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1[[quoteright:315:[[Film/NightOfTheLepus https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pet_store_bunnies.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:315:[[NightmareRetardant D'awww]]... I mean, [[KillerRabbit RUN]] [[Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail AWAY]]!]]
3
4->''every "scummy sewer rat" used as set dressing in modern tv and film is a healthy, chubby lil boi with a nice shiny coat bc he lives a blessed little rat life full of fruits and nuts and tummy scritches''
5-->-- Website/{{tumblr}} user '''[[https://fieldbears.tumblr.com/post/686345779503366145/see-also-every-scummy-sewer-rat-used-as-set fieldbears]]''' [[note]]In truth, most rats used in film are girl rats, because boy rats have... rather significant testicles that would be offputting to audiences.[[/note]]
6
7The protagonist opens the cupboard in a haunted house and, terror of terrors, there's a rat inside. Everyone involved screams at the sight of the filthy diseased vermin. Except it looks like it's been recently bathed and brushed. And instead of fleeing or acting aggressive, it's looking expectantly at the actors for a treat. In really egregious cases it might even be white or multicolored instead of black or brown like a wild rat.
8
9This is a Terrifying Pet Store Rat. While the animal in question is often a rat, it also applies to spiders, snakes, and anything else the audience is expected to react with fear or revulsion toward, despite the animal reacting like a pet. Spiders will saunter calmly over people instead of racing along in a panic. Snakes will crawl onto people's shoulders, staring them in the face comically instead of hissing and coiling defensively. ''Non''-menacing animals can be an inversion of sorts, when an animal which should, ''itself'', be terrified by events unfolding in-story instead acts calm, content, and eager for the treat its handler is dangling just out of frame.
10
11This is generally caused by the fact that wild animals are [[NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals really hard to work with]]. A wild rat might panic and flee realistically, but getting it to sit still long enough for the actors to show up is a challenge, as is anything involved in moving it and keeping it there long enough to have the cameras set up. And the SPCA/Humane Society/local equivalent would be likely to object, too, since there's a much higher chance of the animal or human handlers being injured, which helps no one, so this trope is one of the AcceptableBreaksFromReality when it's done for safety's sake. So as far as most directors are concerned, a tame ball python that barely moves is usually a better choice than a deadly jungle snake, especially since [[BellisariosMaxim no one will notice the difference anyway.]] Strangely, this often isn't averted with CGI, as fast, complex movements are expensive to animate. Very often crosses over with MisplacedWildlife.
12
13Tarantulas and scorpions used in film and TV tend to be docile species with very weak venom, since a more lethal species would obviously be more dangerous for the actors. This can give arachnologists or spider enthusiasts a GeniusBonus (alternatively, SomewhereAnEntomologistIsCrying) when they notice that the characters are freaking out about a harmless species.
14
15A variant of this trope instead features common cats and dogs, either as themselves, used as stand-ins for wolves or wild felines, or put in costumes to represent monsters of various sorts. These will be intended to appear menacing, aggressive and dangerous, but the actual animal actors themselves will be tame and socialized animals. This often leads to dramatic scenes featuring supposedly vicious dogs with happily wagging tails, lolling tongues and other signs of excitement for play, or cats seated with a patient, attentive expression, who will let themselves be picked up and handled or simply sniff, bat or investigate their putative victims, without a trace of the snarls and bristling fur of aggressive dogs or the folded ears and distinctive yowls and hisses of angry or scared cats -- or, alternatively, the sounds of angry cats or dogs dubbed over animals that are clearly nothing of the sort.
16
17This is a stock feature of horror movies, they often wander in the background for ambiance, act as a CatScare, or provide a WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes moment when a protagonist has to get past them. In severe cases, the central threat of a horror movie may fall into this trope. The main thing making this trope is that the animal is neither threatening nor believably wild.
18
19Related to RealityIsUnrealistic, in that viewers accustomed to seeing only Terrifying Pet Store Animals on film are often shocked by how tick-ridden, mangy and scarred actual wild animals tend to be.
20
21See also {{Slurpasaur}}, a.k.a. [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever Attack of the 50-Foot]] Terrifying Pet Store Lizard. For actual Terrifying Pet Store Rats, see YouDirtyRat
22----
23!!Examples:
24
25[[foldercontrol]]
26
27[[folder:Advertising]]
28* One [[http://www.webbertraining.com/photos/custom/IC%20Cal%202013_Page4.jpg PSA for sanitation]] had a caption saying "When did you last clean your phone?" and featured a leopard gecko sitting on an old-style flip phone. While clearly intended to invoke the ReptilesAreAbhorrent trope, leopard geckos are incredibly docile and make great pets, which was probably ''why'' it was picked for the advertisement. For bonus points, the leopard gecko in question is a morph (color) almost never seen in the wild, making its pet-ness even more obvious.
