Manchild - TV Tropes
- ️Thu Dec 02 2021
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Manchild
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Don't worry, he's eating according to the four elvish food groups.note
Brother's in the playpen, doing like he's told
Never mind the fact that he's thirty years old
— Al Duvall, "Five Against One"
Sometimes people just fail to develop into social or intellectual maturity. Maybe it's due to a very loving but confining mother or father, who don't suggest or won't let them get a job and move out, enabling their laziness or dependence instead. Maybe they were never taught any responsibility growing up, and now that they're adults, it's too late and they're set in their ways. Maybe they're a Spoiled Brat who's learned to manipulate their parents into doing what they want, and the parents came to the conclusion that it's just easier to indulge them than to fight about it. Or maybe they just didn't want to leave the nest. Maybe they've been intentionally secluded from learning about the world. Or they grew up as a neglected orphan without a proper education or any guidance towards adult life. Maybe their parents or legal guardians simply failed to teach them how to do things like cook for themselves, keep their home clean, balance the checkbook, make and stick to a budget, pay bills and taxes, do minor home repairs, or change a tire. Maybe they were literally Raised by Wolves. Maybe it's the result of brain damage, an intellectual disability or developmental disorder, or something sinister. Perhaps they just never had a life-changing moment involving a shotgun and a beloved pet. Maybe it's just a form of Mars and Venus Gender Contrast, or they live in a society with certain gender roles, where one sex is expected to be the responsible one, and the other is not expected to be (and is not always taught to be). Who can say?
Although the causes might not be clear, the effects are. The Manchild, a term invented by William Faulkner, is usually an adult who possesses a very childlike or (stereotypically) childish demeanor. He's emotionally both simple and fragile; he prefers (although does not always need) to have a parent figure to look after him. He usually isn't very worldly and is typically pretty gullible. The Manchild's interests are usually what most people consider to be immature or childish, sometimes even in comparison to actual children. Psychologically speaking, this is very much linked to the defense mechanism of regression (since it involves mentally reverting back to earlier stages).
The character is almost Always Male. This is (presumably) to contrast the differences between him and "normal men" with the normal responsibilities and wisdom of adulthood. The female version usually overlaps with The Ingenue, the Manic Pixie Dream Girl or the Genki Girl. Manchild has many more negative connotations than The Ingenue; the manchild's immaturity and lack of outward adult behavior is emphasized as being a bad thing versus being an emphasized good thing like The Ingenue's purity and idealism. This is also because of the Double Standard most societies have, which exist for various reasons, where they expect more from men than they do from women. More contemporary works are increasingly likely to play female examples as unsympathetic (or, at the very least, deeply flawed), with a characterization that is fairly similar - irresponsible, unreliable, unable or unwilling to meet basic adult responsibilities on their own, and dependent on others. When portrayed unsympathetically, female examples are typically more dysfunctional than male examples, as their parasitism is typically aimed at partners (usually viewing them as meal tickets and lifestyle subsidizers, and often cheating on them when they grow bored with them or find a better provider), and they also tend to have more severe mental health issues and are more likely to have serious issues with substances.
On the Brain Chain, the Man Child occupies a space between The Cloud Cuckoolander and The Ditz, but without necessarily becoming The Fool. He usually does not have The Fool's luck, but he doesn't necessarily play the role of the Butt-Monkey either. Although the Manchild is commonly portrayed as being mentally challenged, he does not necessarily have to be. In many cases, the character may be very intelligent, and even leave the idealism aside and be very shrewd in business or career. Alternatively, his childlike qualities/way of thinking, when intelligently applied, can be a basis for his success as a businessman, in which case he's also The Wonka.
In comedic works, he usually plays the role of The Ditz. In dramatic works, he could be the Jerk with a Heart of Gold due to his simplicity or immaturity, or an Audience Surrogate. Sometimes the Man Child embarks on a late-in-the-day Coming of Age Story, which ushers him into true adulthood. Note that usually Sex as Rite-of-Passage works only some of the time. In many instances, a Man Child is not necessarily a virgin, but only sees sex as a tool of pleasure and does not recognize its emotional significance. If he ever gets married, it's likely that his wife will end up being a mother-figure not only to their children but to him as well, doing all the "emotional labor" needed to keep the household afloat while he just coasts along and drags her into all sorts of wacky hijinks. If he doesn't, there's a good chance that he's a Disappeared Dad - he very likely knocked up an ex or casual sex partner, but plays no role in the child's life whatsoever, either because he can't or because he won't (quite often both). The Manchild is occasionally prone to delivering or enjoying a "Life Is Awesome" Speech.
