Monster Teens Porn

Monster Teens Porn




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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TeensAreMonsters
In their striving to try to be taken seriously, teenagers are susceptible, gullible, and downright dangerous to anyone who wants to manipulate them. They are the best targets for demons, vampires, or The Virus. Sometimes they're just delinquents with no respect, sometimes they are only a hair's breadth of sanity away from shooting up the place and they'll stay that way as long as you don't treat them like a kid.
Much of this trope is fueled by a distrust of teenagers by the adult population. Also, many parents of young children dread the day that their innocent little angels grow into back-talking, angst-ridden, hormone addled teenagers, which can sometimes even happen earlier than expected. However, television producers are often worried about offending the very lucrative 13-to-17-year-old market, so usually the heroes are also teens, or at least there will be a very prominent "good" one.
Ironically, the much milder version of this trope occurs with shows aimed toward younger children who find teenagers cryptic, pushy, and intimidating for other reasons.
Some cases of Royal Brats and Military Brats can be attributed to this trope. This trope often has the teenage monsters in question have been previously sweet kids. If teen monsters run society, it's a Teenage Wasteland. See also Big Brother Bully, Kids Are Cruel, and Humans Are Bastards.
Some teens act this way because they don't know any better. Some others however do, know they will get away with it because they won't get caught, and might have For the Evulz as their main motivation. Others may have been taught to act this way by their parents or are even dealing with their own huge troubles at home. Whatever the reasoning, the results are basically the same.
Of course, this can be β€” on an individual basis β€” Truth in Television (ask any high school or middle school teacher/student); there are monster teens in Real Life in the same fashion that we can find some mean kids and cruel adults. The mere fact of being a teenager doesn't make people automatically good or evil; it, contrary to popular belief, does not make any given person susceptible to reckless and selfish behavior. There are just as many, if not more, selfless, sweet teenagers as there are selfish, impulsive adults, and age does not necessarily correlate to behavior.
Compare and contrast Troubled Teen, a usually more sympathetic portrayal though one can develop to a monster.
Gostumon: Woah! I think you knocked over a monster!
Pumpkinmon: Even worse! I think I knocked over a teenager!
John Mulaney says in his New in Town special that he considers middle schoolers the worst people in the world and goes out of his way to avoid them.
In the graphic novel Black Hole, teenagers are being afflicted with a mysterious STD that causes them to mutate randomly, occasionally turning them into literal monsters: barely human creatures that live in the woods. At least some of them seem to have become significantly mentally deranged because of this, turning them into more traditional monster teens.
This was America's prevailing attitude towards Young Justice in The DCU, causing them to eventually become America's most wanted super-group, despite the fact that they were actually pretty heroic and set a good example for others like them.
The X-Men and other Marvel mutants. Most mutant powers seem to manifest around puberty, and turn their recipients into freaks or outcasts of some sort. Rule of Symbolism much? One incarnation of the Hellfire Club are all teens at just about 12.
Also from Marvel, there's the Bastards Of Evil, the illegitimate teenage children of famous supervillains, who have set out to take over the world but mostly seems to cause chaos for the hell of it. Warhead, the son of Radioactive Man, blows himself up at Ground Zero, killing thousands and irradiating the whole area. It turns out that it's actually a case of Kids Are Cruel, the members of the team are kidnapping victims who have been genetically engineered with powers and brainwashed by their leader Superior, who's much younger, and the only real Bastard of Evil, being the son of The Leader.
Robin: Several of Tim's high school classmates are murdered by other classmates, and while most teens in the series are nice enough if flawed individuals those he faces off against as Robin are generally quite monstrous in their actions.
Several of the teenage antagonists in the Shazam! franchise, especially the ones who tend to focus that antagonism on Freddy such as Sivana Jr. and the Breyer brothers. (Usually) averted hard by the Shazamily themselves β€” even Superman thinks he was a holy terror in his teens compared to them.
The police procedural action strip Dick Tracy has a few teenage villains.
