It’s safe to assume that if you’re here on this site you’re a huge fan of something. Maybe it’s Brandon Sanderson’s writing, or V.E. Schwab’s. Maybe it’s DC Comics, or Marvel’s Netflix shows. Maybe it’s all things Star Wars, or maybe it’s the sci-fi genre as a whole. Fandoms can be enriching, they can be found families, they can be outlets of boundless creativity. And one of of our very favorite things in modern pop culture is that after many years of fans being derided for being too nerdy or even creepy, many films and TV shows have started including characters that are themselves fans, to create a meta Greek chorus.
Trooper Wagner—Knives Out

Knives Out is a miraculous film for many reasons, but chief among them is Trooper Wagner, the junior officer of the team investigating mystery author Harlan Thrombey’s suicide/possible murder. Rather than writing yet another good cop/bad cop or by the books/rogue cop dynamic, Rian Johnson gives us Detective Lieutenant Elliott, laconic and deadpan in the face of the Thrombey family’s privileged cluelessness, paired with with Trooper Wagner, a starstruck fan of both Thrombey’s mystery novels and Mr. Benoit Blanc, Gentleman Detective. Trooper Wagner doesn’t even try to investigate the crime—he’s much too excited to just sit back and watch it unfold around him, like his very own murder mystery dinner party.
Henchpeople 21 & 24—The Venture Bros.

These two are the inspiration for this list. Someday there will be a giant study made of The Venture Bros and all the things it had to stay about fandom, nerdculture, and the state of the world in the beginning of the 21st century. For now, looking at these two hapless henchpeople will suffice. They collect action figures, geek out about their supervillain boss and his various friends and foes, and comment on the action the same way any of us would if we were suddenly dropped into the show. They are indestructible comic relief in a very funny series about super scientists–until they’re not, and the show isn’t really so funny or cute anymore. Later, 21 isn’t so much a henchperson as he is a partner and amateur therapist to his ostensible boss, the supervillain The Monarch. Does 21’s gradual disillusionment with the world of heroes and villains match up pretty well with the increasing toxicity and mean-spiritedness of the nerdier corners of the internet?
Edna “E” Mode—The Incredibles

Syndrome and Edna Mode are two sides of a coin: both fans who were born without superpowers, one dedicated his considerable intellect to becoming a science villain, with a master plan of eradicating superheroes entirely. Instead of just…becoming a hero like he said he wanted? The other dedicates her considerable intellect to becoming the greatest fictional character of all time. And also to designing super suits that were both fashionable and practical. Edna throws herself into the history and lore of the supers, studying their various powers, their idiosyncrasies, their needs, and then working with them to improve their natural abilities with, once again, science. And some fashion, dahling.
Chas Kramer—Constantine

In the Hellblazer comics, Chas Chandler is John Constantine’s best friend from adolescence, his band’s roadie, and often acts as a partner-in-exorcism. In the 2005 adaptation, Constantine, the character is transformed into a kid in his late teens or early twenties. He is John’s driver, but he wants to be John’s apprentice. It’s never explained how they met, or why John started allowing this much-younger Chas to drive him around. For the first two-thirds of the film, his purpose seems to be embarrassing himself by trying to act cooler than he is, and, literally, sitting alone in his car practicing badass quips. He seems to be much more a fan of John’s than a student. Then in the film’s final act, he suddenly proves that he’s been studying—but it’s too little too late to elevate him fully from admirer to colleague.
Lowery Cruthers—Jurassic World

Jurassic World was something of a mixed bag. The references to the early films were fun, and the dinosaur petting zoo was incredible, but Owen and Claire weren’t quite as instantly lovable as Drs. Grant and Sattler, the pair of hapless abandoned children were nowhere near as winning as Lexi and Tim, and as if that wasn’t enough, Ian Malcolm was nowhere to be found. However, the movie’s one true home run? Jakes Johnson’s dino-loving Lowery Cruthers. First of all, his competent techie character was a nice callback to the first two Jurassic films, which were some of the most nerd-positive movies of the 90s (a heroic mathematician? A tween girl hacker? Ellie Sattler?? Sarah Harding???) and a nice way to offset the legacy of Dennis Nedry. He could have been a regular nerd and still helped save the day—instead he’s a giant, gleeful fan of Jurassic Park itself. He has little dino toys on his desk, he buys vintage JP merch on eBay, and he genuinely loves the animals in his charge. He’s a jolt of joy in a movie that often seemed market-tested unto death.
Scott Lang—Captain America: Civil War

It’s safe to assume that the Avengers run into superfans all the time. One of the best things about the sheer size of the MCU and its television siblings is that it allows for a very lived-in universe. We know from Agent Carter that Captain America was the star of a popular radio serial. We know that Peter Parker’s classmate Liz Allan drew cartoons of the Avengers when she was little, right after the Battle of New York, and that a decade later she and her friends play “F, Marry, Kill” to determine the heroes merits in a more adult way. Phil Coulson’s crush on Cap was played first for comedy before being used as a guilt tactic by Nick Fury, and in Iron Man 3 we meet Gary, who is so into Tony Stark’s whole deal that he got a tattoo of Tony, and shaped his facial hair to match his hero’s. But for me the best fan moment was Scott Lang hopping around like a retriever puppy upon meeting Cap. This isn’t Coulson inheriting his fandom from his dad and quietly collecting baseball cards, or Gary taking his admiration for Tony into slightly uncomfortable places, this is sheer, unbridled giddiness at meeting a hero—plus a loving wink to the fact that Scott seems a little out of place in the epic Avengers roster.
Zero—John Wick: Parabellum