29[[/folder]]
30
31[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
32* The anime ''Fluffy Paradise'' has a non-threatening variant. The main character, who is a FriendToAllLivingThings, finds an injured rabbit in the forest and wants to take it home with her only for her father to tell her that doing so is highly disruptive to the natural world. The problem is that the rabbit in question is a fluffy, lop-eared bunny that looks like a fancy-breed show rabbit with a highly conspicuous white coat rather than a wild animal. To make matters even worse, the same episode also has several realistic-looking wild rabbits.
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
36* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'' features an animated version. Remy is supposed to be a common street rat, but his looks (and temperament at that) are of a pet rat. It's almost impossible for a wild-born rat to be Remy's Russian Blue-looking color, as the vast majority of wild brown rats [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin are exactly that - brown]].
37[[/folder]]
38
39[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
40* ''Film/GraveyardShift'', a movie based on a short story about killer rats by Creator/StephenKing, uses several scenes of rats sitting placidly along the rafters staring at the characters in a way reminiscent of ''Film/TheBirds''. Fortunately the movie shifts the actual monster to a giant (animatronics) bat, sparing us from a forced-perspective Terrifying Pet Store Rat as final boss.
41* ''Film/TheHauntedMansion2003'': At one point, the son needs to get past spiders to get into the mausoleum. The spiders are harmless tarantulas (orange-kneed) and they're tame enough that he can move them with his hands. However, he ''is'' arachnophobic, so no matter what spider they used, he would still be frightened by it.
42* ''Film/TheGestaposLastOrgy'': A woman is threatened by being hung over a pit of flesh-eating rats... played by gerbils.
43-->'''Nazi:''' If I didn't take my hand out, they'd strip it down to the bones in a minute.
44* ''Literature/RatmansNotebooks'': Done deliberately in ''Willard'', since the rats are ''supposed'' to be tame, well-groomed, and friendly because Willard takes care of them. It's just that they'll kill if they're told to.
45* ''Franchise/IndianaJones'' does this extensively:
46** ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom'': Indy and Short Round nearly die while Willie refuses to reach into a crevasse filled with harmless stick insects and millipedes to shut off the death trap they're in. Though Willie freaks out because she's a [[DamselScrappy fussy, high-maintenance]] [[TheLoad load]], not necessarily because the bugs are supposed to be dangerous. Indy isn't fazed by them at all.
47** ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull'' lampshades the use of non-venomous (or at least less-venomous) scorpions in movies. Mutt gets attacked by a large but harmless emperor scorpion, and Indy says, "The bigger, the better... if a small one bites you, don't keep it a secret."
48** ''Film/RaidersOfTheLostArk'':
49*** Some of the snakes are recognizable harmless snakes of types people keep as pets, though there is at least one actual cobra ([[FreezeFrameBonus behind glass]]). There's also several "snakes" being played by European Glass Lizards (''Pseudopus apodus''), which aren't even snakes at all. And of course, some of them are clearly just sections of rubber hose. The snake in Jock's plane right at the beginning might count as a subversion as it really ''is'' a pet... [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes not that this reassures Indy in the least]].
50*** In one scene, Creator/AlfredMolina's character is covered with tarantulas. This particular variety is the Mexican Redknee, which make popular pets because they are extremely docile and have venom that is harmless to humans. Of course, the spiders aren't meant to be dangerous so much as just kinda gross, since Indy, again, seems largely unfazed by them.
51** ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheLastCrusade'': The petroleum-filled Venice tomb is full of rats; Indy even notes that his father never would have made it past the rats, as [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes "he's scared to death of them"]]. All the rats are pet store rats; Harrison Ford is seen in behind-the-scenes footage playing with some of them. They are replaced with [[SpecialEffectFailure unmoving]] dolls when the bad guys torch the petroleum.
52* ''Film/Dracula1931'': The English-language production has a scene where Count Dracula introduces his "children of the night", which are implied to be supernatural monsters. The animals on screen sure look suspiciously like opossums and armadillos. Of note is that opossums have lower body temperatures compared to most mammals, and many human transmissible diseases won't survived inside them. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting Likely a lucky coincidence]], though, armadillos are known to be disease vectors for leprosy but aren't exactly intimidating.
