tvtropes.org

Sinister Stingrays - TV Tropes

  • ️Sun Jan 23 2022

Sinister Stingrays (trope)

"We call him Flesh-Eater. He's the biggest, meanest manta anyone's ever seen! Most mantas are gentle creatures, but this one's a real bone-grinder!"

Sharks are usually the go-to creatures when writers want to include a threatening sea animal in their stories. Sometimes, however, writers can get tired of them and might want another, more unique underwater threat. The creatures commonly known as rays (and scientifically known as Batoidea), which include both the stingrays and the manta rays, are a popular choice. While not as outwardly dangerous as sharks (to which they are distantly related), their bizarre appearance has captured the imagination of many storytellers.

It's easy to see why these fish are often portrayed as creepy and menacing. Their winglike fins call to mind a black cloak and make them look like the underwater version of a bat. As such, they tick a lot of the boxes that traditionally mark animals as "scary". Even when they aren't actually shown as threatening, stingrays and manta rays are popular Animal Motifs for underwater-themed villains, likely because of their aforementioned resemblance to a Black Cloak or Ominous Opera Cape. Doesn't help stingrays have venomous spines, also a hallmark of scariness in pop culture, and bury themselves in the seafloor to leave only their eyes and tail visible. Strangely, electric rays rarely show up in pop culture, despite being a worthy alternative to electric eels in the Shock and Awe department.

It's also fairly common for manta rays and related species in particular to be portrayed as not simply creepy, but as downright demonic. The funnels on either side of their mouths recall the horns of the Devil, and indeed an alternative name for them is "devil ray". This, combined with the fact that they are the largest of all rays and are often coloured black, has led to many depictions of them as demons.

Compare both Threatening Shark for their close cousins and Bat Out of Hell for a flying animal with many of the same connotations. Contrast Mellow Mantas.


Examples:

open/close all folders 

Anime & Manga 

  • One Piece: An early antagonist in the series is Kuroobi, a martial artist ray-fishman, who serves as a member of the Arlong Pirates who took over Nami's home village, terrorizing and extorting the villagers.
  • The☆Ultraman has a Monster of the Week called Zanba, an alien manta ray monster with powerful Razor Wings which it uses to destroy planes and buildings, and proves to be one of Ultraman Joneus' tougher opponents due to its Lightning Bruiser abilities.

Comic Books 

  • Aquaman: The villain and modern-day pirate Black Manta wears a high-tech manta-themed suit. He even gets turned into a hybrid of a manta by fellow villain Neron for a bit in Underworld Unleashed.

Films — Animation 

Films — Live-Action 

  • Like his comic book counterpart, Black Manta in Aquaman has a menacing appearance and is one of the key antagonists Arthur has to fight, complete with a black suit and manta-shaped mask.
  • Captain Nemo and the Underwater City has a once-peaceful, if abnormally large, stingray under the seas, which mutates into kaiju proportions after being exposed to radiation leakage from an underwater nuclear power plant.
  • In the second Detective Dee movie, Rise of the Sea Dragon which is set on the oceans, Dee and his crew are assaulted by a giant stingray monster that destroys several ships and devours a few of his crew. Dee eventually drives the monster away via an arrow through the eye.
  • The 1930 film The Sea Bat has an aggressive manta ray that menaces Mexican sponge divers.

Folklore 

  • Manta rays were regularly portrayed as evil in Polynesian mythology. Legends describe them using their cloak-like bodies to drown pearl divers or even kidnap children.
  • The Kongamato is a monster from Congolese folklore whose name translates to "one who overturns boats". Because it is described as having a long tail and bat-like "wings", it is often interpreted by cryptozoologists as a pterosaur, but it is most likely an aggressive freshwater stingray.
  • El Cuero ("the leathery one"), from Patagonia, is another legendary monster believed to be based on a stingray, being a crawling cowhide that floats on bodies of water and ensnares anything that goes in it.