Some will agree that this is Truth in Television for certain people, as there do exist many immature adults out there who refuse to grow up. Sometimes it's just people who are capable of engaging in adult responsibilities but have childlike interests and personalities in their free time, other times it's adults who somehow have all the knowledge capable of living independently yet the emotional maturity and mentality of a spoiled child (or teenager). The likeliest cause of the Manchild is a sheltered upbringing or mental illness, particularly Peter Pan Syndrome note
One of the Kids is related, in where their childishness is caused by spending a lot of time around children. When events will force him to be independent, he will be Not Used to Freedom.
Does not relate to Never Grew Up, because they physically did grow up - but never outgrew being attached to immature or childish things or behavior. Sister Trope (perhaps) to Adults Dressed as Children, although that trope is almost always played for laughs or borders on the grotesque. Compare Keet, One of the Kids, Kiddie Kid. For a villainous version, see Psychopathic Manchild. Compare Basement Dweller. May form a Nerd Hoard out of items relating to their childish obsessions. Not related to Manchild (2002), the British TV series, either. Compare and contrast The Three Faces of Adam. Contrast with Wise Beyond Their Years, where a child acts like an adult. Can overlap with Only One Finds It Fun for when the manchild is entertained by children's entertainment that fails to entertain the actual children. May engage in the Jinx Game as an adult and expect others to abide by the rules. Also likely to be a Holiday Aficionado, such as a Halloween Enthusiast.
Adult women may reveal such tendencies with the use of the Feminine Leg Swish.
Example subpages:
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- Films — Animation
- Films — Live-Action
- Literature
- Live-Action TV
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- Webcomics
- Western Animation
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Asian Animation
- In Boonie Bears, despite being a grown adult, Bramble - the younger of the two bear brothers - acts naive and childish and is easily distracted by food.
Blogs
- Bosun's Journal: The ancestors of the brat barons, who had been designed to be genius corporate planners and strategists, were brilliant by any human standard but lacked any real emotional intelligence, being extremely self-entitled and competitive. Their post-apocalyptic descendants retain their ancestors' arrogance and stunted emotional skills but have lost most of their ancestral cunning due to hundreds of generations spend without using it in their sedentary, indolent and isolated lifestyles. As a result, a typical brat baron only retains childlike levels of intelligence and emotional maturity even as an adult.
Comic Books
- Obelix from Asterix is innocent and childlike.
- Batman: Quite a few interpretations of Batman, which actually makes a lot of sense. He was clearly inspired by Zorro (or maybe the Gray Ghost) to become a superhero after his parents death (and followed through with that childhood plan into adult hood!), keeps tons of cool toys and souvenirs around his mansion, is still taken care of by the same butler he's had since childhood and seems to get along very well with people much younger than him like Batgirl and Robin.
- In Empire State, Jimmy admits that he really doesn't feel grown-up, even though he's 25. But when his friend Sara calls him out for not having a checking account, and still receiving an allowance from his mother, he insists that "it's an Asian thing".
- Madman (Mike Allred): Madman, mostly due to being killed and reanimated with new memories and a different personality. Mentally, he is only about ten years old (at least when his former life isn't poking through).
- Rage of New Warriors was an immature young teen when he got his powers — which mutated him into the form of a very large and muscular Scary Black Man.
- Shazam!: Captain Marvel often comes across this way, but for a different reason — he's a young boy (or sometimes teenager) named Billy who can transform into an adult superhero. Early on the two forms had different personalities, but most modern interpretations make them the same person, acting like a Cheerful Child in both forms (though Marvel gets a bit of maturity from having the Wisdom of Solomon as one of his powers).
- Suske en Wiske:
- Van Zwollem is a mad middle-aged man who enjoys playing outside like an infant.
- In the early albums, Jerom also has an infantile personality, but as he became more civilized, he lost this character trait.
Comic Strips
- Darryl and Wanda from Baby Blues aren't really that much more mature than their children (Zoe, Hammie and Wren) as Darryl can be seen engaging with childish activities with the kids and Wanda bawls like a baby when something goes really wrong for her.
- The titular character of Brewster Rockit: Space Guy! is shown to be a manchild, even having book tapes on coloring books, and being exceedingly stupid. It is implied that he originally had average human intelligence, but his intelligence and maturity decreased substantially due to the government overdosing him on memory wipes.
