Flipping through old manga, I always get a soft spot for characters whose noses are practically their personality. Big noses in classic comics aren't just a visual gag — they're shorthand for bluster, mischief, stubbornness, or tragicomic timing, and some of the best ones are hilarious simply because their faces do half the acting. Here are the big-nosed goofballs and lovable blowhards who've stuck with me the longest, and why I still laugh when their profiles show up on the page.
Shunsaku Ban, better known as Higeoyaji, is a Tezuka staple who never fails to make me grin. He pops up across the Tezuka universe, most famously in 'Astro Boy', with that unmistakable mustache and prominent nose that reads as both world-weary and perpetually exasperated. Tezuka used him like a running joke and a connective tissue between stories, and Higeoyaji’s expressions — that squinty glare, the resigned slump, the occasional triumphant wink — are pure comedic gold. He’s the kind of character who looks like he’s seen everything and still gets duped by a clever scheme, which makes his big nose feel like a cartoon map of his emotional life.
Fujio Akatsuka’s creations take nasal comedy to absurd heights. Iyami from 'Osomatsu-kun' is iconic — that bucktoothed grin, theatrical poses, and exaggerated nose come packaged with the “Sheeeh!” pose that’s burned into the culture. Iyami is shameless, desperate, and irresistibly over the top. Then there’s Bakabon’s Papa from 'Tensai Bakabon', whose big, bulbous nose and deadpan, nonsensical logic make him one of the strangest and funniest dads in manga history. Akatsuka loved twisting facial features into personality shorthand, and with them it’s never just a joke at the nose’s expense — it’s an entire comic rhythm built around how they move, react, and cause trouble.
Kankichi Ryotsu from 'Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Koen-mae Hashutsujo' is another classic. His nose, along with the rest of his bulldog-like face, matches his loud, scheming cop energy. Ryo-san is always cooking up get-rich-quick plans and failing spectacularly, and that big nose reads like a flag for trouble — every time it fills a panel, I braced for some ridiculous misadventure. Similarly, Namihei Isono from 'Sazae-san' has a distinct profile that signals grumpy, practical patriarch energy, and his clipped reactions to family chaos are somehow sweeter because of that dignified, long nose.
I could throw in characters like Kogoro Mouri from 'Detective Conan' — his grandiose, bulbous nose and swaggering incompetence make him unintentionally hilarious — or even Gian from 'Doraemon', whose imposing face and crass bravado are part of the gag. What ties these classic characters together is that the nose isn’t just an oddity; it’s a cue for delivery. Big noses in older manga often meant big personalities, and the artists used that shorthand brilliantly. They still crack me up, and flipping back through these panels is like visiting an old group of absurd, beloved friends.
2025-11-13 01:39:07
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