Live-Action TV 

  • Denji Sentai Megaranger: The very first Monster of the Week is a humanoid stingray called Stingray Nezire.
  • Doctor Who: The Monster of the Week in "Planet of the Dead" is a gigantic swarm of part-metal, part-organic alien Giant Flyers which look like truly demonic stingrays. They travel from world to world, devouring anything that moves and turning said worlds into lifeless deserts.
  • River Monsters: Jeremy's tackled two giant species of stingray which cause attacks with their barbed tails: the Giant freshwater stingray of southeast Asia in one episode and the Short-tailed river stingray of Argentina in the other. Though like most other animals on the show, Jeremy does treat the animals with respect and dignity and the show does the same, showing them as animals living their lives rather than monsters. The Giant Freshwater episode even has the one Jeremy catches give birth.
  • Ultra Q has a Monster of the Week named Bostang, a stingray kaiju that terrorizes the seas, destroying ships and causing widespread destruction. It is finally taken down after a lengthy sea battle by the combined forces of the Japanese air force and navy.

Literature 

  • In Scott O’Dell’s novel, The Black Pearl, legend has it that whoever removes the Pearl of Heaven from the sea is cursed to be stalked by the Manta Diablo, a giant demonic manta ray.
  • Circe: Exaggerated with Madeleine Miller's addition to Greek mythology in the Animalistic Abomination Trygonnote . Vastly stronger and older than any God or Titan in the story with a poison barb tail that would be instant death and unending lifelong pain to mortal and immortal respectively. The only reason he hasn't tried to rule is that he doesn't care for anything outside his abyssal ocean home. He turns out to be a nice reasonable creature who is one of the only characters to help Circe purely out of the goodness of his heart and respect for her courage and willpower.

Tabletop Games 

  • Deadlands has Devil Rays; a mutant species of carnivorous manta ray created by the demonic influence of the Reckoning. Imbued with the ability to leap out of the water and glide for short distances like a flying fish, they attack unwary sailors by attempting to tackle them overboard and into the water, where they can be Eaten Alive.
  • Dungeons & Dragons:
    • The Ixitxachitl are a race of monstrous, vampiric stingrays or manta rays that serve Demogorgon, the Prince of Demons. Rather than being mere vicious animals, they are sentient and actively malicious and even practice slavery.
    • The lurker above is a Living Gasbag that looks like a large (20-foot wingspread) manta ray. It hovers near the ceiling of caves and falls onto its victims. It does 1-6 Hit Points of constriction damage per combat round and will smother opponents to death within 2-5 combat rounds unless they can escape.
    • The mantari is a flying monster that bears a strong resemblance to a manta ray and has an 85% chance to attack other creatures. Its long tail has a stinger that can do significant damage each time it hits and does quadruple damage each time it hits an opponent in successive rounds of combat.
    • Wererays, a kind of therianthrope with the ability to change from a humanoid into a giant predatory stingray or a humanoid stingray, are amongst the many minor werebeasts of D&D. They're largely associated with Ravenloft.
  • Warhammer has Screamers of Tzeentch, a species of airborne daemon that resembles a brightly-colored stingray festooned in Spikes of Villainy.

Toys 

  • LEGO did this several times.
    • The Atlantis line includes villainous Manta Warriors.
    • Alpha Team has a "Mutant Ray" that is controlled by the villain Evil Ogel.
    • The Stingray faction of Aquazone are villainous undersea pirates who use rays as Animal Motifs.
    • Mantax from BIONICLE, one of the six Barraki warlords, resembles a humanoid manta ray as a result of being mutated by the corrupting waters of The Pit. He is noted for his secretive nature and great distrust for the other Barraki (because he knows that one of them betrayed the rest). Like real rays, he also has a tendency to hide in the seabed to ambush his enemies and has venomous spines (albeit on his head rather than his tail).

