Famous fictional characters
Some fictional characters are so famous that they are often used alone, without explaining exactly why they are used.
- Achilles (Greek mythological hero, immune to all forms of injury except in the back of his heel, source of the term "Achilles heel", referring to a sole flaw, often seemingly insignificant)
- Alice (Lewis Carroll's invention, a young naive girl transported into a strange and alien land, interprets everything literally)
- Captain Ahab (from Herman Melville's Moby Dick, refers to someone with an incessant and obsessive need to accomplish some task)
- Darth Vader (Star Wars mythos, often used as a symbol of ultimate and irredeemable evil, though he began good and was ultimately redeemed in the end; compare Luke Skywalker, a plucky hero)
- Don Quixote (character from Miguel Cervantes' novel of the same name; he believed he was a chivalric knight; often used as a symbol of dedication to achieving one's goals in spite of all obstacles, especially including reality, source of adjective "quixotic")
- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (from story of the same name by Robert Louis Stevenson, refers to anyone particularly two-faced, especially with one evil and one good side)
- Dracula (archetypal vampire, sometimes metaphorically any person, event, thing or idea perceived as life- or energy-draining; modern character created by Bram Stoker)
- E.T (film alien, simple and good yet misunderstood by others)
- Hamlet (Shakespeareanan character, tortured by a moral dilemna; compare with Ophelia, whose passion drives her insane and to suicide)
- Hercules (Greek mythological character known primarily for his immense physical strength; compare Paul Bunyan)
- Homer Simpson (Character from The Simpsons, often used to refer to an average adult male)
- Huckleberry Finn (aka Huck Finn, Mark Twain character, a youth who rescues a slave, has an exceedingly simple moral code and character but is still virtuous)
- James Bond (suave, charming secret agent from a series of films)
- King Arthur ((maybe not entirely fictional), legendary British king and epitome of righteousness, justice and virtue)
- King Lear (Shakespeareanan character who does not recognize the only one of three daughters who love him; he is undone by his blindness to her, Cordelia's, love)
- Macbeth (Shakespeareanan tragic character, undone by his drive for power and the corrupting influence of Lady Macbeth, his wife)
- Miss Piggy (a Muppet who is vain, narcisstic, demanding, greedy and self-centered; compare the lovable and always virtuous Kermit_the_Frog)
- Odysseus (from Homer's Odyssey, spent some thirty years from his family and is often used as a symbol of dedication and wisdom)
- Othello (Shakespeareanan tragic character, undone by his own jealousy and naivete, also often used as a generic racial minority)
- Penelope (from Homer's Odyssey, Odysseus's wife, often used as a symbol of marital fidelity due to her commitment to her husband, who was absent for twenty years)
- Robin Hood (outlaw with a heart of gold who "steals from the rich to give to the poor")
- Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeareanan lovers, whose marriage is forbidden due to a family rivalry; they commit suicide due to complex circumstances)
- Siren (Homer's Odyssey includes Sirens whose beautiful voice lures sailors to their doom, often symbolically any femme fatale)
- Mr. Spock (Star Trek character, Vulcan who is ruled by logic and reason and ignores passion and emotion, contrasted with the passionate Captain James T. Kirk)
- Uncle Tom (created by Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom's Cabin, often used to refer to a person who is a disgrace to his or her race, especially African-Americans)
- Wile E. Coyote (cartoon character who constantly tried and failed to kill the Road Runner, used as a symbol of dedication in the face of futility)