- The Arbuckle brothers in Garfield both have problems with this. Jon sometimes regresses to thumb-sucking and tantrum-throwing when he gets emotionally vulnerable. Doc Boy still needs his Security Blanket to sleep, childishly teased Jon when the latter got a girlfriend and was shown in the Christmas special to get a toy airplane as a present. Both also show childish happiness at hearing the same Christmas story read to them every year and opening presents. There seems to be an element of nurture to their behavior, as their mother still sees them as her little boys and treats them as such. In his more self-aware moments, Jon makes attempts to grow out of this, but Status Quo Is God dooms his efforts.
- InSecurity has Sedine, a Cloudcuckoolander Genki Girl who is so childish that she makes Sam seem more like her babysitter than her husband. Then there's Sedine's cousin Roy...
- The title character of Luann, after the cast's graduation from high school. Between her constantly messy room, hitting up her parents for money, avoidance of schoolwork, hangups around sexuality, and overall "head in the clouds" demeanor, it's pretty easy to forget that she's a grown adult attending college rather than a fourteen-year-old girl.
- Nemi: Nemi herself can be quite childish, doing things like stuffing her face with sweets, or licking a lamppost despite being twenty-plus.
- Nero:
- Nero has a very childish way of looking at the world. For instance, he is the only adult who still writes a letter to Sinterklaas.
- Abraham Tuizentfloot is an adult who dresses like a pirate and has very infantile fixations. Of course, it doesn't help that he's also completely mad.
- The main character in The Norm is this. This is deconstructed many times, with Norm genuinely struggling at adulthood and him trying to be mature contributing to his depression.
- Ted of Sally Forth (Howard) loves collecting geek memorabilia and trivia and is prone to being a Sore Loser. He's even referred to himself as such one time. There are some deconstructive elements with him, as his estranged relationship with his father is hinted to be why he regresses to childish demeanor as a coping mechanism and Sally has made it clear to him at least once that he has to become more of an adult if he wants to keep their relationship healthy.
Fan Works
- Abraxas (Hrodvitnon): Zig-zagged by San, true to his rather childlike behavior among Ghidorah's three heads in Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019). He's genuinely inquisitive and can often be very childlike even though he's an eons-old former piece of a Draconic Abomination, but besides being cute, this also highlights San's Dark and Troubled Past of being abused and starved of affection by his brothers (Ghidorah's other two heads) for billions of years. On the other hand, when San isn't being playful and childlike, he's very much capable of being serious and responsible.
- Accommodations and Cabbages: Goku is portrayed as incredibly immature and childish. He uses child-like speech patterns, doesn't pay attention to important conversations, and is clueless about adult topics such as sex.
- Cloud Kicker, one of the main heroines in Ace Combat: The Equestrian War, has a very childish personality most of the time.
- Always Visible: Jordan Thurlow, who chose to work as a culturologist because he really dislikes work.
- In Batshark
, a Fusion Fic combining a cartoon crossover with Batman, Elliot the deer plays Two-Face as a half-adult-half-manchild as opposed to a half-lawyer-half-criminal. And then there is the fusion of The Joker and The Warden...
- Children of Remnant: Weiss was hit with the Darkness the most of her siblings, and it caused her personality to regress to that of a young child. "Nice Weiss" specifically exists so that she can be more responsible when absolutely necessary.
- C Listers: Killer Moth is basically a little kid trying to be a supervillain and live out his childish fantasies of being "the anti-Batman", and he constantly whines about no one taking him seriously. As more of his darker side becomes apparent, he starts to border on being a Psychopathic Manchild, but he's ultimately too much of a moron to make the leap.
- In Death's Design, Fate's Plan
Hermione referred to Sirius as a "man child without the ability to grow up." Sirius replied that Harry's mother once said something very similar to him and Remus commented that every female he knew had said something similar at one time or another.
- Dragon Ball Abridged portrays Nappa as this. In this story, he is a borderline disabled Psychopathic Manchild whose dialogue mainly consists of non-sequiturs and random annoyances to his partner Vegeta, to the point that "Goddammit, Nappa!" has become the latter's catchphrase.
- In Frayed Edges
, Ennard acts like an innocent child, with a curious fascination for even the most mundane of things and an often simplistic sense of the world. It is deconstructed, as for all intents Ennard is a child who was kept isolated their entire life, with only their fellow animatronics and their abusive creator William Afton for company.
