Evil laughter: Difference between revisions

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*[[Joseph Gari]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']] (To counter Willy's evil laugh/heart attack)
*[[Joseph Gari]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']] (To counter Willy's evil laugh/heart attack)
*[[Carlos Gonzalez]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Carlos Gonzalez]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Daniel dixon]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Daniel Dixon]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Rhett Gosset]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Rhett Gosset]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Ben calle]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Ben Calle]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Zelda V]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Zelda V]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Gerald Benson]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]
*[[Gerald Benson]] from the emmy nominated famous comedy [['My Willy and Me']]

Revision as of 01:20, 22 September 2006

An evil laugh is a stock megalomaniacal laugh by a villain in fiction. In comic books, where supervillains utter such laughs, it is variously rendered as mwahahahaha, muhuhahaha, mwahahaha, and mwa ha ha or BooWHAHAHA!. (Compare Ho ho ho.) These words are also commonly used on internet Blogs, BBSes, and games. There, they are generally used when some form of victory is attained, or to indicate superiority over someone else. The words are often used as either interjections or nouns.

The evil laugh has been used for thousands of years to convey a villans feeling of significance. For men it starts off as a low rumbling, in the back of the throat, slowly accending to a loud cackle. For women, on the other hand, it begins as a hoarse scratchy sound, and then rises to a maniacal laugh- however, this could work either way.

The Evil Overlord List notes that evil laughter often distracts the villain from important details that the hero can use to escape or prevail.

Popular culture

Characters that use an evil laugh include:

Other notable occurrences of the evil laugh in popular culture include:

Professional wrestler Ted DiBiase was well known for an evil laugh whenever he performed as the Million Dollar Man during his run in the WWF. Although he doesn't usually laugh, The Undertaker does give a spine-chilling laugh once in while at the end of a promo, especially to his brother Kane. Also, The Boogeyman is known to use an evil laugh to coincide with his gimmick.

The "evil laugh" has become an almost-total cliché in recent pop culture and is now almost only used in a comedy light or satire. For example, Gary Larson drew a Far Side cartoon which portrayed a lecture hall full of science students aspiring to be mad scientists. The mad science curriculum, asserts Larson, requires all students to take "one semester of maniacal laughter".

See also

External links