He did, and had since she had first laid eyes on the ruin that fire had made of his face...
The human face is supremely important on a social and biological level. Most of our non-verbal communication comes from reading subtle facial movements, and its importance in our cognitive thinking is best shown in our tendency to see faces in inanimate objects (think of how many times you've looked at a rock face and thought you'd seen two eyes and a mouth). So there is something genuinely disturbing to most people about seeing a face visibly distorted, mutated, or rearranged ... so, naturally, this type of Body Horror is one of the most common Horror Tropes.
A Sister Trope and effective primary component of Nightmare Fuel.
It is in fact at least Older Than Feudalism — armies over the world have based their war masks around this trope, and in mythology and folklore, just about any self-respecting demon or supernatural evil will have one.
More recently, it has also become a staple of Surreal Horror.
This is a main symptom of Coming Back Wrong. Most humanoid examples of Our Monsters Are Weird will fit this trope.
This trope is commonly doubled with the Jump Scare in a Screamer Prank.
Sub-Tropes include:
- Black Eyes of Crazy: A character is shown to be evil by having black sclera.
- Black Eyes of Evil: Evil characters' eyes are completely black.
- The Blank: No facial features at all.
- Cheshire Cat Grin: An unusually wide, mischievous smile.
- Cute Creature, Creepy Mouth: A cute creature has a horrifying mouth.
- Eyeless Face: A face is devoid of eyes and eye sockets.
- Facial Horror: The face is disturbing because of scarring.
- Game Face: A character's face becomes frightening when they reveal their true self.
- Ghostly Gape: The eyes and mouth are empty black pits.
- Glasgow Grin: A large grin created by slicing the cheeks.
- Glowing Eyelights of Undeath: Undead beings have glowing eyes.
- More Teeth than the Osmond Family: A character's mouth is full of numerous sharp teeth.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: Red eyes indicate a character is evil or dangerous.
- Scary Teeth: Character has a mouthful of sharp, predatory fangs or heavily rotten, disgusting teeth.
- Slasher Smile: Character has an evil, bloodthirsty, frightening grin.
- Two-Faced: One side of the character's face is disfigured, distorted, discolored, or otherwise different from the other side of the face.
- Wide Eyes and Shrunken Irises: Beady irises generally indicate that a person is unhinged.
See also:
- This trope's well-meaning (but still scary) sisters, Face of a Thug and The Grotesque.
- Game Face, which comes into play when a supernatural villain disguised as a human flashes his true form's Nightmare Face to scare someone.
- Demon Head, cousin to this trope.
- Demonic Head Shake, when the head shakes uncontrollably
- Take Our Word for It, when the face is too grotesque to even show.
Interesting tidbit: this is one theory as to why some people are afraid of clowns. Exaggerated mouths, bulbous noses, and pin-prick eyes are downright terrifying to young children who haven't yet figured out that the person is just wearing make-up and not deformed.
Warning: Many of these examples contain image links. Read at your own risk if you are prone to losing sleep, especially if you're on a touch device where you may accidentally tap and therefore open links.
Example subpages:
Other examples:
- This horrific 60s print ad from Mobil
◊, created to advocate against driving with tension. And it does so by showing a horrifically distorted face. Interestingly, this image is actually of a dancer named Killer Joe Piro, and the original photograph was taken mid-dance, giving it its creepy look.
- 90s Rice Krispie Treats commercials showed
kids who, upon having none of the treat left to satisfy their craving, would morph into a disturbing...monster of some kind while bellowing "IIIII WAAAAANNNTTT OOOONNNNEEEE!!!"
- This Scotland Against Drugs PIF
starts tame, as the photograph features a smiling party-goer. However, as the ad progresses, the man's face gets spotty and sullen, as his expression changes from happy to scared and in pain. It culminates into morphing into a horrifying snarl with piercing evil eyes and razor-sharp teeth, just before it melts back into a blank picture. Not helping is that this was a cinema PIF, meaning it was originally shown on a giant screen with surround sound in the dark.
- Blossom Lady from Lost in the Moonlight assumes the form of a young, beautiful woman most of the time, until she reveals her true form as a tree-demon. With a close-up of her face turning into wrinkled bark as she indulges in some Evil Gloating. It's spooky enough to make another character Faint in Shock.
- Batman:
- Two-Face, obviously. Well, the scarred half of him. Varies from artist to artist, with Tim Sale's rendering
◊ being particularly gruesome.
- The Joker, naturally. Frozen Face with a Slasher Smile? Check. Permanent Uncanny Valley Makeup? Double Check. Looks like a Monster Clown from your worst nightmares? Quintuple check. Taken up several notches in Death of the Family. Prior to the story arc, Joker was last seen having his face surgically removed and left for the police to symbolize his "rebirth". When he returns, still without a face, he steals his original, preserved face from the GCPD lockup and proceeds to wear it like a mask
◊, using several hooks and leather straps to stretch it across his head in a grotesque parody of his original face. As the series goes on, the face starts to visibly decay and attract flies and at one point Joker even wears it upside-down to psychologically torment Red Robin.
- The Great White Shark lost most of his face (including ears, nose and hair) after being locked in a freezer and has since filed his teeth into points. As a result, he's nothing to scoff at, either.
◊
- Two-Face, obviously. Well, the scarred half of him. Varies from artist to artist, with Tim Sale's rendering
- The Transformers: More than Meets the Eye:
- Vos is a Decepticon Justice Division member, and he combines Cold-Blooded Torture with this trope. Transformer faces have been pretty ugly before, but somehow this
◊ takes The Blank, inverts the concept of the Face Stealer (a Face Giver, perhaps?), and comes out the other side unsettling and terrifying.