- Gordon Freeman, as depicted in Freeman's Mind, was this the even before his mental breakdown, apparently acting immature the whole time he worked at Black Mesa and doing many childish things like playing racket ball in the anti-mass spectrometer and doing a cannonball into his bathtub. And there's the episode where he discovers a cart that goes around in circles at high speeds. He just spends a full minute sitting there pressing the button that sends it back and forth while screaming "Weeeeeeeeee!". Let it be known that there's an alien invasion the middle of all this.
- In Friday Night Funkin' HD, Boyfriend is 19 years old, yet he still has fun visiting a Mall Santa.
- Downplayed in A Growing Affection with Naruto. Most evident when he's giddy at the prospect of building sand castles despite being 16 and a competant shinobi. Painfully justified since Naruto's painful and lonely past as a result of being the jinchuuriki means that he never got to experience such simple pleasures of childhood. After Ino actually asks him why he's excited, he does remind her of this, causing her to promptly shut up.
- Guys Being Dudes: Arlo is in his 20s and has the personality of an emo teen as well as enjoying making innuendos a bit too much. Spark acknowledges it, deciding that he, being a Transgender man, "couldn't be a preteen boy when he was a preteen, so he's making up for lost time".
- In Half-Life: Full Life Consequences, there's Henry Freeman, who debuts in Hero Beggining, if one assumes that he is an adult based on the Half-Life 2 setting not having children born for 20 years and him having an adult model in the Icton machinima. He lives with his mother, whom he asks basic questions about the Combines, such as why the Combines are here or why they beat up humans. He foolishly antagonizes some Combines, resulting in his mother getting shot. That being said, he's capable of leading an army of humans and killing plenty of Combines despite no apparent combat experience.
- Karmic Epilogue: Kim grew up being coddled by Ms. Bustier, who preferred punishing the victims of bullying rather than the culprits and gave him a free pass to each successive grade despite his academic struggles because she thought it'd be cruel holding him back a year. After she got fired, he dropped out; ten years later, he's a nuisance streamer who specializes in pranking and harassing innocent victims, peddling products like energy drinks that aren't fit for consumption. He refuses to take any responsibility for his own actions, claiming his critics are all "losers" who only keep winning in court because his lawyers suck, instead of recognizing that he's forcing said lawyers to fight impossible battles.
- In The Last Casualties
, Voldemort put Harry's parents into suspended animation in a pocket dimension for thirteen years instead of killing them outright. Lily calls James a manchild in exasperated affection when he gives Snape a "welcome back present" by turning his robe pink.note
- In The Life of the Legendaries, Legendaries Mew and Jirachi are extremely immature and have many, many childish habits.
- Serizawa in the Mob Psycho 100 fanfic Man Child
. He doesn't have the first clue how to take care of himself after breaking free from Claw... or so it seems. It's revealed later on that this has all been an act to get closer to Reigen.
- The Grand Ruler from My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic. He likes to play hopscotch.
- Of The Earthling Saiyan: When there's no fighting to be done, Kakarot is often quite childish, much to the other Saiyans' chagrin. He is often distracted by things children like, childishly insults others, and is considered to have a child's level of intelligence. This is attributed to his Childhood Brain Damage and being raised by monkeys out in the wilderness. At times he can border on being a Psychopathic Manchild, especially in Book 4.
- Pacific: World War II U.S. Navy Shipgirls has Chester, who treats other peoples' weapons like toys and throws them around without second thought, not to mention acting childish even during the middle of combat.
- In Poké Wars, Mew is depicted as being incredibly immature, as evidenced by his words upon meeting Latias.
Mew: Hi. I'm Mew. Wanna play?
- In The Power of the Mind, Remus refers to Sirius as "special" while apologizing for his behavior to a Muggle salesclerk. Harry later asks if there's any truth to that, because Sirius is the biggest manchild he's ever met.
- In Resurrected Memories, Ember is one of these. Despite having been a ghost for 30 years, she has not grown passed her rebellious teenage mentality.
- Beelzebub from Sonic X: Dark Chaos is an immature drug-fueled hedonist that would easily be the poster for a man child if he wasn't also incredibly dangerous.
- In Spellbound (Lilafly), Adrien is a teenager but gets easily excited about kindness, birthday parties, cake, and making friends. Partially because he's been socially isolated from just about everyone except his brother Félix and their friend Chloé, and partially because he's half faerie.
- The Tyrant and the Hero has Black Alice, who wears a "dress that wouldn't have looked out of place on someone ten years younger" and owns a teddy bear. The plot is kicked off by her mother sending her on a journey around the world in order to gain some maturity.
- War of Remnant: A RWBY Anthology: Oobleck can be rather immature for a teacher, when he realized Cinder’s team was Team CMEN was pronounced Caiman, he was about to point out he thought it was pronounced some other way before Port interrupted him.