Jimmy White is an angsty seventeen-year-old who robs banks as well as his father, attempts assassinations, and acts as a cohort to major 30s villain Ben Spaldoni, who in turn worked for the Big Bad of the decade, Big Boy Caprice. He later explodes in an oil tank trying to kill another person. For a young kid that's pretty twisted.
Flattop Jones, Jr. committed at least two murders and led Tracy on a manhunt while trying to kill the aforementioned protagonist as well before getting killed. Considering this kid is the son of Flattop Jones, a mass murderer, hitman, and child killer, this is not unexpected of him. It's implied to be hereditary as despite being raised by his law-abiding aunt, Flattop Jr still turned out rotten.
Flattop Jr's accomplice, Joe Period, also guilty of several murders. When his mother visits him in prison, he basically just tells her to fuck off. Joe Period and Flattop Jr were created to explore the topic of teenage criminals, which was becoming a major concern in the 1950s.
An unusually serious and dark CATverse story, The Pæan of the Bells, gives us a flashback to The Scarecrow's incredibly shitty childhood. A group of teenagers enjoyed hunting him down daily, beating the crap out of him, verbally abusing him, and more, purely For the Evulz. He was terrified that he might just be killed sooner or later, and the kicker? They weren't doing this to somebody their own age or anywhere near their own size; Jonathan was still a little boy. Not surprising that he grew up to be a villain.
"Anarchy for All" of the Dusk to Dawn Batman series portrays Anarky this way. Dillon "Lonnie" Machin appears at first to be a dorky fourteen-year-old Teen Genius inspired by his idol Batman to expose corruption in Gotham's society with his hacking skills. Unfortunately, constant neglect and emotional abuse from his Workaholic father Grant, plus having Hugo Strange for a therapist, reveals a dark side in the boy: He's a Loony Fan who wants Batman to be his father figure in place of Grant, has a creepy crush on Batgirl, trades his hacktivist modus operandi for blowing up buildings, and slowly poisoned his mother for being an Alcoholic Parent before becoming Strange's pawn.
The Megamind fanfic Heroes makes it clear just how cruel and uncaring some teenagers can be compared to others. In some places, the cruelty is shockingly realistic.
During the section set in 1996, Redaction of the Golden Witch focuses on a group of Witch Hunters. The three younger members are all twenty-somethings, and much of the conflict revolves around the significantly older Narrator getting frustrated with the trio's apparent Lack of Empathy. Each of the three is so wrapped up in what they enjoy most about the Witch Hunt fandom that they don't seem to care about the fact the Rokkenjima Incident was real, with real victims whose memory they're insulting.
PokΓ©mon Reset Bloodlines features Belladonna Tyrian and her group of minions/lovers. They're introduced in Chapter 22 plotting to cause a blackout in Gringy City by sabotaging the local power plant and kill someone. Their motivations are fully fleshed in Chapter 23, which reveals their Dark And Troubled Pasts.
Doki Doki Literature Club!:
In The Bike, Yuri has several moments where she is more unhinged than her canon version. There's MC eats breakfast with his 'mother', where Yuri confesses to murdering his whole family after breaking into his home. Or she's also seen holding Sayori captive in "Sayori is missing." Or she's there to brandish knives.
Monika also has her moments. In "Monika checks on Sayori," Monika witnesses Sayori's suicide, and takes a morbid interest in it.
Autistic Communist:
After not eating for three days, Natsuki murders MC and eats him before killing her abusive father and deciding to leave his corpse to rot.
Rosario Vampire Brightest Darkness Act III: While they actually are monsters in the literal sense, the bulk of the Yokai Academy student body fit the bill throughout most of the act. Disbelieving that Tsukune and his friends actually did fight Fairy Tale and believing them to just be fakers claiming as such for attention, they take virtually every possible opportunity to harass, bully, and mistreat them, climaxing in Kano blackmailing the girls into letting him take dirty pictures of them and nearly raping them outright; it reaches a point where Felucia asks the others in earnest why they should bother saving such assholes from Kuyou's upcoming attack. That being said, when the students witness the gang fighting off Kuyou, as well as a subsequent assault on the academy by Fairy Tale, they suffer a Jerkass Realization and help fight Fairy Tale off.