Vos: wear. my. faaaace. - The incredibly creepy Sunder
◊ from the same series could be seen as Vos' Autobot counterpart. Like Vos, his freakish and distressing face has no eyes. Unlike Vos, this is because he gouged them out to control his Horror Hunger for Cybertronian brains. This unfortunately didn't work, causing Sunder to become a Serial Killer, and his gaping, slack-jawed grin with a cavernous mouth as empty as his eye sockets did nothing to help his image either.
- Vos is a Decepticon Justice Division member, and he combines Cold-Blooded Torture with this trope. Transformer faces have been pretty ugly before, but somehow this
- All of the titular Hate Plague victims in Crossed have a distinct, cross-shaped rash across their faces. And it's never without a look of pure, animalistic intent.
- Implied for Doctor Doom of Fantastic Four; first he gets his face scarred up by being caught next to an exploding machine (though precisely how badly scarred varies), and then he, in some tellings at least, puts his trademark metal facemask on. While it's still red hot.
- Judge Dredd:
- Judge Fear, one of the Dark Judges, is able to kill by simply revealing his face, though the reader never sees it. Averted once by Dredd himself.
◊
- Dredd himself for that matter. The first time we "see" his face with his helmet off, there is a big black bar over it reading Censored For Graphic Content and the gang holding him at gunpoint are so horrified at what they see that they decide Dredd needs to die immediately. And while never taken to that extreme again, under Carlos Ezquerra's pen, both Dredd and his clone father Judge Fargo tend to look like lumpy lipless potatoes as they get older.
- This forms a significant portion of the character named Otto Sump. Put simply, he is the ugliest man who has ever lived. Just how ugly is Depending on the Artist, but the only person in all of Mega-City One who doesn't find it hard to look at him for more than five seconds is Dredd himself.
- Judge Fear, one of the Dark Judges, is able to kill by simply revealing his face, though the reader never sees it. Averted once by Dredd himself.
- Paperinik New Adventures: Raghor's face is usually under a helm, but when he takes it off... not only does he seem to be completely scarred, but he also has Medusa-like tentacles.
- Rhona Burchill from Ultimate Fantastic Four has one courtesy of self-inflicted brain surgery to boost her own intellect, which left her with a large bald spot that exposes a very ugly, ragged scar and unnaturally bulging skull.
- Crazy Jane from Doom Patrol has several, including Black Annis and a personality whose head is a sun that shoots smaller suns.
- Wonder Woman: Some members of the Greek pantheon like to manifest with horrific things for faces, most notably the fear god twins Phobos and Deimos, who each like to appear with a desiccated dog skull for a head, or in Phobos's case to manifest with shadow and twisting cobras for a face. Their father Ares also tends to go the shadow route, manifesting with formless darkness and two glowing red eyes beneath his helmet is his go to look.
- Irish Mob member Finn Cooley, a memorable one-off villain in The Punisher MAX. A bomb went off in his face before he could get away, and now everything above the lower lip is just skull wrapped in sticky exposed musculature. At all times he either needs a transparent face mask or a mess of bandages to hold it in place. In spite of all that, he was one of the less nightmarish mobsters in that storyline.
- In Faith: Dreamside, Belu's minions all have large yellow eyes and wide, sharp-toothed grins.
- The chapter of Tales from the Dark Multiverse dealing with Knightfall features a version of Bruce Wayne sporting yellow eyes and a Slasher Smile as a result of the torture he was subjected to as he gets revenge on Azrael.
- Sonic the Hedgehog is no stranger to the stuff of nightmares, but most Sonic media avoids this particular sub-trope. Sonic the Hedgehog (IDW), however, features several notable examples.
- Mimic the Octopus, a new villain introduced in the Tangle & Whisper miniseries, is a shapeshifter with Black Eyes of Evil and wrinkled lips (as part of a Skeleton Motif). He can show these features while disguised as someone else, with terrifying results.
- During the second major arc, Dr. Eggman causes a Zombie Apocalypse (on purpose) with his Metal Virus bioweapon, which turns its victims—including some of Sonic's allies—into evil robo-zombies. The faces of these "Zombots" are intimidating by default, but they turn outright demonic when silhouetted, as Sonic's Zombot-ified friends demonstrate
.
- Hell, even Eggman gets a few of these in some panels being casted in shadow, and only being able to see his eerie grin and glasses which, while totally matching his Eggman Empire logo, is quite creepy-looking on the guy himself.
- In Pumpkin (Jason Conley), the titular vigilante develops a hideous face like a jack-o-lantern whenever she transforms.
- Villains in the original Dick Tracy newspaper comic were notoriously Nightmare Faced. This waned at about the time Chester Gould suffered a Creator Breakdown, but has returned with the new artist, Dick Locher, who absolutely loves this trope.
- Al Capp's Li'l Abner had a character named "Lena the Hyena" whose face was never shown, but by reputation and the reactions of other characters was this. Capp eventually ran a contest for readers to send in their own depictions of Lena. The winning entry, by Basil Wolverton, can be seen here
◊.
- Angel of the Bat:
- The first time Cassandra gets a look at the Seraphim's face, she's in the midst of an intense Mushroom Samba, causing him to appear utterly monstrous. When she finally gets his mask off later without anything messing with her mind, it's such a mess of old burn scars that it isn't much better.
- In Da Pacem Domine, Cassandra sees her father, David Cain in a nightmare at one point, exactly as he would have appeared when he died from a collapse of burning wreckage falling on top of him. This renders his face little more than a smashed up skull barely covered with burned skin.
- The Bat (Siltrics):
- The version of Batman seen in the videos is often depicted in in-universe drawings to have a rather gaunt face, blank eyes, and missing his nose.