Magazines
- British lad-mag Loaded was predicated on this trope and serviced the needs of Manchildren who were beginning to feel marginalized and scorned by a society and culture that no longer valued them as much. At its peak in The '90s it had a circulation approaching half a million and spawned many imitators, including American equivalents like GQ and Maxim.
Music
- Ringo Starr's persona in The Beatles. They generally gave him rather sweet, childish songs to sing, like "With a Little Help From My Friends", "Yellow Submarine", and "Octopus's Garden" (which he wrote himself).
- Blink182's "What's My Age Again?"
is about a 23-year old who is about to get laid, but he gets distracted by the TV, so the girl leaves, and he prank calls her mother in retaliation.
- David Bowie's song "Uncle Arthur" whose protagonist runs a shop but demonstrates all the properties of a manchild.
- Devin Millar takes this up not to eleven, but 12. He dresses like a young girl with skirts and bows, has a girlish hairdo, and uses childish vocabulary. His animated characters also dress this way from the girls to even the boys.
- Buckethead, the stage persona of musician Brian Carroll, is generally built around being both childish and a little creepy. It's common for Buckethead to play with toys and trade them with the audience during his live performances. He'll also avoid talking or giving interviews in general, except in a few recorded ones where he uses his scary mask / puppet Herbie to "speak for him".
- Counting Crows' "Round Here"
, is about not having a conception of what being an adult means, "Round here we're never sent to bed early, no one makes us wait. Round here we stay up very, very, very, very late"
- The Idle Race's "I Like My Toys"
, which deals with a thirty-one year old man's desire to play with his childhood toys instead of looking for a job, much to his parents' chagrin.
- In Barry Louis Polisar's "I Don't Wanna go to School", Tommy hides under his covers, whines and pouts to his mother about not wanting to go to school, even though he's the Principal. His mother understandably tells him to grow up.
Only little boys and girls
Ever act like you do - In the movie The Wall, Pink implies this trait; in "Is There Anybody Out There?" he builds a replica of a military barrack, while keeping a battery-powered toy robot among his possessions. Pink is partially based on Syd Barrett, who was called a "man child" or "boy child" due to incorporating childhood themes in his songs even after leaving Pink Floyd.
- Weezer's song "Dreamin'".
- Jonathan Richman poses as one to boast his innocent songs.
- "Manchild" by Eels from their album Beautiful Freak about his sister who committed suicide in a mental institution.
- Joni Mitchell's song "A Strange Boy" from the album Hejira is about a lover who shares some man child traits:
What a strange boy
He still lives with his family
Even the war and the navy
Could not bring him to maturity. - Daniel Amos's "Baby Game" (from ¡Alarma!) is about a female example. It's a satire of Christians who never bother to learn anything about their faith and just keep believing exactly what they did as a child.
Little birds are helpless, way up in the tree
They cry for mother almost constantly
But little birds must one day take their wing
I told her this, she threw her rattle at me - The Lonely Island's "Threw It On The Ground" features the protagonist defiantly throwing a bunch of things on the ground for all sorts of stupid reasons, such as a hot dog because he's not "gonna be a part of your system", his "so-called girlfriend"'s cellphone because his dad's calling and "my dad's not a phone", and a kid's birthday cake to welcome him "to the real world, jackass" while insisting "I'M AN ADULT!"
- Implied to be the case with the subject of the song Stiches by Orgy. At one point the singer angrily says "Unsatisfied? You little girl!"
- "The Archer" by Taylor Swift says, "I never grew up, it's getting so old."
- The music video for "Free Will at Ease"
by Skating Polly portrays this by showing Peyton dating a guy who flops between being portrayed by an adult actor and a literal little boy. He demonstrates both obnoxious man traits, like mansplaining music and groping Peyton's sister Kelli, and childish traits such as playing with his food and being a picky eater.
- The Vocaloid song "The Lost One's Weeping" by Neru has this gem as its Wham Line in its final chorus:
いつになりゃ大人になれますか (Why don't you grow up?)
そもそも大人とは一体全体何ですか (What the hell is growing up?)
Podcasts
- The premise of Podcast: The Ride is the innate humor of "three childless men in their thirties" talking about Theme Parks for hours on end. Jason in particular is targeted for frequent jokes regarding how his height and love of sweets make him seem even more of a grown child.
