ones to take AmusingInjuries. Mervin, Hyde, and Ket are the most prominent -- Mervin and Hyde smack each other up, and Mervin and Ket tend to get into brawls with occasional co-sporker [[Film/OnceUponATimeInMexico Agent Sands]].
518* ''WebVideo/DragonBallZAbridged''
519** When Goku accidentally knocks Chi-Chi through the wall of their house with a pat, Gohan tells him to run.
520--->'''Gohan:''' DAD, RUN!\
521'''Goku:''' WHAT?\
522'''Gohan:''' THE WORST SHE CAN DO IS GROUND ME, NOW RUN!
523** When Goku throws Chi-Chi up in the air after healing from his heart condition, he throws her up into space and she experiences re-entry heating on the way down. She does survive, though.
524%%* Spoof video [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8h7N2mVWjk Rorschach's Plight]]
525[[/folder]]
526
527[[folder:Western Animation]]
528* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball''
529** The show is replete with AmusingInjuries and DeathAsComedy. Characters have been torn apart, dissolved in water, eaten, SquashedFlat, shocked, and the like. Considering that among those victimised include a paper bear, a piece of toast, a balloon, and a robot, just about all of it is PlayedForLaughs.
530** Nicole, the mother character, despite being less prone to getting herself in slapstick situations through idiocy and more capable of getting out of them unharmed do to being an ActionMom, does still get hit with slapstick on occasion. Usually due to her family's antics. Including the very first episode, "The DVD", when she faceplants into the ground pretty hard and later smashes into a brick wall, while chasing her sons, Gumball and Darwin across the neighborhood. She also gets a black eye in "The Vase" after an accident, gets launched off a an esculater and pulled up into the air into a pretty nasty (offfscreen hit in the head), among other more minor frustrations in "The Mothers", and gets her legs pinned under a steel beam in "The Worst".
531** Like her mother, Anais is generally one of the more intelligent and capable characters, and therefore gets herself in these situations less often than her brothers. But she still gets into them. In the "The Responsible", Anais, along with Gumball and Darwin smash into the ground after being shot into the air and falling back down. She takes another nasty fall along with her brothers (and father this time) in "The Cycle". Gets run over by a motor scooter alongside Gumball in "The Goons". Accidently knocks herself out with a ''brick to the face'' in "The Treasure". And gets knocked down a flight of stairs in "The Parasite".
532** Gumball's girlfriend Penny gets a milkshake repeatedly thrown in her face and later gets ''blasted across'' the room by a lightning strike in "The Storm", gets sent into an allergic reaction by Gumball in "The Dream", gets her head smashed in by a VCR in "The Console", and inadvertently gets sent on an outright TraumaCongaLine (including another allergic reaction) by Gumball in a misguided attempt at sending her on a romantic quest in "The Romantic".
533* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' ''really'' lives up to its name, what with the zany characters involved in over-the-top antics, many of who even end up on the receiving end of AmusingInjuries.
534* ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'':
535** Pam and Cheryl are constantly being abused (physically and psychologically) for the sake of comedy. While Lana receives a lot less compared to Pam and Cheryl, certain episodes put her through considerable slapstick, such as 'Pipeline Fever' where she severely scalds her hands on dry ice and is shot full of morphine, and the 'Space Race' episodes, where she continuously vomits and has her clothes destroyed, forcing her to run around in just her underwear and stickers on her breasts.
536** Malory, while very rarely getting injured, does suffer amusing injuries or mishaps from time to time such as when she accidentally puts zucchini (which she is allergic to) on her eyes, mistaking them for cucumbers, causing her eyes to puff up and blind her, being trapped in an elevator by her employees who crank up the heat (leading her to resort to stripping naked), getting the crap kicked out of her by Pam (albeit off-screen), and a few others.
537* Sokka in ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' is the common victim which involves being the practice dummy, the one who always gets beaten up, always lands face first, getting hopped up on cactus juice, getting hit in the head (especially by Katara when he says Kyoshi has an alibi when Chin the Conquer was killed in the ClearMyName Episode), the one who always gets Chi-blocked by Ty-Lee, etc.
538* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'': Harley Quinn is often the subject of slapstick humor due to her BumblingSidekick status. Notably, in the episode "Girl's Night Out", she shoots an oversized knockout glove at Supergirl, only for it to bounce harmlessly off of Supergirl and rebound right back in her face. The ''Mad Love'' comic had Harley physically abused in both funny and unfunny ways. An early scene shows a fed-up Joker grabbing her by her nose, dragging her down to the cellar, and [[LiteralAssKicking booting her into a muddy pit]] (while she's in her underwear, no less!) [[DisproportionateRetribution as punishment for calling him "Puddin'"]]. Later, on a ''much'' less funny note, [[DomesticAbuse the Joker pushes her through a window hundreds of feet above the street, crippling and nearly killing her]].
539* While most WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts don't use slapstick that much compared to other studios at the time, their Goofy cartoons revolve all around violent slapstick. Goofy and other characters get punched in the face and hit on the head repeatedly, fall from high places while yelling the classic Goofy yell, crash into each others' cars, smoke cigars that [[ExplodingCigar blow up in their faces,]] get electrocuted, tip over, have their [[ComedicUnderwearExposure underwear exposed,]] get [[LiteralAssKicking kicked in the butt,]] and suffer many other AmusingInjuries.
540* ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'': Abby and Kuki are stuffed into soda bottles in "Operation: P.O.P.", both are hit by a [[NakedPeopleAreFunny nudifying missile]] (at the north pole, no less) in "Operation: Arctic", Kuki is [[ItMakesSenseInContext turned into a hamburger]] via a RubeGoldbergMachine in "Operation: Fast Food", and many, many more.
541* There was a lot of slapstick in ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'': since the creator of the show, John Dilworth, is a big fan of classic Warner Bros and Creator/TexAvery animation. Much of the gags in the episodes are a result of Courage outsmarting the MonsterOfTheWeek to save his family.
542%%* ''WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck''.
543* ''WesternAnimation/DrawnTogether'':
544** Princess Clara tends to be beaten up, sometimes randomly, by the housemates in several episodes.
545** Toot Braunstein frequently dies in humorously gruesome and over-the-top ways such as [[spoiler:chopping off her own head after Xander rejected her advances...]]
546** Foxxy Love is subject to slapstick, such as [[spoiler:having a nail and a separate finger yanked off]]...
547* ''WesternAnimation/TheDreamstone'': Amberley for the large part bumbled as much through missions as [[TheKlutz Rufus]] did. However, this consisted mostly of tame pratfalls compared to the exaggerated AmusingInjuries [[IronButtMonkey the Urpneys]] suffered each episode.
548* ''WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers'': The Episode "The New Cadet", the new cadet (a gorgeous human woman) finds herself in the same ButtMonkey situations as the Porky Pig version (before she turns out to be a StalkerWithACrush) including getting blown up by Dodgers as a practical joke.
549* ''WesternAnimation/EdEddNEddy'': There's a lot of the slapstick humor in this show, usually because one of Eddy's {{Get Rich Quick Scheme}}s either fails spectacularly and causes them to get beaten up during the episode, or the things they build for their schemes cause them to get hurt. The Eds will inflict slapstick on each other a lot too.
550* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'':
551** The series shows Cosmo accidentally slapsticking Wanda so often, including [[AshFace torching her with a flamethrower]], that it's considered entirely possible that she would deliberately get him sent back to live with his mother.
552** Vicky is often on the receiving end of slapstick most of the time when she [[LaserGuidedKarma receives her comeuppance]], which is in almost ''every'' episode.
553* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'':
554** As the show's resident ButtMonkey, Meg Griffin is a victim of a lot of slapstick like the male characters of the show.
555** Meg's mother Lois doesn't get much easier. She's been shoved down the stairs by her husband Peter, fallen off the roof of the Griffin house when Peter's rickety balcony breaks, drenched in scalding cooking oil by Peter, beaten up by a group of children, and more.
556%%* ''WesternAnimation/FanboyAndChumChum''
557* ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'': [[WesternAnimation/FelixTheCatOttoMessmer The B&W shorts]] featured a lot of slapstick in the vein of Creator/CharlieChaplin movies along with a hefty load of urban surrealism.
558* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
559** Amy Wong was created specifically to see whether audiences could laugh at a female victim of slapstick. Turns out the answer is a resounding "Yes".
560** Leela gets her fair share of slapstick in later seasons. She's been hit on the head, electrocuted, sucked by a leech, attacked by an octopus, and smashed into a wall [[TheDoorSlamsYou by a door]].
561* ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'': Mandy is [[AshFace burnt to a crisp]], [[CoveredInGunge sneezed on]] by Grim, swallowed and later spit out with hairballs by a giant cat, and so on.
562* Despite the fact that ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'' is a slice of life cartoon, Helga Pataki is often subject to slapstick, from getting crapped on by flying birds to getting into a bumper car accident to suffering two beatings from Big Patty. Half of her slapstick moments are deconstructed in "Helga on the Couch".
563* While Heloise was rarely a victim of AmusingInjuries in Season 1 of ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'' (where she was instead usually dishing them out), she suffers more in Season 2 than just about any other character (except [[ButtMonkey Samy]]). The episode "Heads Roll" practically centers around [[LosingYourHead Heloise's head]] getting completely battered.
564* Zatanna magically hurls musical instruments and furniture at Circe multiple times during a fight in ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'', not even letting her ''finish her threats''.
565-->'''Circe:''' Insolent trickster! You dare to stri--\
566''[hit in the back by a chair]''\
567'''Circe:''' You dare to stri--\
568''[smacked by a table]''\
569'''Circe:''' You dare to stri--\
570''[head covered by table cloth]''\
571'''Circe:''' '''QUIT IT!''' [[OhCrap Oh No...]]\
572''[gets hit by a [[PianoDrop piano]] ]''
573* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'':
574** Korra's personality makes her as good a target as anyone for slapstick. For example, an airbending test early in the series tasks her with weaving between a series of quickly-spinning wooden planks, counter to the physical bending she's more adept at. The first couple scenes featuring the test boil down to Korra getting comically slapped around by the planks.
575** In Book 2, the royal children [[HalfIdenticalTwins Desna and Eska]] are not usually played for laughs (except rather darkly, by ''[[ComedicSociopathy dishing out]]'' abuse to others), but in the one scene where it does happen, Eska suffers it no less than her brother Desna.
576* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'':
577** The show usually features the cartoon's antagonist falling victim to cartoon abuse from either their opponent or their own stupidity. Possibly the purest example: the "plot" of every Road Runner cartoon is, essentially, "Wile E. Coyote tries to catch the Road Runner and hurts himself in hilarious ways." This happens to other characters also, but it's the ''only'' thing that ever happens to Wile E. (except for a couple of cartoons that replace "the Road Runner" with "Bugs Bunny").
578** In the episode “Pigture Perfect”, Petunia Pig is trying to take a picture of a squirrel to fill the rest of her mantle and is repeatedly put through hell during her attempts to do so; she suffers injuries like her ass catching fire, being electrocuted by a pole and then landing on a pitchfork, getting hit by several cars, and eventually getting hit by a ''bus''. [[spoiler:She gets her picture, but not before being out in the hospital wearing a full-body cast that she’s still in six months after the incident; she ultimately decided that it was completely worth it]].
579* None of the sisters in ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'' (with the possible exception of Lily) are excluded from involvements of over-the-top slapstick and numerous injuries in distinctive, funny styles. The one who probably takes it the worst, however, is [[DumbBlonde Leni]], which, of course, isn't helped by her stupidity.
580* Bessie from ''WesternAnimation/TheMightyB'' is always prone to physical slapstick, much to her enemies' amusement. [[ThrowTheDogABone Though, at least she does end out on top most of the time]].
581* In ''WesternAnimation/MyLifeAsATeenageRobot'', Jenny is usually the ButtMonkey of the show. Being a robot, [[EasilyDetachableRobotParts she can be put back together]] from the worst abuse that would kill any human.
582* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'':
583** The episode "Feeling Pinkie Keen" features Twilight's repeated attempts to observe and document Pinkie Pie's alleged powers of clairvoyance resulted in a constant string of ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes''-esque shenanigans, up to and including having a [[FlowerPotDrop flower pot]], an [[AnvilOnHead anvil]], a hay wagon, ''[[OverlyLongGag and]]'' a {{piano|Drop}} fall on her in one scene. And it's undoubtedly the funniest moment of the entire show.
584** "Castle Mane-ia" subjects nearly the entire cast to a string of Scooby-Doo-esque disasters. Naturally, Rarity, the girliest pony of the bunch, [[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-hauCQ645dCU/U3lVmmQNfmI/AAAAAAABx7c/RiajF2wDQ00/s1600/Rock_clonks_Rarity_on_the_head_S4E03.png gets it the worst]].
