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DreamWorks Face

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DreamWorks Face (trope)
Not just for DreamWorks, though.note 

"Uhh... There are talking animals. And they do things animals don't normally do. And they all make this face." (holds up picture of guy smirking)
DreamWorks representative, short webcomic

You know that face. The clever, asymmetrical smirk. The similarly crooked eyebrows. The intense stare-down that comes at you from the promotional movie posters - especially for CG family films. It's the expression that tells you the hero is going to be up to no good, and is much cooler than any of those classic, mainstream, conformist wimps those other studios produce. The character probably won't make that face in the movie, but it doesn't matter - on the poster the face says "Go see our movie, kids, or you're not cool!" It's usually a way to get audiences to see a particular film over another, and promises a very different tone from what we are used to. It's the facial expression form of hip, sassy, snarky dialogue.

This trope pertains to faces seen outside of the body of the film or TV show and only in marketing material... in posters, billboards, ads, etc. Otherwise, it would be a No Fourth Wall or an Aside Glance.

Films produce advertising and posters as various stages of production and all of these are meant to be teasers. The stuff that comes first is normally dominated by faces staring at you because that's the only thing finalized at that point. So the DreamWorks Face is one of numerous stock attractive faces. For instance, you may have also seen the "everyone is smiling, bright eyes and maybe waving at you".

See also Mascot with Attitude, American Kirby Is Hardcore, Sean Connery Is About to Shoot You.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Advertising 
  • The red M&M has this expression permanently etched onto his face in advertisements, reflecting his sarcastic personality.
  • Isaiah Mustafa as The Man Your Man Could Smell Like in the Old Spice commercials, especially when he's on a horse.

    Anime & Manga 

    Asian Animation 
  • Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf: One of the official pieces of artwork for Sparky from the earlier seasons shows him with the smirk and the crooked eyebrows that are characteristic of the DreamWorks Face.

    Comic Books 
  • The cover and internal title page of Death: At Death's Door depicts Death of the Endless smiling with a raised eyebrow.
  • Superboy/Kon-El has a habit of grinning or smirking while raising an eyebrow at friend or foe alike when making sarcastic quips. He also makes such an expression to the viewer on a couple of covers.
  • This expression has become an iconic image of The Tick.

    Fan Works 

    Films — Animation 

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 
  • In Animator Nancy Beiman's "Animated Performance" book, this expression is briefly mentioned as an example of a cliche expression that should be avoided. It also sets up a gag where a guy making this expression gets hit with a pie in the face to make him don a more specific expression.
  • Artwork depicting the Discworld's Machiavellian tyrant Lord Vetinari almost invariably features the steepled fingers, the quizzical expression - and the single raised eyebrow.
  • Harry Potter seems to be stuck doing it for seven years on the cover of the german books.
  • Done on the cover of the Ally Carter book Heist Society.

    Live-Action TV 

    Podcasts 
  • The main cover art for Distractible has the show's hosts, Mark, Wade, and Bob making this expression.

    Theme Parks 

    Video Games 

    Webcomics 

    Web Original 

    Western Animation 
  • The promotional images for Archer all feature the titular character making this face whilst all the other characters make neutral or disgruntled facial expressions. Might be deliberately invoked, as Archer is a textbook narcissist and everyone around him is perpetually frustrated by his personality.
  • Gabby's Dollhouse: that's Cat Rat's default facial expression.
  • Lampshaded in the season 3 premiere episode of of Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh where, among the Long List of seemingly arbitrary rules the Boov have, making that face is expressly forbidden.
  • In Kung Fu Panda: The Dragon Knight, Po is shown with this expression in his wanted posters. He protests it looks nothing like him.
  • This trope is Older Than They Think. The show logo in the opening for early 90s cartoon Little Dracula featured the protagonist's face making this expression.
  • Littlest Pet Shop guest character Harold Winston of "In the Loop" has his eyebrows stuck in this position about 90% of the time.
  • Penn Zero makes this face nearly every time he's seen smiling.
  • The term is directly used in a storyboard for the Regular Show episode "Cruisin'".
    Rigby: (Struggling to talk and hold the expression) Dude, this isn't going to work, no human ever makes this face.
  • Explicitly avoided in John Kricfalusi's cartoons—he hates this expression so much that he forbids any of his artists from ever drawing it—and that includes any expression that even remotely resembles it, including non-cocky smirks or eyebrows raised out of curiosity. The Ren & Stimpy Show does make use of the Fascinating Eyebrow, though, usually when Ren is feeling smug or slightly annoyed.

    Other 
  • Football manager Carlo Ancelotti, of Milan, Juventus, Chelsea and Real Madrid's fame, famously has no control over his left eyebrow, which makes him often show a very similar expression.
    • On the other side of the ocean with the other football, Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Liam Coen's infamous Duval chant inadvertently led to his own Dreamworks Face.
  • The Crazy Frog is doing it in this image.
  • Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson did it so much in his WWE days that his logos made the expression. Although normally he didn't do the half-grin, just the eyebrow.
    • On the poster for the intercontinental title match of WWE Extreme Rules 2016, Miz and Cesaro do it side by side.
  • Jeopardy! contestant Colby Burnett seems to have one.
  • Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau often makes this face.
  • Ever-so-subtly used by Montréal mayoral candidate Mélanie Joly in her promotional images during the 2013 municipal election.


Alternative Title(s): Smarm Brow

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