Professional Wrestling
- George Steele, after his face turn. Fans would instantly sympathize with "the Animal" as he tried to win over Miss Elizabeth, which sparked a legendary feud with Randy Savage. Several vignettes were also filmed featuring Steele, such as at the Detroit Zoo and at an ice cream factory (one which made ice cream bars featuring wafers imprinted with a WWF superstar); still later, he was paired with a hand puppet named "Mine."
- Alexis Laree in Bad Boys Of Wrestling. She mistook birth control for candy.
- Find an archive that houses Abyss's career (at least starting with the Abyss gimmick) and marvel as he gradually transitions from a Wrestling Monster in Puerto Rico and NWA to asking if Jacqueline on his lap means he's no longer a virgin in TNA.
- R-Truth after being betrayed by John Morrison on WWE Raw, rapidly descended into an madness and childlike behavior.
- The Rock's criticism of John Cena basically boiled down to The Rock seeing Cena as a giant child. Cena had a counter argument, though it didn't endear him anymore.
- Wrestlers who frequently throw tantrums when things don't go their way, such as Chris Jericho when he's a heel, Alicia Fox or Ken Anderson.
Radio
- Cabin Pressure gives us Arthur Shappey, the relentlessly cheerful and optimistic steward of the aeroplane who is gullible to the point of idiocy, gets ridiculously excited over Christmas, still lives with his mother, genuinely thinks it's possible for something to be bigger than the box it's in, has discovered the secret to true happiness, and thinks everything and everyone is utterly brilliant. And who once killed a man.
Theatre
- Willy Wonka in the 2013 musical version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a downplayed version. He has a distinctly adult air of authority and elegance, but at the same time has childlike wonder, enthusiasm, impatience, creativity, and — to a lesser extent — innocence, rather Ambiguous Innocence at that.
- In Eurydice, the lord of the underworld is childish and petulant, best shown when he rides in on a tricycle in his failed attempt to seduce Eurydice, eventually determining she'd like him more if he were taller.
- Laura in ''The Glass Menagerie" is a female example. Due to crippling insecurities and social phobias, she cannot function at all in the real world at all, relying instead on her overbearing mother and put-upon younger brother Tom. Her one attempt to find a job (as typist) fails when she has a nervous breakdown and throws up on the instructor, and so she spends her days either wandering around the zoo or hiding in her room among her collection of glass figurines.
- Batman loves the circus in Holy Musical B@man!:
Alfred: You can't stay in your pillow fort and cry forever.
- The Green Role from the Reduced Shakespeare Company's Ragtag Bunch of Misfits. Being the Man Child of the group is his defining characteristic.
- The clown in Cirque du Soleil's Saltimbanco, Eddie, is quite childlike as he pulls pranks on others and engages an audience member in a pantomimed Wild West shootout. In fact, he might actually be the adult form of the Child seen early on, if a transitional scene is anything to go by.
- Peter Pan is one in Shrek: The Musical:
Peter: Maybe if we all close our eyes and clap really hard!
Pinocchio: Oh, grow up!
Peter: I won't grow up!
Pinocchio: You're thirty-four and need a shave! - Tobias Ragg from Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street can be played several ways, and this is one of them. Bonus points if he is still childish because of insanity and/or mental handicap, both common portrayals. The Movie made him an actual pre-pubescent boy, a method that is much harder to pull off on-stage, mostly because labor laws require underage performers to be doubled.
- The Complete History Of America Abridged depicts Ronald Reagan as an irresponsible overgrown lap-boy with an undersized puppet body who calls Nancy "Mommy."
Visual Novels
- CLANNAD:
- Sanae Furukawa, the mother of Nagisa. She is around 40 years old, yet she is often quite emotional and childlike. This doesn't make her any less adorable, though.
- Fuuko Ibuko. As an adult in ~After Story~, she still acts rather childish and is more willing to play with children than interact with adults. Justified since she had been in a coma for a number of years, so she wouldn't have aged much mentally.
- Nagisa herself is a mild example. Even in her 20s, she's still rather sensitive, playful, and eccentric. Much like her mom, this makes her all the more cute and lovable.
- Miu Iruma from Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony has a penchant for making sex jokes, calling her classmates virgins while giving juvenile nicknames, and generally saying whatever comes to mind without filtering herself, not that she seems to realise that she is acting in terrible taste. In addition to her childish behaviour, her report card shows that she likes watching TV shows for kids.
- Kyousuke from Little Busters! is a benevolent, more subtle example: because he's so obsessed with finding fun things to do, tends to be overdramatic and switch between extreme emotions, and doesn't always possess the greatest amounts of common sense (though that's not unusual in this game) he's commonly compared with a child.