Video Games 

  • Bayonetta 2: Insidious is one of the demons of Inferno, and takes the appearance of a gigantic manta ray, complete with skull markings on its back and eyes on its wings. Insidious swallows Bayonetta and Loki alive at one point, forcing them to battle it from within, and they have to use extremely powerful magic weaponry to kill it.
  • Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The levels set on Planet Flamar has Buzz pursuing Gravitina (and later, Warp) through a gorge infested by all kinds of alien monsters, the most common being a gliding airborne manta ray-esque enemy that takes potshots gnawing away Buzz's health.
  • Darius: Death Wings is a gigantic Animal Mecha based on a manta ray.
  • Demon's Souls: In the Shrine of Storms stage, the sky is populated by manta ray-esque Storm Beasts, which glide through the air and fire crystal barbs at players. The final boss of the area is the Storm King, the massive progenitor of these monsters that is large enough to have easily a dozen Storm Beasts clinging to its back and underside.
  • Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest: Flotsam is a stingray who serves as an enemy in the game's underwater levels. He swims back and forth, harming Dixie and Diddy if the Kongs swim into him, but he can be destroyed by Enguarde the Swordfish.
  • Ecco the Dolphin: In Defender of the Future stingrays will deliver a painful shock if Ecco bumps into them, although they mostly just stay on the sea floor and so they're not hard to avoid. One single overgrown stingray will actively chase Ecco down if he manages to disturb it, but it moves slowly and will go back to its resting place if it manages to shock Ecco.
  • EcoQuest has Flesh-Eater the manta, who was mutated by toxic waste and is the main antagonist of the game. However, it's said that he's not in his right mind and once the pollution is cleaned up he may return to being gentle.
  • The Elder Scrolls mobile spinoff game Shadowkey has packs of floating stingrays (Cavern Stingers, Shadowrays, and Snowrays) among the enemies you can encounter in the glacial caverns of High Rock.
  • Mega Man X4: One of the Repliforce members is the Reploid Jet Stingray. While most of the Maverick bosses are merely told to be occupying a location, he is stated to have destroyed an entire city during the military coup and is now hiding in the ocean.
  • The underwater area of Monster Eye has fast-moving manta rays as enemies which swoops at the players every now and then.
  • Mystic Riders throws schools of stingrays as enemies in underwater levels.
  • In Operation Neptune, stingrays frequently appear and have the ability to shoot barbs at the sub, which can damage it.
  • The last stage of the mecha-themed FPS Shadow Master has a section containing three flying stingray-like robot enemies. They somehow don't appear anywhere else in the game.
  • Shin Megami Tensei has Forneus, which is designed to resemble a manta ray. Word of God says that this is because manta rays on occasion are referred to as "devil fish".
  • In Shovel Knight, the Iron Whale level features manta ray enemies that swim back and forth swiftly, dealing Collision Damage.
  • In Stinkoman 20X6, the enemies encountered in level 9 include giant manta rays that shoot Slow Laser beams from cannons mounted on their wings.
  • Super Mario Sunshine: Phantamanta is a mysterious being that resembles the silhouette of a giant manta ray. It spreads terror on Sirena Beach by appearing out of nowhere and covering the area with electric goop.
  • In Warframe, the deserts of terraformed Mars are home to desert skates, which crawl right under the surface ready to attack any intruder.

Web Original 

Western Animation 

  • Beast Wars had Depth Charge, a badass Maximal security officer who heads for prehistoric Earth in pursuit of the serial killer Predacon Rampage and takes on a manta ray form when he gets to Earth. While he's still heroic enough to pull the occasional I Was Just Passing Through, he's generally an unlikable ass who couldn't care less about his fellow Maximals and is so hyperfocused on killing Rampage that he hinders his allies as often as he helps them. Optimus, who knew him before Rampage slaughtered all his friends and family, points out he was once a very kind and noble machine before becoming the broken, hollow, revenge-obsessed shell he is now.
  • Justice League: During the final season, a Black Manta Expy known as Devil Ray is included among the ranks of the Legion of Doom (a result of Aquaman and his characters being tied up in a series that never get off the ground). A cold and ruthless villain, his arsenal includes poisoned barbs, and he freely admits to having killed many people.
  • The most recurring villain in The Little Mermaid (1992) is The Evil Manta, a demonic manta ray merman.
  • Rainbow Fish: Stingo the stingray is one of the local bullies along with his buddy Chomper the shark. Though their bullying is mostly restricted to teasing.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants has Man Ray as a recurring villain... though he's mostly an ineffective if not harmless one, especially in later seasons.
  • Lord Stingray from Superjail! is both egotistical and bad-tempered and has an "evil stingray" motif.
  • Mantaman in Street Sharks is a former human transformed by injecting himself with a mutagenic cocktail loaded with a mixture of manta ray and alien DNA. He looks like a terrifying monster, like any of the other genetically engineered creatures of the series, and has a number of monstrous powers, including flight, Super-Strength and the ability to survive in the vacuum of space. However, he's a good guy who heroically sacrificed his humanity to gain the power to stop an alien monster that was wreaking havoc on a research space station. He does have a stint of being Brainwashed and Crazy in one of his subsequent appearances, though.