53* ''Film/TheMonsterSquad'': Armadillos are seen wandering around Dracula's tomb in the opening scene in an homage to ''Dracula'', above.
54* ''Film/NightOfTheLepus'': The rabbits look like a menagerie straight from a pet store, which are mostly shown running through miniature sets in slow motion or in extreme close-up, smeared with red paint and backed by dubbed growling. It's made even more obvious due to the fact that the film earlier shows stock footage of ''actual'' feral rabbits, making the non-wild nature of the giant ones a lot more blatant.
55* ''Film/TheKillerShrews'' uses [[{{Slurpasaur}} dogs in bad costumes]] to play the shrews. As you might guess from the quality of the effects, the dogs were not trained well enough to ''act'' scary either.
56* ''Film/SnakesOnAPlane'' has plenty of actual venomous snakes appear on camera, but also a number of harmless milk snakes and a corn snake.
57* ''Film/TheStuff'' uses a Great Dane which is apparently threatening its owner if it doesn't get more of the title substance. It wags its tail throughout the scene while dubbed in growling plays.[[note]]Granted, dogs do wag their tails when angry, or when upset. The higher a dog holds their tail, the more threatened you should feel. Mid-height is relaxed, and lowering it is fear, or potentially submission. These should all be considered in relation to the breed, such as Huskies having a curly tail, and Whippets a very droopy one. Slow wagging indicates insecurity.[[/note]] Even worse, in the shot where the dog goes for his throat, it's clearly just trying to happily lick the actors' face. Made more ridiculous because it's preceded by a shot of a model dog head unhinging it's jaws with the Stuff pouring out of it, while the actual dog looks nothing like it.
58* ''Film/TheAmazingSpiderMan'' uses this with lizards, who lead Peter into the sewers after Conners and participate in a fake out scare where they make Peter think The Lizard is coming.
59* ''Film/ChoppingMall'' has snakes and spiders get loose in an actual pet store. They aren't played as dangerous, but they make it challenging for the heroine to stay silent while being stalked by killer robots.
60* ''Film/TheMummyReturns'': In the beginning, Evy and Rick are in an ancient ruin and encounter some snakes. They're Terrifying Pet Store Snakes; in an overlap with MisplacedWildlife, some are tricolor milk snakes, which are known for having warning coloration similar to that of venomous snakes but are ''not'' known for living in Egypt. The venomous snakes they mimic aren't exactly from Egypt either. During a fight in the O'Connells' house, Meela throws a snake at Rick, claiming it's a very poisonous Egyptian asp. What actually gets thrown isn't a live snake at all due to [[NoAnimalsWereHarmed another trope]], but any shots that did use a live snake use a black kingsnake, another harmless snake and common pet.
61* ''Film/ShutterIsland'': A whole Terrifying Pet Store Rat swarm confronts Daniels when he begins climbing the cliff face to the cave. Not only are they obviously well-groomed and curious about his presence, but the first one to appear is clearly ''dropped'' into view of the camera rather than climbing or jumping down to the rock.
62* ''Film/{{Cujo}}'' tried to avert this by having the BigFriendlyDog's tail restrained to stop it wagging, which would have made it rather difficult to take it seriously as a savage, rabid monster. As the symptoms of the disease progress, it's also covered in progressively more blood and pus throughout the movie, and its mouth becomes ringed with foam and spittle, partially obscuring the dog actors and making them look more threatening.
63* ''Film/TheFoodOfTheGods'' uses this with its swarm of [[RodentsOfUnusualSize giant rats]]. They tend to stare around in a perfectly tame way looking for a treat. The rats' leader is even a white rat. It doesn't help that since they're just superimposed on miniature sets, they have no reaction to the human actors whatsoever.
64* ''Film/{{Nosferatu}}'': Some of the rats are obviously ''hooded'' rats, a pet store variety.
65* ''Film/ManosTheHandsOfFate'' has the Master's "devil dog", a big Doberman who seems like the friendliest dog in the world. His affection for the Master (played by the dog's real-life master, aptly enough) is palpable.
66* ''Film/SilverBullet'': A girl is startled into falling over when a rodent emerges from beneath a garage shelf. It's a ''gerbil''.
67* ''Film/ThreeBigMen'' contains what might well be one of the most ridiculous cases ever: man-eating ''guinea pigs''.
68* ''Film/{{Strays}}'' is about killer housecats. Aside from the cats' "leader", who actually hisses for the camera, the cats just sort of run around the house or sit on their marks. In a few cases they're obviously batting at string just out of view of the camera.