- Minotaur Hotel: Storm tends to be pretty naive about most things, and would end up sounding like a child if it wasn't for the fact that he's a Minotaur with a deep voice at the age of 21. This is because he had a sheltered life, having neglectful parents, and a hostile environment in which no one approached him friendly. This is the reason why P is so hesitant on starting a relationship with him even though he's attracted to him, because he sees it as an Unequal Pairing.
- Nasuverse:
- Fate/stay night: Saber is, we are told, not actually fifteen; after receiving her sword and becoming King Arthur, she didn't age over the next ten years, and she's really in her twenties. Not only does nobody mention how strange it is for her to have a romance with the seventeen year old main character, but she's as naive emotionally as a real fifteen year old, which is Hand Waved by claiming that as the king she had no personal life, or more specifically, she spent so much time keeping her emotions bottled away for the greater good that being put into a situation where she actually uses them leaves her vulnerable, not helped by the fact that her romance with the main character is one of the first times she legitimately felt romantic love for somebody else.
- At least Saber is reasonably mature, even if she's inexperienced and her wish is to childishly undo her mistakes. In Fate/Apocrypha we meet Mordred (Saber's child), who is not only actually about ten years old, but immature even for that age. She rarely listens when other people speak, spends a significant amount of time getting in fights with cats, and caused a rebellion against her father because she knew being king was killing Saber. The entire myth of King Arthur would have gone very differently if she had any ability to have a mature conversation with her father.
- Ciel from Tsukihime has a similar situation to Saber's going on, but in that case it's actually lampshaded in Kagetsu Tohya.
- Arcueid is a textbook example after she opens up with Shiki.
Web Animation
- Bee and Puppycat: Bee is in her twenties, though can't hold a job, is always messy, and acts immature.
- The titular character of the Childish Dad series is this to a T. He enjoys watching kids' shows, playing with toys and other typical child pursuits. Moreover, he behaves like a young child, throwing tantrums and bursting into tears when things don't go his way, refusing to take in adult responsibilities like getting a job and refusing to take responsibilities for his actions, usually blaming others. His own children are more mature than he is.
- Chronicle of the Annoying Quest: Guy and Ellers both. Although Guy is more cynical while Ellers is a Casanova Wannabe, they both have extensive arguments about Star Trek, Doctor Who and just about anything associated with geekiness, never really taking their quest all that seriously. James, unlike his brother Eric, is naive to the point of stupidity. Goliath frequently asks questions any adult should know the answer to, and exasperates his wife constantly with his immaturity (oh, and he's also responsible for crashing the Exodar). Finally, Stephi is a typical Dumb Blonde Valley Girl who thinks Dirim is her boyfriend. Basically a quarter of the series' cast fits this trope in some way.
- The Doctor (10th incarnation) in Episode 5 of Ducktalez. When Dewey asks for his advice for the time travel situation, he messes around with his Sonic Screwdriver instead. During the stinger, he pretends his TARDIS is an automobile. He also shows up during the bowling montage in Episode 7 and zaps Gizmoduck with his Sonic Screwdriver.
- DSBT InsaniT: Kayla is a female example. She frequently pouts or use words like 'meanie' when she doesn't like something or someone.
- Alex is prone to throwing hissy-fits when things aren't going his (often twisted) way.
- Epithet Erased:
- Giovanni is a positive example. He's obsessed with being a "villain", often acts less mature than twelve-year-old Molly, sleeps in a race car bed and, per Word of God, retains a keen interest in the kind of things that would be marketed to boys in the '90s such as goo and spikes. On the other hand, his imaginative nature is quite helpful in coming up with creative uses for his epithet, he's In Touch with His Feminine Side as well as his childish side, and for all his faults, he becomes intensely serious when his minions need him to be.
- Molly's father Martin is a purely negative example. He's shown to be self-absorbed, irresponsible and thoughtlessly selfish, bumbling through the world without any concern for the consequences of his actions. When supervising a field trip for Molly's class, he spends most of it playing a very loud game on Molly's phone (which is made even worse by Molly's misophonia), then considers it to be "punching his parent card" and thus assigns Molly the job of keeping the shop open until late, for the third day running. Molly's constant exhaustion has been considerably worsened because Martin can't be trusted to manage the finances or do the taxes. Supposedly, he was better about it while his very responsible wife was alive, with the two balancing each other out, but following her death, he's more or less reverted to a second childhood.