- "Novus Ordo" sees a skull-like version of Hal Jordan's face in the static, and an image of Jay Garrick and Alan Scott appearing normal at first before a glitch and afterward sporting Joker-like grins.
- CWMH: Moanica is described as having rotting flesh, bulging eyes, a jaw that consistently looks like it's about to fall off of its hinges, and clusters of holes in her face that regularly have bugs crawling through them.
- Super Danganronpa Another 2: The members of Void each flash a Slasher Smile and ominous red eyes when they're finally unmasked. And then there's Kanade Otonokoji, with eleven different frightening faces, each one more disturbing than the last.
- The Fluffy Folio: The Spirit of the False Fae has a wide mouth with disturbingly human teeth, and black and red eyes that stare in opposite directions.
- Glitchtale's Season 2 Arc Villain, Bête Noire, excels at this (fittingly for an someone whose power is rooted in Fear). If you don't mind spoilers, see here
◊ for an example. Looking like a cute little girl most of the time, in reality her body is a shell made from a dead little girl's corpse. Her true form has sharp teeth, a wide Slasher Smile, and the skin can be torn off to reveal inhuman pink flesh that looks disturbingly like someone who's been Flayed Alive.
- TS!Underswap:
- Asgore makes a scary face during his final attack on a genocide run, as a reference to one of Toby Fox's original concepts.
- Underverse:
- Especially with their already eerie black-and-white designs, X-Chara and later on X-Gaster are very good at pulling this, with wide jagged-mouth Slasher Smiles and creepy Black Eyes of Evil that have sinister red and purple irises.
- Ink Sans of all people does one as well in Xtra Scene 2, though it's implied to have been a dream (or possibly Foreshadowing that he isn't all that trustworthy). It's currently the page image for the Nightmare Fuel page for the series.
- Unsurprisingly, Flowey does this in OWNERS.
- Played for Laughs with Ayla in Vow of Nudity. She's a changeling wizard with face-blindness, so her human form includes a horrifyingly uncanny amalgamation of blurry and misshapen facial features, but her neighbors and fellow cityfolk all pretend she's nailing it out of respect for her feelings.
- Twice in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. First, the hideous gnarled faces Snow White sees on the trees during her escape in the forestnote . Then, the Queen the first time she reveals her hag look.
- The Nightmare Before Christmas:
- Jack Skellington threatens Lock, Shock, and Barrel by tugging the sides of his mouth and roaring fiercely at them.
◊
- He also makes a pretty wicked
◊ Slasher Smile as he describes Santa Claws to them.
- Jack Skellington threatens Lock, Shock, and Barrel by tugging the sides of his mouth and roaring fiercely at them.
- The Emperor's New Groove features a couple involving the already ugly, wizened villain Yzma:
- One such instance is when she wakes up, with her facial mask scaring and disgusting her minion Kronk.
- She also manages a pretty freaky Slasher Smile as a kitten when she threatens to kill Kuzco.
- Mulan:
- Mushu makes quite a ferocious
◊ Death Glare when he says "Your worst nightmare."
- Mushu makes quite a ferocious
- The song "Pink Elephants on Parade" from Dumbo has a giant Combining Mecha of a monster that's made entirely out of pink elephant heads.
- The Care Bears: Adventure in Wonderland features a scene during the Evil Wizard's song when he very briefly produces an uncannily terrifying face.
- Oliver & Company has the scene where Georgette warns Oliver of her authority over him, where she flashes a manic expression at him.
- Pocahontas: The Extreme Close-Up of Governor Ratcliffe’s face, complete with Slasher Smile, during “Mine, Mine, Mine”
.
- The Lion King (1994) has the manic Slasher Smiles Shenzi, Banzai and Ed all wear as they sing "Yes, our teeth and ambitions are bared!" in "Be Prepared".
- Aladdin (1992, Disney): Jafar briefly gains one of these at the end as he is gradually turning into a snake. His deranged smile at the end of his mocking reprise of Prince Ali is also quite terrifying.
- Toy Story 1 has the Death Glare Woody gives Sid as he proclaims "...so PLAY NICE!!!" (not that the face is very nightmarish on its own terms, but any sudden change of facial expression is terrifying if it appears on the face of a supposedly inanimate doll).
- The Princess and the Frog: Doctor Facilier makes a satanic glare that's punctuated by his skull makeup during his spell-casting: "I hope you're satisfied..."
- The snarling, vicious look on Tod's face
during the fight with Copper in The Fox and the Hound.
- Beauty and the Beast (1991): Whenever the Beast gets pissed, he makes a fierce snarl capable of scaring every other being, both in and out of universe.
- Shrek the Third has the close-up of the baby-headed Donkey
in Shrek's Nightmare Sequence as he says "Da-da!!!".
- The Queen of Hearts' face in Alice in Wonderland (1951) when she says "Someone's head's going to ROLL for this!!!"
- Ice Age has Diego accidentally make a scary face as he's entertaining Roshan; Manny demands that he stop scaring him.
- The Jungle Book 2 has the scene where Shere Khan threatens Lucky
◊with a Slasher Smile as he mauls him.
- The Little Mermaid:
- The expression Triton makes right before he completely demolishes Ariel's treasure room
◊ ("So help me, Ariel, I'm going to get through to you! And if this is the only way... so be it!"). (ZCE)
- Also, Ursula's crazed grin
as she commands Ariel to sing during "Poor Unfortunate Souls".
- The expression Triton makes right before he completely demolishes Ariel's treasure room
- Cats Don't Dance has quite a few supplied by Darla Dimple, especially her Slasher Smile when she gets the idea to invite Danny to tea in order to trick him
.