In Danny Phantom fanfic ResurrectedMemories: The A-Listers as per cannon are a group of snobby popular kids who bully others they deem beneath them but it's stated that the popular kids from Ember's backstory are even worse.
While they haven't been seen yet, Infinity Train: Blossoming Trail shows off how monstrous Grace and Simon, both 18, are. They essentially crippled a young child and buried him within the confines of his own car β€” and his father was unaware of this for eight years β€” and the one person who tried standing up to them and the Apex's cruelty got hit with a sledgehammer to the face, kicked in the ribs and tattooed with the Apex's symbol on their wrist.
Anna: Try to be friendly, just smile and say "hi". Don't be defensive look them in the eye.
Elsa: Those kids are jerks.
Anna: I know it's hard but your temper makes it worse. They don't understand... your gift.
Elsa: Yeah, they think that it's a curse.
Elsa: They want me to stay mild and meek. I'm s'posed to turn the other cheek. But if one more kid calls me a...
Elsa: Wait for itβ€”
Boy: Freak!
Anna: [spoken] Elsa, what did you do? I'm so sorry!
Anna: [whisper to Elsa] You should know better.
Stacey de Lacey from Oliver and the Seawigs looks to be around his teenage years, and wants to help the Thurlstone win the seawig contest and become ruler of the living islands so he can have them under his command, and use them to get back at everyone who was mean to him. It probably doesn't help that he seemed to bring the bullying upon himself by being a pretty nasty kid himself. Plus, he has absolutely no qualms about trapping Oliver's parents inside the Thurlstone's new earrings.
Jodee Blanco's memoir of recovering from intense bullying, Please Stop Laughing at Me, turns both this and Kids Are Cruel Up to Eleven. A group of kids Jodee was friends with in a new town fall out with her after she refused to play a prank on a disabled teacher. They then come back to her over the summer, invite her to play baseball, then knock her out with a fastball, moon her, and call her a variety of names. Not only that, her crush wrote "You're going to have to fuck yourself bitch" in her yearbook, gets beaten up by the entire football team, and is made fun of when word gets out that one breast is smaller than the other, and that's not even the half of it.
Speak has Melinda's classmates. Heather jumping ship on her. Those kids at the pep rally. And Andy Evans who raped her.
A Clockwork Orange in all its horror show entirety.
Figures rather prominently in many novels by Stephen King β€” one almost suspects King believes Teens Are Monsters himself. (Well, he did teach high school for several years.) Among other examples, we have:
Todd Bowden from Apt Pupil, the second novella from Different Seasons. Todd learns that his elderly next-door neighbor is a Nazi fugitive, but doesn't turn him in because he wants to learn the "gooey stuff" about the Holocaust. As his Odd Friendship with the Nazi continues, Todd graduates from dreaming about raping concentration camp inmates to becoming a hobo-mauling serial killer. Finally, Todd kills his guidance counselor and snipes motorists on an expressway.
Buddy Repperton in Christine. Arnie Cunningham doesn't qualify quite so much due to the whole Demonic Possession thing.
The Children of the Corn, along with Creepy Children.
Junior Rennie and his posse in Under the Dome. Three of them rape a girl while the only female member of the posse cheers them on, and Junior repeatedly has sex with the bodies of two girls he murdered and stuffed in a pantry.
The teenagers who kill Alice in Cell.
The Kid in The Stand gives the appearance of this, but is in his mid-twenties to thirties.
Henry Bowers and his friends Victor and Belch in IT, as well as Patrick Hockstetter, whose actions even disturb Henry.
The girls in the locker room in Carrie, particularly Chris, who comes up with the whole ill-advised pig-blood thing.
Ann M. Martin, best known as the creator of The Baby-Sitters Club, published a young adult novel titled Slam Book in 1987, which eerily seemed to presage the same bullying issues that would be associated with online social networks two decades later. In this case, Anna, the protagonist, falls out with her BFF, Alpha Bitch Paige, over a boy, and concocts a scheme to humiliate Paige by forging slam book entries supposedly written by Paige to Cheryl, the school outcast. Anna, not even taking Cheryl's feelings into account, doesn't realize it's gone too far until Cheryl commits suicide by slitting her wrists.