69* ''Film/{{Holes}}'': The deadly "yellow-spotted lizards" are played by bearded dragons, which are harmless and popular as pets. At moments when the lizards have to act particularly menacing, the film averts this trope using CGI; however, in most of their appearances they are clearly Terrifying Pet Store Lizards.
70* ''Film/TheCraft'' is the king of this trope near the climax when the other witches torment the main character. Her house absolutely fills with piles of harmless snakes, small lizards, scorpions, spiders, and cockroaches that just sort of ignore her as she flees from them. The rats are at least dropped on her from offscreen.
71* ''Film/IceCreamMan'': Whenever we see inside the crazy killer's truck, there are white mice and Madagascar hissing cockroaches wandering placidly around the ice cream and bloody eyes.
72* ''Film/DeadlyEyes'': In order to have rats the size of small dogs in some scenes, they were literally played by small dogs; the filmmakers dressed some dachshunds in specially made rat suits.
73* ''Film/{{Barbarella}}'' at one point has the lead character thrown in an execution chamber to be torn apart by parakeets and lovebirds. While they do fly around in a panic, they're pretty clearly not attacking her at any point.
74* ''Film/AdventuresInBabysitting'': Brenda, having lost her glasses, accidentally picks up an adorable white "huge sewer rat" thinking it's a cat, and freaks out once it's pointed out.
75* ''Film/JamesBond''
76** Notably averted in the sewer scene in ''Film/FromRussiaWithLove''. The tame white rats they intended to use became lethargic under the hot lights (and kept licking off their cocoa-powder "makeup"), so the producers hired someone to catch a sufficient number of real sewer rats. The ones seen in the film are noticeably scruffy.
77** The beginning of ''Film/LiveAndLetDie'' has a HollywoodVoodoo ritual execution where the victim is bitten by a venomous snake. Except the snake in question is actually a non-venomous emerald tree boa.
78* In ''Film/IfLooksCouldKill'', the supposedly deadly scorpion used in an effort to kill the hero is in reality a harmless emperor scorpion.
79* ''Film/TheAbominableDrPhibes'' has its first onscreen victim "torn apart" by bats -- portrayed by flying foxes, which are a) fruit bats and b) look like adorable flying puppies. They seem more interested in snuggling up to their human co-star for warmth than doing anything aggressive. Later in the movie, actual Terrifying Pet Store Rats make an appearance, and a woman is killed by locusts (aka ''grasshoppers'') after being covered by a concoction brewed from Brussels sprouts.
80* ''Film/TheEvilDead1981'' briefly features a domestic-variety hooded rat in the cabin in the middle of nowhere.
81* In the 1958 film ''Devil's Partner'', a man is threatened by a rattlesnake (actually a shapechanged villain) that crawls in through a window to menace him. At least, that's what it's ''supposed'' to be doing, but even the use of a genuine rattlesnake doesn't salvage the scene when the reptile is visibly making every effort to crawl ''back out'' the window its handler just herded it in through.
82* In the low-budget horror flick ''Night of the Wild'', many of the dogs that "go berserk" and attack the townspeople are obviously having the time of their lives fooling around. Especially obvious when a bulldog perches on the chest of a "fallen victim" who is clearly holding its shoulders and ''play-wrestling'' with it.
83* ''Literature/{{Maradonia| Saga}} and the Shadow Empire'' prominently features snakes as the villains' AnimalMotif... but bungles it by making them all species of domestic python.
84* Aside from one rattlesnake, the creepy critters that pour out of the pumpkin mask in ''Film/HalloweenIIISeasonOfTheWitch'' are harmless, the vast majority being the type of crickets sold as live food for pets.
85* In ''Film/FridayThe13thPartIII'', the farm rat that distracts Mrs. Hockett from Jason's imminent attack is a cream-and-white hooded rat.
86* ''Film/{{Fresh}}'' contains a dog fighting scene between two dogs who act more like they're playing than fighting. Prior to the fight, they both act like tame pets, without any tension or aggression.
87* Even ''dead'' animals get in on the act in ''Film/HunterPrey'', in which the RibcageRidge of "alien" animal bones consists entirely of whale skeletons. The bounty hunter also has an "alien" skull for a shoulder adornment, which is clearly a (real or replica) sea turtle skull.
88* Jess Franco's 1970 film ''Count Dracula'' has a pack of ravenous wolves portrayed by well-groomed and docile German shepherds with their howling painfully dubbed in.