- Turbo from Wreck-It Ralph; his CGI form is freaky enough due to his zombie-like appearance. His 8-bit face is scary as hell because it combines his zombie-like appearance with Uncanny Valley (his pixellated face in a 3D environment looks rather off).
- The Secret of NIMH has the manic grin Jenner makes as he plans to murder Nicodemus
.
- Home on the Range: Alameda Slim's angered expression at his nephews mocking his yodeling
◊.
- Tamatoa from Moana at one point cuts off the light in his lair, revealing that he is covered with bioluminescent paint. His cartoonish expressions and overall appearance become a lot more menacing.
- Tarzan (1999):
- Sabor, being a fierce leopard, makes quite a few horrible expressions throughout her appearances.
- In The Secret of Kells, Aisling gains a brief but still very unsettling one when she helps Brendan into Crom Cruach's cave and Crom's tendrils start to drain the life out of her, making her face look withered and skeletal.
- All Dogs Go to Heaven: Some cut footage from when Charlie has his Nightmare Sequence of being dragged into Hell has a close-up of the boat demon sporting a frightening Slasher Smile. But that's nothing compared to the giant Hell Hound that appears in front of Charlie.
Hell Hound: Now...you are MINE!
- Zootopia: During the Junior Ranger Scout initiation, after the room is darkened and Nick is knocked to the ground, the faces of the troop members as they muzzle Nick become disturbingly menacing and sinister
◊.
- Monsters, Inc. 1: Sulley accidentally scaring Boo and causing her to cry as a result of her genuine fear of Randall.
- The Super Mario Bros. Movie: Bowser has an incredibly twisted expression of rage
◊ when he commands "Launch the Bomber Bill and DESTROY THE MUSHROOM KINGDOM!!!", signifying his Villainous Breakdown.
- Ming Lee from Turning Red sports one as she succumbs to her Suppressed Rage when Meilin Lee runs away from the red panda Banishing Ritual so that she can attend the 4*Town concert with her friends, resulting in her becoming a Kaiju-sized red panda.
- Part of what brought Blood Meridian back to the spotlight in 2023 is this particularly memetic fan art of Judge Holden
that captures his character all too well. For those too afraid to click, imagine a hairless, grinning, white-skinned giant looking down at you with unspeakable intentions.
- Harry Potter:
- Voldemort is described as having a face like a skull, with glowing red eyes and slits for nostrils. It's hinted that his involvement with the Dark Arts warped him; in later books it's explained that he got this way by splitting his soul to achieve immortality through his Horcruxes — he actually used to be handsome as a young man. Ralph Fiennes does a pretty good job of conveying this description in the movies.
- The Made of Evil Dementors were even worse, although it's mitigated somewhat by the fact that they wore hooded cloaks and wraps covering up most of their decaying skin. The one part that isn't covered besides their "slimy-looking" hands is the giant black hole where their mouths should be, and it's said that their eye sockets are completely empty and covered with scabbed-over flesh.
- Quasimodo in Victor Hugo's novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame is described as being so ugly, people mistake him for the Devil.
- In Invisible Monsters (1999) by Chuck Palahniuk, the main character's lower jaw is shot off. This fanmade image
◊ (WARNING: gory/NSFW) gives a pretty good idea of why this is a bit of an upsetting thing.
- The Kane Chronicles:
- Menshikov, whose face was burned when he tried and failed to awaken Ra.
- A heroic example can be found in Bes, whose trademark attack is to scare the shit out of his opponent by distorting his face hideously and screaming "BOO!" Not that he's that handsome when he's not making that face.
- From the first book (and second to an extent) there is a demon named Face-Of-Horror who is what he sounds like and worse. Compared to how other demons can be called Death-to-Corks and have corkscrews or other objects (or limbs) replacing their heads, Face-Of-Horror is a legitimately terrifying demon. If any of you are wondering what Face of Horror looks like: scaly, clawed talons instead of feet, and his face seems to have all the skin torn off, leaving only muscle. Anyone else reminded of a certain monster from Attack on Titan?
- The Phantom of the Opera.
- This is the primary cause of Erik's tragedy (which makes all the slightly-marred-prettyboy adaptations that much more galling).
- Unless we are talking about Gerard Butler
◊ or Julian Sands'
◊ Phantoms, this is not the slightly marred face
◊ of
◊ a pretty boy.
◊
- Redwall:
- Slagar the Cruel has a badly mutilated Two-Faced look thanks to a snakebite in his youth.
- Riggu Felis from High Rhulain is probably even worse. After having his face raked by an osprey's talons, he is described as looking like this: "The black-and-grey-striped fur was normal from ears to eyes, but below that it was red, glistening flesh and bone. The whole muzzle, nose, and upper lip had been torn off. Half of the warlord's face was a frightful mask - a spitting, bubbling skeleton, as he continualy sucked air to breathe."
- "The Dream" from Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. Let's just say the pale woman from the original edition will make you wish you slept with a weapon next to your bed. The illustration from The Thing is spookier still, and as for the illustration from The Haunted House... we would post a link, but we're too scared to search. If you're feeling brave, The Haunted House provides the page image for Ghastly Ghost.
- A Song of Ice and Fire:
- Sandor "The Hound" Clegane, who had the left half of his face burned off by his older brother when he was a kid.
- Lady "Ser" Brienne of Tarth was known for being extremely plain. But after the encounter with Biter she has now a very similar disfigurement to the Hound's, except caused by festering teeth of an evil idiot rather than by fire.
- Lady Stoneheart formerly known as Catelyn Stark, who, before having her throat cut, tore up her own face out of grief and insanity, and was then thrown in the river, where she spent considerable time before being resurrected. The result is not pleasant.