- Jimbob in GEOWeasel is an adult man who is interested in such things as Nick Jr., trick-or-treating and waiting for Santa Claus.
- Gavis Bettel from hololive's Holostars English branch very much qualifies. He debuted at 27 years old, but he's an extremely Picky Eater who mostly lives off of Brisk and junk food and has mentioned eating ice cream in bed, yells and swears a lot, and is prone to throwing comically overdramatic tantrums when things don't go his way. His nature as this trope is especially apparent when his older twin brother, Bettel 2, is on stream with him, with Bettel 2 being the more responsible and levelheaded of the two by far.
- Captain Sam Sweetmilk from Starship Goldfish
, justified as a side-effect of erasing his memory, Vela is this too to a lesser extent, possibly due to being alone on a space station for who knows how long with only an AI for company.
- Story Time Animated: Sandra's mom
behaves childishly for her age to the point where she even kissed and talked to a teddy bear.
- This video
has an interesting and endearing case of one. To summarize, the main character is hired by a billionaire tech genius who's only 16-years-old. Despite his high intelligence and wealth, he's ridiculously naive and unworldly; among other things, he only hired the main character because he found her funny, doesn't know how much any thing costs or how people who aren't wealthy live, and doesn't even know how to do little things like tie his shoes. Worst of all, he's dating a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing who doesn't really care about him and takes advantage of his naivete to get money and expensive gifts. Later, the MC learns that he has no friends and that he had to trick her into coming to his birthday party, because his parents forgot about it and his so-called girlfriend decided to go to Disney World instead, while lying that her grandmother was in the hospital. All of this prompts her to take him under her wing and teach him about the world, which allows him to actually mature. He soon dumps his Gold Digger girlfriend and rewards the MC by funding her education and eventually making her his partner in the company.
- The main boys of Eddsworld are a group of grown men who act like rowdy teenagers.
- McBusters depicts Mayor McCheese as rather childlike, with his first notable scene having him wolf down a Happy Meal while complaining that he got a girl toy with it. In addition, his response to Mac Tonight complaining about him cutting one is to giggle and say he "made a poot-poot".
Websites
Web Videos
- Abuela: Laritza is in her twenties, but acts like a child and has no life skills. When she and her younger cousin Michi are home alone, Michi is the one doing the babysitting because Laritza doesn't even know how to put a frozen pizza in the oven.
- The CollegeHumor Original "Adulthood vs. Childhood
" has Adulthood and Childhood facing off in a fighting game, only to be interrupted by a third contender: the MANCHILD.
- Also, Amir.
- Dad 's behavior and dialogue is very simplistic and toddler-like.
- Zack in Echo Chamber, though it's partially explained by his Freudian Excuse.
- Fictosophy: Tom, in "Jedi Coworker," goes to the office wearing Jedi robes.
Steve: Tom should be ashamed of himself for acting like such a child!
- Henry VIII as portrayed by BRIAN BLESSED!!!!! in Henry 8.0. For example...
- In the JesuOtaku/Nostalgia Critic crossover review of Digimon: The Movie, the latter repeatedly called the former a "woman child" when they traded insults. The joke being he has no room to talk.
- Sag from Movie Rehab got mature critical thoughts but he still acts like a kid at heart.
- Sparadrap in Noob, to the extent of making him more of The Cutie than a female character that was his Distaff Counterpart before her characterization diverged but didn't completely split off. His top priority in a fantasy MMORPG is collecting non-combat pets, his Trademark Favorite Food is a dessert home-made by his grandmother and he tries to make friends with every single player he meets despite the game having a faction system. This is more than enough for both his guildmates and his younger brother to consider they need to keep an eye on him... or in the case of the Manipulative Bastard among his guildmates, pull some of her easiest scams ever. He starts maturing after an enemy player decides that it would be fun to destroy the bag containing his pets in front of him.
- The Nostalgia Chick's best friend, Nella, is repeatedly referred to (by herself and others) as a "wo-Manchild."
- Talking Classics star Keith Apicary is a big one. He apparently still lives with his family, has No Social Skills, isn't too smart, a klutz, and spends his days playing and singing about video games.
Other
- The Tendies Stories from 4chan parodies this trope, consisting of anecdotes that revolve around an autistic man/adolescent who lives with his parents and constantly terrorizes them by demanding praise and food items such as chicken tenders ("tendies"). Part of the meme also emphasizes the character's parents attempting to control his behavior with a childlike reward/punishment system known as "good boy points."
Major Plays With His Toys
John Major fantasises about getting back at his Cabinet with his toys.