89* In ''Film/TheHazing'', the pledges have to collect a live rat as one of the items in the ScavengerHunt. They catch a rat in an alley that is suspiciously clean, well-groomed and tame for something that is supposed to be feral. This does not prevent Delia from being [[EekAMouse terrified of it]].
90* Inverted in ''Film/TheThing1982''--the first form of the namesake creature is presented as a tame sled dog, but it's actually a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jed_(wolfdog) wolf/dog hybrid,]] and an extremely ominous presence at that.
91* ''Film/TheGiantGilaMonster'''s title character -- portrayed not by an actual gila monster, but by a Mexican banded lizard on a miniature set -- is oddly cute.
92* In ''Film/MaryShelleysFrankenstein'', Victor Frankenstein uses electric eels as his energy source for bringing the creature back to life. The eels shown in the film are common American or European freshwater eels, which are unrelated to South American electric eels (which aren't true eels), don't look very much like them, and don't produce electric currents.
93* Apart from the foreground shot of a cobra, all of the snakes in Patient X's hospital cell in ''Film/TheExorcistIII'' are harmless corn snakes, rat snakes, and king snakes, species commonly sold in pet shops.
94* One scene in ''Film/TalesOfTerror'' has a terrifying vision of a harmless rat, a harmless snake, and a crab that has clearly been ''cooked.''
95* ''Film/TheBeastMustDie'' features a werewolf played by a [[BigFriendlyDog very happy, very friendly looking German shepherd]].
96* PlayedForLaughs in ''Series/HomeMovieThePrincessBride'' where the Rodent of Unusual Size is portrayed by Creator/SophieTurner's corgi licking her and eating titbits from the hand of Music/JoeJonas as they ham up their mortal peril.
97* PlayedWith InUniverse, in a sense, in ''Film/TheSuicideSquad''. Ratcatcher's favorite rat, Sebastian, is-- like his owner-- [[YouDirtyRat a little grimy]], but [[ResourcefulRodent friendly, helpful, and well-socialized]]. But even after being reassured that he's harmless and tame, Robert "Bloodsport" [=DuBois=] is ''still'' terrified of him, because his [[AbusiveParents abusive father]] used to [[FreudianExcuse lock him in a box of rats]].
98* The titular rodents in ''Film/RatsNightOfTerror'' appear to be in pretty good health, at least the ones who haven't been pre-killed to swell the ranks. Several of them are multicolored or white, as well.
99* In ''Film/TheThirstyDead'', the cult keeps a pit of rats for disposing of their [[HumanResources involuntary blood donors]] when they are no longer any use to them. However, the rats are sleek, well-groomed and obviously tame.
100* Nazisploitation film ''SS Hell Camp'' has a woman subjected to a torture where rats are placed on her stomach, then a heated bucket placed over them, so they'll burrow into her flesh to escape the heat. One small problem: the "rats" in question are very clearly ''guinea pigs''.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Literature]]
104* ''Literature/WorldOfTheFiveGods'': ''Demon Daughter'' contains an InUniverse example. Ilpo, a ten-year-old boy, catches a rat and attempts to use it to scare Otta, a six-year-old girl. But the rat he caught was a cute, friendly juvenile rat, and instead of being scared of it Otta wants to keep it as a pet.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
108* ''Shamelessly'' invoked on various Creator/AnimalPlanet shows these days such as ''Series/FatalAttractions2010'' and ''Series/SwampWars'', the latter of which goes on endlessly about the evil scaly monsters infesting the Everglades while treating us to ostensibly terrifying stock footage of a [[RidiculouslyCuteCritter Corn Snake!]]
109* An episode of ''Series/StorageHunters'' featured a storage container filled with old furniture. It was so old, it was apparently infested by rats. Strangely, and somehow, many of these turned out to be skewbald (white with brown patches) pet rats.
110* There's a History Channel documentary on the Black Death that uses hooded (white with grey or brown heads) rats in its scenes of flea-infested rodents carrying the Plague into port. Granted, they look a bit grubby, but their coat-pattern mutation is still conspicuous and unlikely to survive in the wild. The rats who contributed to the Black Death were black rats (''Rattus rattus'') not brown rats (''Rattus norvegicus'', the rat you're more likely to encounter on the streets or in a pet shop). Arguably a case of a RealityIsUnrealistic, however, as while the Plague was brought in by black rats, rat fleas freely exchange between the two, and the brown rat was more common in Europe even at that time.