- In John French’s Thousand Sons novels, the sorcerer Ichneumon is so heavily mutated by the powers of Chaos that his face no longer resembles anything even remotely human. One half of his face is covered with clusters of eyes, and the other half is dotted with lamprey-like mouths. Ctesias, a fellow sorcerer, is so put-off by the sight of it—and by Ichneumon’s obvious pride at having been “blessed” with such a hideous face by the Chaos Gods—that he can’t think of anything to say for a long moment.
- Brightheart from Warrior Cats has half of her face torn off by a pack of dogs, leaving her permanently scarred and missing an eye. This picture
◊ from Cats of the Clans sums it up nicely.
- In Wax and Wayne, Bleeder displays one of these between forms, a skinless face "of stretched muscle and grinning teeth". When she realizes she's been seen she makes another one by trying to copy the cabbie's face over the wrong bones, leaving her face a twisted nightmare.
- Little Ghoul on Beetleborgs Metallix had one, shown from the back a la Beetlejuice.
- Breaking Bad has a good example of this in the Season 4 finale, when Gus is caught in an explosion. He calmly exits the crumbling room, adjusting his tie and looking perfectly fine, until the camera pans around to reveal half his face missing, hollowed eye socket staring blankly, teeth bared through the distinct lack of cheek. Exploded flesh adorning his shoulder. Fittingly, the name of the episode is "Face Off".
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer:
- The ghostly James Stanley's rotting zombie-like face in "I Only Had Eyes For You" while scaring Buffy and dancing to a song with his teacher.
- In the Cadfael series, this is the fate of Lazarus, the titular Leper of St Giles. He was once the legendary knight, Guimar de Massard, but caught leprosy whilst crusading. He let himself be thought of as dead, though secretly returned to England to watch over his orphaned granddaughter. In the end, he leaves her safe with a man she loves, not wishing to sully her memory of him with the truth of what he has become.
- Doctor Who:
- The hideous alien face of a Sensorite pressed up against the glass of a spaceship in the first Cliffhanger of "The Sensorites".
- The early Cybermen in "The Tenth Planet", with surgical-like cloth masks, black voids for eyes, and jaws that, when they talk, just lock open without moving for the duration of their speech.
- The Autons are living plastic. In appearance, they can range the spectrum from animate mannequin to indistinguishable from human. While costuming's moved on from their '70s heyday, back then... oh god.
◊
- Davros
, who created the Daleks, had his face (and the rest of his body) hideously disfigured when his lab exploded.
- The Master in "The Deadly Assassin" and "The Keeper of Traken" who, being on the very verge of death, had basically become a walking corpse with the skeletal face to match (as best makeup of the 1970s and '80s could manage, anyway).
- Xoanon, the titular Face of Evil in "The Face of Evil", so terrifying the people on the planet have a religion based upon placating it — an especially unusual and upsetting case because it's also played by Tom Baker, with eyes bulging out of his head and the jaw working wrong.
- The robots in "The Robots of Death" are an in-universe example. Some people in the story are fine with them or even relate to them, but others subconsciously equate their weird, distorted faces with disfigured people or animated corpses, a recognised psychological disorder in the setting.
- "The Talons of Weng-Chiang": Magnus Greel has a melted, spaghetti-like face due to a mutation caused by primitive time-travel technology.
- The Weeping Angels. The grey faces of a humanoid angel statue, with fangs
◊.
- In "Forest of the Dead" we get Miss Evangelista's horribly distorted
◊ face in the virtual reality. She looks like a walking Picasso painting.
- Subverted in "Midnight". When Skye turns around, there is clearly a new consciousness, but her face is unchanged.
- The infectees in Russell T Davies and Phil Ford's "The Waters of Mars" with their split, cracked faces.
- The "Angry Face"
◊ of the mechanical Smiler androids from "The Beast Below". Their heads rotated 180 degrees to display one of two Frozen Faces — one pleased and smiling, the other disappointed and frowning. This made the appearance of the angry face, which was furious and snarling — and revealed by rotating the head another 180 degrees — a total surprise.
- The Silence from series 6, with their eye-covering eyelids, long faces and lack of a nose and mouth.
- The Whispermen in "The Name of the Doctor" have no eyes or nostrils, only sharp-toothed mouths.
- Fringe has one episode where a biological weapon results in people developing scar tissue at an alarming rate. Biggest problem with this is that it turns them into a blank, covering their eyes, nose, and mouth, resulting in them suffocating.
- Lucifer (2016): Lucifer is rather fond of scaring humans with his "Devil Face". In the episode "Monster", Lucifer's psychiatrist, Dr. Linda Martin, gets tired of his 'metaphors' about being the Devil, so he decides to drop his glamor. Linda just stares at him in shock. He restores his human features and asks what she thinks. She still keeps staring. So Lucifer quietly gets up and walks out, leaving Linda still staring at the place he was sitting.
- Valin Hess from The Mandalorian is a normal human Imperial officer with no alien traits whatsoever. And yet, his empty bug eyes and unnerving smile along with his sociopathic tendencies and phony nice guy attitude make for a character who's bound to make your skin crawl.
- The Soup, of all shows, has this in their "Tales from Home Shopping" segment. The intro for the segment shows some old-timey footage of people shopping. One of the customers' faces melts into a horrifying expression while a scream plays. It's Played for Laughs, but is arguably still rather scary, especially when they froze on the face when the intro was still new.
- The Twilight Zone (1959):
- The episode The Masks
, a dying man promises his entire fortune to his daughter and her family if they will wear grotesque masks for one evening. When the man dies at midnight, after telling them they have earned their inheritance, they remove the masks and find their faces have permanently taken on the masks' features
◊.
