Over-the-Shoulder Pose

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    "...The only 'strong' in many 'strong female comic book characters' are the oblique muscles required to point their ass and boobs in the same direction."
    Cracked', on this very trope

    When a character or model poses with their back to the audience, but twisted round to look at the viewers so that their torso is almost pointing backwards. If the fanservice is more blatant, they'll probably be sticking their butt out and curving their spine vertically rather than merely twisting sideways. Probably used for a few reasons:

    1. Lets you see the character's face. Having them look at the audience is more engaging.
    2. Can be used to give a coy impression ("Oh, what are you doing back there?") or to make the character look mysterious.
    3. Tends to enforce a sidelong glance from the character, intending to invoke a submissive or vulnerable image.
    4. Shows the character is supple and limber.
    5. As the alternative name suggests, lets you see the character's butt and chest at the same time, so both Ass and Tit fans get what they want. If it's trying to be anatomically realistic, the "tit" part will usually be restricted to Sideboob.

    Popular with glamor models and anime characters. Naturally characters not portrayed by real life actors can pull this off more effectively, since they can twist in ways that would snap a real person's spine or at least be darn uncomfortable.

    At least one glamor model has blamed their back problems on having to repeatedly pose in this way. Not that glamor models don't have other causes of back pain.

    Compare Coy Girlish Flirt Pose. Not to be confused with Over-the-Shoulder Carry.


    Examples of Over-the-Shoulder Pose include:

    Anime And Manga

    Art

    • Judith by Jan Sanders van Hemessen, circa 1540CE, may be Ur Example. A nude in the "spine twisting exercise" pose and holding a sword overhead, all right. That being Renaissance, however, she doesn't look gutted and with broken spine. In fact, she got enough of muscles that Willing Suspension of Disbelief is not needed to see she can lift that sword in one hand without falling over and even decapitate something significantly bigger and tougher than a chicken.


    Comic Books

    • Rob Liefeld is an artist well known for drawing busty women posing in such a way that you can see their ass and breasts at the same time. As they use to say on the late lamented ScansDaily, "anatomy doesn't work that way".
    • As shown above, Psylocke does this in almost every panel she appears in. Seriously, look her up in Google Images and you'll find several shots in this position. The page picture in particular shows off the impossible extremes of this trope. What freaky Body Horror is going on with her spine?
    • Ms. Marvel on occasion.

    Film


    Live Action TV

    Tabletop Games

    • The picture for the Dragonmarked Heir prestige class in the Eberron book shows a half-elven woman in a backless dress posing like this.

    Video Games

    Web Original

    Web Comics

    • Girl Genius:
    • Mocked in Super Stupor with the Snow Owl, who has Green's Disease ("It's where all your joints are ball joints and you spasm into poses.") In one pose she manages to rotate her torso a complete 180.

    Lady Diamondback: That pose offends me both as a woman and someone who knows how spines work.


    Western Animation

    Real Life

    • UK glamor model Jo Guest
    • Betty Grable was famous for this pose. It was the favorite of American soldiers in World War II.
    • Rita Hayworth
    • Paul Manship's (the guy who sculpted the Prometheus statue in Rockefeller Plaza) nude bronze Diana the Huntress not only twists around so her face, breasts and buttocks are all visible from the same side, she even does it while she's running full tilt so she can shoot an arrow at something (or someone) behind her. And she's running away from her quarry? What's that about?!
      • Perhaps she's hunting a Bullfight Boss beast or one of those other creatures that have to be tricked into charging. Plus, you have to get some distance to properly use a bow, so perhaps she's just getting to the optimal range.
    • Male sculpture example: Henri Peinte: Orphée endormant Cerbère
    • Lena / Lenna, the most common face photograph used in image analysis and computer vision is the top part of this pose from the centerfold of November 1972 Playboy.
    • The artist Luis Royo sometimes does this in his [dead link] works [dead link] . Note that all of these are probably NSFW.
    • A recent photo project involved pictures of men in masculine clothes, but posed like female pin-up models, complete with several in over-the-shoulder poses and some with coy, dippy smiles. As should surprise no one, they looked entirely silly.
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