111* ''Series/LifeAfterPeople'', if not using CGI for the rats.
112* In ''Series/MythicQuest'' a rat that's caught in the office is clearly a well fed domestic rat with a white belly. And despite being put in a container with its pups it stays docile even as people are holding up the container to stare at it.
113* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
114** The Alfa 177 canine in the ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' episode "The Enemy Within" is supposed to be cute but also is supposed to be a newly discovered life form, it is basically just a terrier of some sort wearing extra fur, and a fake horn and antennas.
115** On ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'' two-parter "In A Mirror, Darkly," the Rottweiler dog portraying MirrorUniverse Porthos was noted by the producers and animal handlers to be "an even bigger baby than the regular Porthos," a small beagle.
116* On ''Series/CriminalMinds'', some well-groomed rats gather to investigate a bound captive whom the Killer of the Week had left to be devoured alive. They crawl on the bound man's lap and occasionally touch his bare skin with their forepaws, but remain obviously calm and friendly, even when rescuers break in and start shoving them away with an unrealistic delicacy.
117* ''Series/{{Bones}}'' uses this from time to time when a corpse is found infested with animals eating it.
118** Frequently when they find a decaying body in the sewer covered in rats, none of which show the slightest surprise or interest in the living humans walking about. This even applies to a wild rat which Brennan removes without struggle from a nest of helpless pups: something an actual rat mother would surely [[MamaBear attempt to defend]].
119** In one episode they find the victim surrounded by opossums. Again, no opossum shows any hint of non-familiarity with humans.
120** In another episode the dead VictimOfTheWeek is surrounded by "feral" stray cats, which sit about and let themselves be picked up by animal control. This does allow for a gag: the cats sit and stare at the team while licking their lips, distinctly unnerving Booth.
121** In the sixth-season episode "The Killer in the Crosshairs", the VictimOfTheWeek is found crawling with sewer rats that are not only very healthy and well-groomed, but patiently hold still to be picked up and then voluntarily enter transport containers.
122** This extreme instance of the trope may have been the reason why the next time the show featured a body swarmed by rats (the seventh-season episode "The Hot Dog in the Competition"), they averted the trope with domesticated feeder rats for the victim's pet snake.
123* In season 4 of ''Series/TheWalkingDead'', a shadow-hidden figure feeds a live rat to a walker through the prison fence. The rat remains calm, even curious, as it's held up to the chain-link, showing no fear of the walkers ''or'' the human holding it, even when it's being carried by its tail (which ''hurts'').
124* On ''Series/CSIMiami'', a man falls from a balcony into a tank full of jellyfish. Wolf identifies the jellies as ''box'' jellyfish and potentially lethal, but they're obviously moon jellies -- one of the least-dangerous types -- in all the shots where they're not CGI.
125* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
126** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS14E6TheTalonsOfWengChiang "The Talons of Weng-Chiang"]], literal pet store rats were used as one of the ways of portraying Mangus Greel's giant sewer rats, together with a series of large puppets. Creator/TomBaker riffed on how unconvincing the results were in the years since the serial's airing.
127** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS26E4Survival "Survival"]], vicious alien creatures called Kitlings were played by black cats with hair gel in their fur (when they weren't being portrayed by an animatronic). A behind-the-scenes featurette includes cast and crew complaining about how unprofessional their feline co-stars were.
128** In the 50th anniversary special [[Recap/DoctorWho50thASTheDayOfTheDoctor "The Day of the Doctor"]], the 10th Doctor delivers a BadassBoast to what he thinks is a shapeshifted Zygon... but is in fact an ordinary rabbit. He's probably fooled by the fact the supposedly wild rabbit calmly lets him get close enough to touch without fleeing. Or perhaps because it's played by a lop-eared domestic rabbit.
129* Used to FreakOut ''the contestants'' rather than the audience on ''Series/TotalBlackout'': whenever they're required to identify an animal by touch in the dark, it's likely to be this trope. Or possibly a rubber model.
130* Fairly common on ''Series/{{Zoo}}'' when real lions or wolves are shown "ferociously menacing" humans with body language that indicates they're having a fine old time playing with their handlers.
131* A conspicuously Unterrified Pet Store Mouse appeared in ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'', being fed to the scorpion-like alien creatures a scientist is raising in secret. The fact that the mouse we see the scientist pick up is ''very'' obviously pregnant, but the one shown happily waiting to be devoured alive isn't, doesn't help.