- The..uh..medical staff
◊ from the infamous episode "The Eye of the Beholder" all have pig's noses and wrinkled faces. In-universe, the patient's face (which looks like a normal face from the perspective of the audience) is seen is this.
- The episode The Masks
- The creature dubbed "The Great Mutato" in The X-Files, a genetically-engineered mistake whose many deformities included a grotesquely oversized double-face. As it turns out, though, he wasn't such a bad guy, and in fact his greatest desire was to see Cher in concert.
- Twin Peaks has moments of this, mostly in its surreal dream sequences - the animalistic scream Laura gives in Ronette's nightmare, for example. In one scene toward the end of season 2, the villainous Windom Earle unexplainedly has a chalky, white face and black teeth. And, finally, there are the Woodsmen of Season 3, glaring psychotically out from behind a heavy layer of soot.
- Aphex Twin has used his own face to play this trope on a few of his album covers, such as in I Care Because You Do
◊, the Kubrick Stare of Richard D. James Album
◊, or most obviously, his own face photoshopped onto a bunch of children for the cover of Come to Daddy
◊. Also, if you play the track "Equation" in a spectrogram
, you'll have a nice surprise.
- The last scene in Lady Gaga's video "Alejandro" in which the film burns up from the eyes and mouth out.
- In the music video for Madonna's "Bedtime Story", there's a part near the end where Madonna's mouth has been replaced by an eye and her eyes by two mouths.
◊
- GWAR:
- GWAR's former vocalist, Oderus Urungus, has a very frightening visage that looks like a cross between a horned goblin and a skinned pig. His earlier design was arguably worse because of its cheapness, making it look like his face was mangled in some horrific accident.
- The band's first female singer, Slymenstra Hymen, could make an absolutely monstrous scowl that gave the impression that she was ready to straight up murder the nearest living thing. Which, to be fair, is what GWAR is best at in-universe.
- The face of the boy who went mad after seeing Balsac's real face in the film It's Sleazy. He basically turned into a razor-toothed, wide-eyed goblin-creature through the power of pure fear and horrible photoshop. And it's on one of their album covers!
- Soundgarden's video for Black Hole Sun
has a suburban neighborhood of creepy smiling people whose faces very suddenly become horrifyingly distorted.
- Barry Godber's cover artwork from King Crimson's In the Court of the Crimson King. It's basically a technicolor painting of a man screaming in absolute fear.
- Queen:
- The album cover of The Miracle shows a composite of the band members' faces.
- Captain Beefheart's face on the album cover of Trout Mask Replica is covered by a carp's head note , showing a face you wouldn't want to see near your window at night.
- The little girl on the cover of Beautiful Freak by Eels has large creepy eyes.
- 2-D from Gorillaz has two severe eight-ball cataracts, making it look like he has a pair of black, gaping holes for eyes. It's quite frightening in close-up, such as in the music video of "Feel Good, Inc." from Demon Days (Album). Ironically, he's considered very handsome in-universe and has a charming (if dopey) personality.
- The official music video (not the earlier fan-made one) for "Kids" from Oracular Spectacular by MGMT, featuring deformed rubber masks with grotesque protruding eyes and tongues. Then you notice that a small child is crying and reacting to these horror faces.
- Björk in the music video of "Alarm Call" for Homogenic, where she changes into a monster with More Teeth than the Osmond Family!
- Ozzy Osbourne’s face on the cover of Down to Earth has a much more skeletal and macabre look throughout his body and face, and two heads coming out of his head screaming as if they’re in pain, as it’s really a nightmarish look!
- The music video for Michael Jackson's "Ghosts" has a lot of creepy moments in it thanks to its supernatural aesthetic, including Michael stripping himself of his skin into a skeleton, but one face
◊ from the music video has become rather infamous for its creep factor.
- The music video for Azealia Banks' "Yung Rapunxel" features her eyes replaced by mouths, with each mouth working independently to lip-sync the lyrics of the song.
- The album cover for Monster by R.E.M. is a close up of a bobcat-lynx-cougar... thing drawn in black marker on a balloon. It is very disquieting.
- The cover for Runner's High by The Pillows is a pastel drawing of a white rabbit with its mouth wide open and a pair of absolutely bloodshot eyes. It's guaranteed to frighten children.
- Classical Mythology: The Gorgons, Medusa, Stheno, and Euryale, whose faces would turn you to stone. Even aside from the snakes tangled in their hair, they have terrifying faces — huge eyes, boar-like tusks, flaring nostrils, and a grotesque grimace: a toothy smile with a tongue sticking out. Notably, while all characters in Ancient Greek art are usually shown on profile, Gorgons are almost always depicted facing the viewer head-on, highlighting their monstrous appearance. While the Gorgons' image as a protective symbol against evil never fell out of favor, their horrifying look gradually softened into a more human-like face over the course of the 5th century B.C.
- Celtic Mythology: One of the many horrific details of Cu Chulainn's infamous riastrad or "warp-spasm" was that one of his eyes would bulge out of the socket (and fall out) and the other would be sucked in, his lips would peel back to reveal a Slasher Smile with More Teeth than the Osmond Family, and his mouth would stretch down to his chest. Even if he wasn't exactly an evil guy, people tended to be really uneasy around him.
- Dungeons & Dragons:
- The krenshar
, a catlike monster introduced in 3rd edition to give low-level paladins a use for their fear immunity, uses its complex cheek and brow musculature to fold its whole face back, exposing bare muscle and bone, when using its Scare special ability.
- Changelings from the Eberron campaign can take the "Disturbing Visage" feat, which among other tricks can unnerve foes by looking more intimidating. The illustration on the Races of Eberron sourcebook definitely falls into this trope, but exaggerates the actual effectiveness of the feat.