585%%* ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches''
586* In ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'', Candace is one of two main {{Chew Toy}}s along with Doofenshmirtz (who is male). If someone is going to fall, be attacked, hit in the face, dropped in embarrassing goo, covered in hair, or have any other unfortunate yet hilarious thing happen to them, there's a good chance it's her.
587-->'''Candace:''' [[MemeticMutation There's]] SquirrelsInMyPants!
588* ''WesternAnimation/{{Popeye}}'': Olive Oyl often suffers comic abuse when caught in the struggle between Popeye and Bluto.
589* Woodland Animations used this a lot in their productions: ''WesternAnimation/PostmanPat'', ''Bertha'' and ''WesternAnimation/CharlieChalk'', particularly considering the latter of which revolves around a circus clown. The physical comedy in these shows is far less reliant on injuries, but would still provide considerable visual humour.
590* ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' are renowned for taking their lumps during battles with monsters and arch-enemies, despite being superpowered kindergartners. Once in a while, they will take their lumps for laughs. Notable examples are when they played out their own adventures ("The Powerpuff Girls' Best Rainy Day Adventure Ever") and when Blossom goes through a HumiliationConga after the girls defeat Mask-scara ("A Made Up Story").
591* ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'': Penny Proud seems to take after her father due to being the second biggest ButtMonkey of the show, as aside from having the worst luck of having her friends ditch her whenever she's in a pickle, she also ends up on the receiving end of slapstick in roughly 70% of the episodes.
592%%* ''WesternAnimation/RenAndStimpy''
593* ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'' is replete with ''a lot'' of these, thanks to numerous AmusingInjuries any character suffers and surreal humor, not to mention its frequent use of [[WildTake Wild Takes]].
594* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Lisa Simpson has been punched in the face at least twice (one of those times by a man!), hit in the face multiple times with a basketball, strapped to an airplane propeller that was then turned on at full speed as part of a military academy hazing, played goalie in hockey, and -- probably her most humiliating moment -- dared by Bart into drinking canal water from the "Little Land of Duff" ride in [[SouvenirLand Duff Gardens]] which turned her into [[MushroomSamba a hallucinating, naked "Lizard Queen"]]. Marge also takes pratfalls, although far less often.
595* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': The humor revolves around the insanity of the characters (including the titular sea sponge himself) and over-the-top injuries that is mostly PlayedForLaughs.
596* The original ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans'' series was relatively gentle with its female leads but its DenserAndWackier SpinOff ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' has no compunction about slapping Starfire and Raven around for gags.
597* WesternAnimation/TexAveryMGMCartoons rely heavily on slapstick, with characters getting hit on the head with mallets and other stuff, blowing up from bombs and TNT, getting SquashedFlat by heavy objects or bigger animals, and having their teeth fall out or shattering to little pieces after getting hit.
598* Frida on ''WesternAnimation/ElTigreTheAdventuresOfMannyRivera'' received more harm and abuse than any other character in the series. [[RuleOfFunny And it was hilarious]].
599* ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' is essentially a mini WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, deriving its humor from the much younger counterparts of the latter cartoon's respective characters.
600* ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry'': A lot of the humor comes from Jerry's abuse of Tom, by causing Tom's schemes to catch him to backfire. On occasions Jerry and other characters will fall victim to it as well.
601* Penelope Pitstop in ''WesternAnimation/WackyRaces2017'' is no stranger to the series' beloved creatively excessive violence and/or jokes ''about'' said violence (in the first episode alone, she ends up in a body cast), and as the series goes on, it only happens ''more.'' Her [[EvilTwin evil sister Pandora]], likewise, gets the same {{Humiliation Conga}}s that come from being a villain ''and'' the same casual slapstick that comes from being a racer at the same time.
602* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wakfu}}'' pulls no punches when it comes to slapstick. Amalia has probably suffered more black eyes than any of the other cast members save [[ButtMonkey Sadlygrove]]. The two Gobbowl arcs in particular are especially harsh for her. Evangelyne less often, although she's hardly immune, notably in the Ugly Princesses' abode, or in Ruel's house.
603* ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'': Sylvia may be the show's resident ass-kicker but she gets dealt AmusingInjuries almost as often as her counterparts, mostly in her attempts to be the CloudcuckoolandersMinder. See "The Egg", "The Pet", and "The Day" for examples.
604[[/folder]]

Top