132* ''Series/{{Vikings}}'': In Season 1, [[AdiposeRex King Aelle of Northumbria]] throws his captain of the guard into a SnakePit filled with plump, sleek, non-poisonous pythons. The guard screams in terror as the calm, docile serpents slowly slither onto his lap and over his shoulder.
133* ''Series/MurderSheWrote'': In "Tinker, Tailor, Liar, Thief", a seedy alley is portrayed by the presence of a couple of sleek and well-groomed pet store rats. At least they are brown and not white.
134* "Monkey See, Monkey Poo", an episode of ''Series/{{Scorpion}}'' set in the Amazon rain forest, features a swarm of "deadly wandering spiders" played by (harmless) red-kneed tarantulas. A '''vegetative''' variant is also used, when the team divvy up a foul-tasting and exotic "vonvon fruit" that's clearly a dragonfruit from the supermarket.
135* In one episode of ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', the titular hero and FairCop Beckett are moving through a hidden alcove in the ceiling when Beckett tells Castle that even if he's scared, she doesn't think he should be rubbing her neck. It wasn't him, but a rat, calmly sitting there. It barely protests when Castle lifts it off of Beckett by the tail.
136* Creator/NeilGaiman wanted the Beast of London in ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}'' to be a wild boar, but the people who were sent to to the boar farms said they were too friendly, so they ended up using a Highland cow.
137* The iconic pale yellow snake in ''Series/ThePath'' was played by an albino Burmese python named Ghost. He appears several times throughout the show, and Creator/AaronPaul said far from being menacing, he was very easy to work with. He spent most of his time on set going to the bathroom all over everything, which in this case could mean he was fed recently, or that he was mildly stressed.
138* Parodied in ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'', where the wolf of ''Little Red Riding Hood'' is portrayed by a very nervous-looking dachshund in a fur coat.
139* Series/{{House}} once uses maggots to treat a patient's burns. This is a real medical procedure used to remove necrotic tissue while leaving healthy intact (although it's now known that they will eat healthy tissue if left alone too long). The doctor wouldn't really just dump the maggots all over the wound -- and it doesn't work too well with the mealworms that were actually used on the show.
140* PlayedForLaughs in a ''Series/InLivingColor'' skit. Fur minks were played by domesticated ferrets (and they were called "rodents" instead of "weasels").
141* In the third season episode of [[Series/AlfredHitchcockPresents ''The Alfred Hitchcock Hour'']] "Water's Edge' an abandoned boathouse is filled with sleek, calm, obviously domesticated rats, including a couple of small youngsters — who at one point are obviously being flung out of a hatch in the ceiling rather than jumping down of their own accord.
142* In-Universe example in ''Series/HouseOfAnubis'' where Victor stages a mice infestation in Anubis House to get the students out so he can search for the elixir he suspects Sibuna is hiding. It gets lampshaded when Fabian asks a teacher (who is part of the TheConspiracy) why all the mice look like they came from a pet store, which she refuses to answer.
143* In ''Series/TheTraitors'', one challenge features the contestants having to complete tasks in a terrifying room filled with things like insects and rats. The rats are clearly harmless pets and even have color patterns that are not typical of wild rats.
144* Played with InUniverse once on ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' when Tony "saves" Kate from a snake that he claims is venomous, only for [=McGee=] to show up a moment later and (correctly) identify it as a ''non''-venomous corn snake. Naturally, Kate is not amused.
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147[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
148* This was part of why the infamous Kennel from Hell match from ''Wrestling/{{WWE}} Unforgiven 1999'' lived up to its name for all the wrong reasons. It was advertised as a match where the ring would be surrounded by two cages with [[AngryGuardDog vicious attack dogs]] in between, but once the match got underway, it became clear that the dogs weren't so much "vicious beasts" as "[[BigFriendlyDog happy little puppies]]". The greatest danger posed? That one of the wrestlers would slip and fall in a puddle of [[UrineTrouble dog wee]] or dog crap. And when they weren't making a mess on the floor, they were mating.
149* Occurred when [[Wrestling/JakeRoberts Jake "The Snake" Roberts]] was supposed to sic a (real, but de-venomed) cobra on {{Wrestling/Sting}} as a match finisher, only to have the snake turn on him, but the cobra turned out to be ''too'' tame and wouldn't actually bite him, so he just held it to his face while it flailed pathetically.
150** Happened again on RAW when the snake he brought out to torment a KO'd [[Wrestling/JonMoxley Dean Ambrose]] wasn't too keen on tormenting him. And Dean [[{{Corpsing}} corpsed]] when the snake was rubbing against his face.