- The krenshar
- Vampire: The Masquerade:
- The Nosferatu have this as a Clan Curse, as their founder was Punished with Ugly by Caine himself, and anyone embraced into the clan will follow suit. They can't live in normal human or vampire society, but they've learned to cope, woe be to anyone who underestimates this.
- The Tzimisce do this by choice. Their Vicissitude discipline allows them to mold flesh like clay, and as one of the more inhuman clans, they modify themselves and their servants into horrifying forms, faces included.
- Warhammer 40,000: Lucius the Eternal of the Emperor's Children has a millennia-long habit of ritually scarring his face after every victory. This, combined with his long, ropey tongue, makes him particularly disquieting even by the standards of the setting.
- BIONICLE:
- The Barraki also count. They all have these freakishly bulbous, emotionless eyes that seemingly stare into nothingness. Pridak takes the cake, however, with his butt-ugly Slasher Smile, and what looks like blood splashed all over his face (which is actually his natural coloring, according to Word of God).
- The Evil Wand
toy discovered by a parent at an Ohio dollar store has a hidden image under the foil on the wand: A disturbing photo of a girl with glowing orange eyes and a bloody, rapacious Slasher Smile cutting into her wrist with a knife.
- Kokichi Oma from Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony has five of these, introduced more or less once a chapter. He makes a new one just as you get used to the old ones. Among these are impossibly
wide grins
, inverted color palettes
, and shadowy black skin with bulging eyes
◊. The final face
really takes the cake, this almost looks like the last one but his eyes are now large and sunken in, his eyes are now a near black and spirally, and his mouth looks carved like a jack-o'-lantern.
- The Amazing Digital Circus: "The Mystery of Mildenhall Manor": The monster has a fairly unsettling face to start with, which gets even more frightening when it starts floating and glowing, it opens its mouth into a pit of razor-sharp teeth, and starts screaming. Pomni also gets in on this when she's possessed, her eyes turning black and orange and her mouth contorting into a wicked fanged grin.
- Cupcakes (Sergeant Sprinkles): Pinkie Pie in Mister Davie's
version pulls off a series of increasingly
disturbing
expressions
that all technically qualify as happy smiles.
- In Alfred's Playhouse, Alfred makes creepy faces constantly.
- Flippy's Ax-Crazy Split Personality Fliqpy from Happy Tree Friends has one consisted of wide, demented eyes with Creepy Shadowed Undereyes and a fanged Slasher Smile pasted on his face the majority of the time.
- Used frequently in Sr. Pelo's Mokey's Show, in which the faces the characters randomly make in later episodes become more and more grotesque. One of the best examples are the faces Momi makes in Is Not Christmas
, but this particular one really takes the cake for being absolutely horrifying.
- Pretty Blood: Whenever Rinny removes her Mask of Sanity, she has an utterly horrifying Slasher Smile.
- Squimpus McGrimpus: The Five Nights At Freddys analog horror series' Signature Scene is one of these. In "Facial Recognition Testing", we get to see how the animatronics see William Afton; while the grey smug little smile he has before it all goes wrong is unnerving, it's outdone when we get to see the juicy part: Williams face contorted into a Slasher Smile, tinted purple, and warped to a freaky shape. "Finale" makes it worse, as when Michael burns down Fazbears Fright, in turn killing Springtrap, we get to see the horrific revision of Afton's portrait, now tinted red and his face warping into a terrified expression to match his ultimate fate.
- In Commander Kitty, Zenith picks up this kind of expression when she realizes Nin Wah is present.
She shows off a subtler yet simultaneously far creepier one
when she's about to disembowel Ace and company.
- Ctrl+Alt+Del: In the Starcaster Chronicles segment, Cort met up with a Knowledge Broker named Ssissimias to look for a job that pays in advance. Then it's revealed that Ssissimias is a Hive Mind of Puppeteer Parasite infesting the corpse of a man, with holes on its right cheek where the worms poke out at times. They are affable and reasonable, but warns Cort that if he ever crosses them, he will be their next meat puppet. Tryphophobics, beware.
- In El Goonish Shive, Pandora's face turns monstrous
when she gets angry. Her eyes become like a cat's, and her teeth become sharp and with pronounced canines.
- Erma: Erma can drastically deform her face in a wide variety of ways when angered, typically including More Teeth than the Osmond Family (and inhumanly sharp ones, too). "Rules"
shows her mother Emiko telling her not to do this at school and demonstrating a few herself.
- Gunnerkrigg Court has a couple of instances...Zimmy's already a little creepy, given she's got some kind of black clouds where her eyes should be. Then this
happens in the middle of a psychic jaunt Astral Projection into an unconscious Antimony's subconscious.
- Mob Psycho 100: Any time Mob displays anger is usually a case of Tranquil Fury, with little change of expression. When he discovers however what appears to be as the burning corpses of his family in a house fire, his expression becomes a downright terrifying face of overwhelming, burning rage. Sweet dreams everyone
◊.
- In Monster Pulse, energy ghosts can cause a human's body part to become autonomous. One example is Michael Rjinder, whose entire skin has become such a monster. It usually placidly sits on his body, looking eerie with its striations. But when it gets excited...
- The Property of Hate gives us Click's waterlogged face
during "Ex position." You're bound to get nightmares from seeing it.
- Romantically Apocalyptic's main protagonist, "Zee Captain" has a face like this, apparently. In issue 23, he confronts the aliens that abducted Snippy after OWNING one of them with a slice of cake(!) and forces them to gaze upon his Angry face, removing his gas mask in front of them. We don't see, but the alien's reaction says a lot!