A Song of Ice and Fire:
Joffrey Baratheon is only 13 years old, yet is regarded by many as the single most depraved character in the series (at least until the below-mentioned Ramsay came along).
Gregor Clegane was barely in his teens when he burned his little brother Sandor's face after Sandor played with some of Gregor's discarded toys that Gregor didn't even want anymore. Gregor only got worse as an adult.
Sixteen year old Ramsay Snow also qualifies, given how his main hobbies are flaying and hunting women for sport, and to a lesser extent nineteen-year-old Theon Greyjoy also counts, although he does bad things less because he's evil and more because he's a stupid kid that gets in way over his head. Of course, that all changes when the two meet...
In John Saul's House of Reckoning, the main character is crippled from a car accident and the school (and the town) whispers behind her back and alienates her, then accuses her of worshiping the devil. Because she has a limp. Saul actually has several novels with outcast teenagers being victimized by their monstrous peers. The Unwanted, Black Creek Crossing and Punish The Sinners are a few examples. Then there's Teri, the glamorous teenage serial killer in Second Child.
In Andrew Vachss's Burke books the protagonist often passes by disaffected teens who may be violent, though they're rarely the focus.
Brought up in Discworld, but in typical Pratchett fashion, quickly subverted soon after. The Ankh Morpork teen street gangs are mentioned to be ruthless and deadly... but find themselves helpless to resist Captain Carrot's good-natured effort to organize them all into a Cub Scout equivalent, camping trips and chanting all included.
Gone, by Michael Grant. Partially justified in that the series uses an Only Fatal to Adults situation and every main character is 14 or 15 years old. On the other hand, there are a lot more villains than heroes, and the "good" characters have issues.
In The Butterfly Revolution, John Mason rapes one of the female campers, Blackridge tortures Divordich, and Stanley kills Mr. Warren.
Draco Malfoy from Harry Potter, and his Slytherin cronies.
The young Tom Riddle is an exaggerated example, who murdered his father and grandparents, framing his uncle. Opened the Chamber of Secrets, killed a girl and then blamed it all on Hagrid.
For that matter, James Potter and Sirius Black were examples of this trope regarding Snape, at least during fifth year.
Severus wasn't their only victim. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince revealed that the Marauders got detentions for several acts of bullying and general mischief. One incident involved being one of them being apprehended and using an illegal hex on some one-note student. There's also Sirius trying to lure Severus to Werewolf Remus during a full moon with full knowledge of what Remus could have done to him.
Snape might be an inversion because, while he didn't even seem to be mean, he had a very dark mind, with his fascination with the Dark Arts and the creation of some violent spells. This is likely what his classmates' perception of him was. However, he did hang out with a group of other Slytherins who eventually became Death Eaters which probably didn't help this perception. Though we never learn much about this gang's activities, they probably fall under this trope.
And Dudley before the Dementors.
This is, essentially, the point of Sergey Lukyanenko's Knights of Forty Islands, where a bunch of teenagers are kidnapped by aliens and put on small islands connected by narrow bridges, where they're given anger-activated swords and told that anyone who conquers all 40 islands gets to go home (The Cake Is a Lie, as all "kidnapped" kids are copies). The protagonists decide to make an alliance with the neighboring islands in order to peacefully or forcefully bring all islands under one rule. While it works for a short while, teenage hormones soon take over, and the alliance falls apart, as many of them just want to have power and sex (two of the betrayers are murdered in cold blood by the protagonist after they rape a girl).
Ashes by Ilsa J. Bick takes this to the extreme. In this Zombie Apocalypse, an electromagnetic pulse has made most teenagers become Technically Living Zombies and killed most adults, thus making the only survivors younger children or elderly people, who both have no problem mistrusting teenagers.
Some of the teens in The Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth are unnecessarily cruel. The leader of Danielle's hate club actually wishes that Danielle dies from the anesthesia when she goes to get dermatological surgery.
Lord of the Flies pretty much breathes this trope. Let's just say that William Golding had no faith in the ability of human beings to solve problems without resorting to violence, and showed it through the preteen and teenage characters in the book.
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