151* During the buildup to his Summerslam match with Jake 'The Snake' Roberts, Wrestling/JunkyardDog introduced his secret weapon to defeat the Snake Man: GIANT MUTATED SEWER RATS! The first time these were mentioned, [[Wrestling/AllenCoage Bad News]] was seen holding a black box that was obviously being made to move by somebody off-camera shaking it about. Once the "rats" are actually introduced -- or rather, one of them -- we learned mutated rats end up looking a lot like plain old opossums -- and sounding a lot like pigs. Earlier in the feud, Brown was also seen fleeing in terror from very obvious rubber snakes -- including one Mean Gene Okerlund shakes around in the air for ages, which only makes its fakeness that much more noticeable.
152** Actually, wrestler's pets had a way of mutating into something completely different when brought in to fight Jake's snake. Case in point -- Wrestling/RickySteamboat's Komodo dragon looking very much like an alligator in its one and only appearance.
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155[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
156* PlayedForLaughs in ''Film/TeamAmericaWorldPolice'', which uses puppets that are about a third human-sized. When the villains sic their deadly "panthers" on the heroes, they're played by house cats with some snarling sounds dubbed in. Likewise, [[BigBad Kim Jong-Il]] feeds Hans Blix to nurse sharks, which sometimes bite people in RealLife but are not very threatening. Also, at the end, [[spoiler:Kim Jong-Il's alien form is played by a normal cockroach]].
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159[[folder:Sports]]
160* This is the truth behind Ferret-Legging, the (largely tongue-in-cheek) sport of putting ferrets down your trousers as an endurance test. It is far less dangerous than hucksters claim, and far less cruel than ill-informed animal welfare campaigners sometimes believe -- pet ferrets naturally enjoy both confined spaces and close contact with their humans, and in fact often otherwise have to be prevented from wriggling their way into people's clothing.
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163[[folder:Video Games]]
164* In ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossingNewHorizons,'' the "tarantula" bug is a giant, aggressive spider that can actually knock out your character and send them back to their house, making it the most dangerous creature in an otherwise relaxed game. Visually, however, it's based on the redknee tarantula, a harmless and docile spider that's commonly kept as a pet.
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167[[folder:Web Comics]]
168* Referenced in TheRant to the ''Webcomic/MonsterOfTheWeek'' [[http://www.shaenon.com/monsteroftheweek/2021/01/17/mow-16/ strip]] based on the werewolf episode "Alpha":
169-->Angry dogs are scary in real life, but in movies and TV shows they always look like good boys and girls who are happy to be in show biz.
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171
172[[folder:Web Videos]]
173* The 2016 Webby Award-winning video [[https://youtu.be/AQte2nz80Is Tiny Hamster Is a Giant Monster]] parodies this, along with the {{slurpasaur}} technique, by putting a cute hamster in an [[AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever elaborate miniature city set]]. The same creator has made quite a few other elaborate videos parodying this trope, including the 2017 Webby Award winner, [[https://youtu.be/Y69sThwgzpg Tiny Hamster is a Zombie]].
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176[[folder:Western Animation]]
177* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
178** PlayedForLaughs in "[[Recap/SouthParkS12E10Pandemic Pandemic]]", when the town is overrun by giant guinea pigs and other "guinea" animals such as rabbits and dogs. The animals in question are [[{{Slurpasaur}} simple shots of pet animals shuffling about benignly in cute outfits]], which have been digitally inserted into the animation.
179** Also spoofed with [[Recap/SouthParkS2E6TheMexicanStaringFrogOfSouthernSriLanka the Mexican Staring Frog of Southern Sri Lanka]], which isn't even a real frog, just a stuffed toy on a string.
180* ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'': In "Low Budget", Frugal Lucre menaces Kim and Ron with his budget version of a SharkPool -- a kiddie wading pool full of pet snapping turtles that quickly retreat into their shells when confronted.
181* In ''WesternAnimation/DudeThatsMyGhost'', aspiring horror movie director Spencer tries to shoot a movie about a killer sea monster... played by his pet goldfish.
182* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'': In "Face Your Fear", the ShowWithinAShow ''Night of the Felis'' is a parody of ''Night of the Lepus'' that features footage of playful kittens as giant monsters.
183* ''WesternAnimation/ThunderbirdsAreGo'' has the characters menaced by giant lizards. They're actually just bearded dragons shot to look huge, and they spend their time sitting around pretty calmly -- the show uses CGI for its humans, so they didn't even have live actors to react to.
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