- Schlock Mercenary. Tagii is not happy
about being cut off from her external senses by Thurl, and as a result of her treatment takes up a far more ghoulish appearance that reflects her condition.
- Sleepless Domain: When Tessa relives her Dream, things quickly start going off the rails as Goops inserts her own memories, causing the Girl in the Dream's face to melt away into her own terrifying Slasher Smile. Sweet dreams, Tessa!
◊
- Sweet Home (2017): The author's trademark style shines through with the monsters and the monster infected, giving them one of these anytime any one of them does anything evil. The criminals also get it sometimes, to a lesser degree, as well as Hyein after her Sanity Slippage and Hyun when his monster side takes over.
- Trevor (2020): Trevor's face is going through some Facial Horror by the time the audience gets to see it, and it isn't exactly getting any better.
- The Worthington: In Room 1002, the mirrors' reflections of the character's face are unrecognizable as anything human — for example, being made up of bundles of flesh stuffed with pods or being full of dripping orifices or small clusters.
- Whateley Universe story "The Turks or the Geek": Carmilla threatens a superpowered mutant. Hundreds of tentacles come out of her body and grab him. Then her face splits. Down the center. Inside are teeth and more tentacles, and a lot of the tentacles have eyeballs on the tips, and... It's so horrifying the guy wets himself.
- "NvtterBvtterGvrly
" Ava does a pretty damn near good one here.
- Killerbunnies' Io "Nightmare Fuel" McMorrison posses a somewhat milder example of this trope. To elaborate further, she has with her wide, somewhat angry looking blue eyes and her teeth are growing through the skin to outside of her mouth. Naturally,on the note of her teeth, with such a deformity, one wonders how she eats.
- And then of course there's the infamous Momo of the Momo Challenge, which originated as a creepy statue in Japan with giant blank, staring eyes and a rather unsettling smile.
- This image
of a cross between a pig-tailed girl, a chunky middle aged man, and a monkey adorned many an early flash animations and Youtube videos in the 2000s. It actually happens to be the result of a photo mashup from an early photo editing software app called Kai's Power Goo.
- A Running Gag in Mr. Plinkett Reviews is for him to react
(or overreact...) to an inhuman looking face:
OH MY GOD, WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOUR FACE!? - Channel 10 - Manila:
- "Metrocom PSA, September 1988"
starts off normal with the titular PSA for a missing woman named Ana Orosa Bulingan. However, Bulingan's portrait starts to smile and distort into scary forms until it ends with a split-second shot of Bulingan's face distorted to nightmarish levels.
- "Possible Broadcast Hijacking, October 1988"
ends with the airing of Tahanan TV being hijacked into showing footage of what's implied to be the third house until the "For Sale" screen turns pitch-black and shows the monochrome image of a girl with empty eye sockets and a toothy grin.
- "Dance-o-Rama PHILSACOR Promo September 1988"
starts off normal until we get to the PHILSACOR discount promos for the Maligaya T-666 TV model, which show a winking woman with a distorted face flashing an impossible ear-to-ear grin, then it ends with a white screen with just the TV until its screen shows said grinning woman with both eyes open.
- "Metrocom PSA, September 1988"
- Nazo no Eizou - CM Channel: "People Encountered This Week"
starts innocuous with images of people in relationships. However, the kicker comes when the ad shows the titular People, whose portraits have their faces twisted into predatory, deranged expressions. Not helping matters is their descriptions for an ideal partner are equally predatory, especially the last two, which border in pedophilic levels of creepy (the 44-year-old who wants a 18-20-year-old woman who could birth cute girls, and the 57-year-old who sought someone of any age to marry him in one week).
- Todd in the Shadows is revealed to have this in To Boldly Flee, neatly explaining why he does all of his reviews in the shadows or wearing a mask. Naturally, the other characters see it but the audience does not. The horrifying thing about his face? According to Word of God, his face is a mirror into people's souls — the worse you are, the worse his face looks. Which is why the Makeover Fairy and The Nostalgia Chick have both reacted in horror to it. The fact that Lupa remained calm when seeing Todd's face may lessen this slightly (indicating that good people see a more normal-looking face). The concept is still pretty creepy, though.
- "The Glitch
" by Corridor Digital focuses on a group of game characters as they try to evade a series of game-breaking glitches. Mario falls into a glitched portion of the game world, and just before he sinks in completely, his face suddenly and graphically morphs into several hideous visages as his screams digitally decompose.
- The reason why Laina Morris became well-known as the Overly Attached Girlfriend. And she only needs to open her eyes wide and smile to do so.
- This trope plays a major role in Illusion of Bias
when the girl is unhappy the she lost her face. She then has a nightmare where she has a hideous face.
- The entirety of Monster Factory is based on this trope. Out of all of the monsters in the series, Truck Shepard has by far the most nightmarish face, because its features have been horribly distorted thanks to a little hacking. For example, at one point his cheek stretches into infinite and his eye is several inches away from his face. In the words of Griffin, "Yikes!"
- Lights Out (2016) Good luck sleeping tonight.......or ever again. Just watch Diana's true form when the lights are on - espeically in the 2013 short film when that......thing appears on the woman's bedside table. The creature in the short film is a nightmarish humanoid with a female-like appearence, dead white eyes and a mouth full of sharp teeth, alongside long brown hair.
- The Whistle Occurrence:
- In "Whistle'rblx", a strange, contorted face appears on a round object behind VBLeaf before the Whistle Occurence's effects fully kick in.
- In "Whistle occurrence live stream tragedy", TorchwoodYT is suddenly greated to a picture of Builderman on an "unexpected error with your request" screen... but then Builderman loses his face, which is replaced with a gaping hole.