Zero is a chef who wields the blade at a walk-up hole-in-the-wall sushi counter. When The Adjudicator hires him to take out John Wick it seems for a moment that he’s going to be a very serious character, and that we’re about to witness Jiro Dreams of Murder. (Which, could we have that anyway, please?) But then! The film veers into a quirkier direction when Zero lovingly slices some pieces of fish and slides them over to a waiting cat. In terms of the Wickverse, his respectful treatment of an animal marks him as a decent guy, even if he is Wick’s adversary. The film pushes this in an even more delightful way when it turns out that Zero is a John Wick superfan. As serious as he is during their battles, once the two of them are together in The Continental he takes the opportunity to freak out about how excited he is to meet him, and loses his shit when Dog comes in. “Is that—the dog???” he squeaks, his eyes transforming into hearts. It’s adorable, and weird, and this added element makes their final fight legitimately poignant when we realize that Zero really just wants to earn his idol’s respect.
The description of Edna made me burst out laughing! Wonderful.
She is my favorite thing about the Incredibles movies – in both of them.
*ahem*
Osgood in Doctor Who.
Mack in Agents of SHIELD uses lessons from horror and monster movies to shape his tactical responses, and often quotes them in emergencies.
The nerd is as big a cliche in most genres as the gay best friend is in a rom com. Cisco in THE FLASH. Sheldon in BIG BANG THEORY. Nate and Ray in LEGENDS OF TOMORROW. Pick a show with a decent sized cast, and there’s always a popular culture nerd.
HenchMEN 21 and 24 were perhaps, many years ago, somewhat as you describe them, but 24 was killed at the end of of season 2… in 2006.
“21’s gradual disillusionment with the world of heroes and villains…”
That didn’t happen.
Great list but where are the Thermians in Galaxy Quest?
@5
Willow, who is both a nerd and the gay best friend.
Love this! I would add Rhino from Bolt
What, no mention of Troy and Abed in Community?!
@5. All the CW DC shows have this. Before Cisco, Arrow had Felicity Smoak, eventually joined by Curtis “Mr. Terrific” Holt. Flash has Cisco, Supergirl had Winslow Schott Jr., as well as Kara and Alex themselves being big TV-watching dorks. Legends had Ray initially, then added Nate. Black Lightning is the only exception, as Jennifer is too cool to admit to having dorky interests. Even non-DC Legacies has MG (rarely seen without a comic in his hands), and Lizzie, who plays the role of the Popular Blonde Girl but makes more Lord of the Rings references than anyone else (and becomes dramatically offended if you point out the implications).
Of course, 24th-century Star Trek is also full of 20th-century fanboys; Picard has Dixon Hill, Data has Sherlock Holmes, Tom Paris has Captain Proton, Julian Bashir has (legally-distinct) James Bond… One of the old Deep Space Nine comics suggests that Worf has gotten hooked on Alexander’s “Ancient West” holoprograms (and manages to spread the fandom to Kira, who joins him to chase down cattle rustlers).
Stargate SG-1 turned stoic alien rebel Teal’c into a huge Star Wars fan. Atlantis managed to turn Rodney McKay into a prickly reverse-fan (don’t even get him started on everything wrong with Back to the Future).
Of course, the ur-example is John Crichton, from Farscape, who was able to survive and thrive on the other side of the galaxy largely due to his encyclopedic knowledge of sci-fi, movies, and cartoons, even if his companions could rarely tell what he was babbling about.
Over in Japan, the Gundam Build Fighters/Build Divers franchise is made of this, as it posits a world where the long-running Gundam media franchise is… an in-universe work of fiction (that spawned a VR video game) that the characters are all fans of (to the point where the divide between “canon” and “inspired fanwork” becomes a plot point leading to a Crowning Moment of Awesome).
I absolutely Love to Hate Edna Mode – perhaps it might be more appropriate to say that I have a Love/Hate relationship with the character one step away from being Complete Adoration – because that prowling martinet is a Cape hater (and so far as I’m concerned a Superhero setting without capes would be like the Wild West without stetsons!).
I’m not saying her vicious slanders are being spread to hush up the fact that there would have been far, far fewer cape-related demises if only her d— over-engineered fabric would rip once in a while, but I definitely hate to see a film as Excellent as THE INCREDIBLES rag on one of my favourite elements of Superhero style.
Admittedly all this boil of competing passions did inspire me to create a Sitcom rival to La Mode so obsessed with making capes work for Superheroes that he has essentially turned himself into Zorro-as-gentleman-tailor/Superhero sensei* (“It’s not enough to buy the Cape, you must wear the Cape and this takes practice”) and Edna Mode is Awesome, so there’s clearly a silver lining in this cloud.
*Why of course he sounds like Antonio Banderas, what could be more proper?
I once saw a cartoon of Loki stomping on Thor’s cape (because you know he would) with Edna on stop looking stern and advising, ‘No capes!”
I would still pay cash money to see what she would say about Dr. Strange’s cape, though. And what it would say back.
@13.excessivelyperky: I’m not sure the Good Doctor’s cape can actually vocalise, but it would be an excellent counter-argument to La Mode’s perfidious cape-less agenda! (-:
@7: Galaxy Quest Thermians, yes! And let’s not forget Brandon Wheegar and company, either.