\n Death frightened most people, but not Pe Ell.<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nThe first time I read The Heritage of Shannara<\/em> was also the first time I read a book (or part of a book) from an antagonist\u2019s point of view. This was an unexpected but pleasant surprise because I loved reading the thoughts of the assassin who was planning to kill one of the other main characters. It\u2019s great to read a thoroughly developed antagonist with his own thoughts and feelings, motives, doubts and fears.<\/p>\nThe best part about him was that, at the end, he decides he doesn\u2019t actually want to kill his target. There’s also an element of tragedy here for Pe Ell because, while his character arc was very powerful, he was manipulated into killing his target anyway, so the other characters in the story continued to think ill of him and are not sorry to find that he had been killed (by an invisible plot device\/monster thing that, to this day, I think was a really cheap move). This left me feeling very hurt, and stories that can do that are rare and wonderful things.<\/p>\n
Kingpin\/Wilson Fisk\u2014Daredevil<\/em><\/h1>\n\n ‘I realised that this city was a part of me, that it was in my blood, and I would do anything to make it a better place for people like you.’<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nHell’s Kitchen is the setting for Marvel’s Netflix series Daredevil<\/em> in which a (slightly bland) blind lawyer dons a mask and beats up bad guys by night and shuffles papers by day. The best thing about this series (apart from its production quality and acting, that is) is the character of Wilson Fisk, aka Kingpin. About as much time is given to fleshing out the villain as is given to the hero, making him a believable and, frankly, likeable man. True, he does kill a lot of people and his plans for Hell’s Kitchen upsets many more, but his intentions are good. His methods are what make him the bad guy here.<\/p>\nHow did he become such a powerful crime lord? We see him struggling through his childhood, being bullied at school and then being forced to violent revenge by his father. He killed his father to protect his mother and the two of them cut up and hid the body. After piecing together such a tragic figure, it’s no wonder that, when we see him later as an older man, we’re glad he’s apparently risen above such a traumatic childhood. Problem is, he hasn’t. His present is shaped by his past, he can’t escape the man he has become, and it’s the vulnerabilities in his character that make him so relatable.<\/p>\n
When he clashes with Daredevil, we know we should be rooting for the perfect, blind, Catholic, lawyer superhero standing up for the little guy\u2014but whenever Fisk gets away, we can’t help but cheer. Maybe don’t smash that guy’s head repeatedly in your car door? No? No. Okay…<\/p>\n
The Joker\u2014Batman<\/em><\/h1>\n\n \u2018I believe whatever doesn\u2019t kill you simply makes you\u2026 stranger.\u2019<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nVery dangerous, a total nutter, unpredictable, cunning, ruthless and wild, the Joker is Batman\u2019s greatest nemesis. Though the Joker has many origin stories, the most common in the canon is that he falls into a tank of chemical waste, which causes him to lose his mind. This accident also turns his hair green, his skin bleached-white and his lips an unnatural red. This is the Joker we see portrayed by Jack Nicholson and Jared Leto. The origins of Heath Ledger\u2019s Joker (and almost all of Mark Hamill’s renditions), however, is a complete mystery.<\/p>\n
Why do I like the Joker so much? He isn\u2019t your usual \u2018I want to take over the world and look down upon you from my throne made of cash\u2019 sort of bad guy. He also doesn\u2019t concoct stupidly complicated traps to capture or torture Batman, like a villain from the Bond universe might do. In fact, he\u2019s arguably not interested in killing Batman at all. He simply enjoys the thrill of the chase, the challenge and the mayhem. The fact that he’s a few sandwiches short of a picnic is the reason why he’s so interesting\u2014you never know what he might do next, and he probably doesn’t even know himself, or why.<\/p>\n
The Shadow\u2014A Wizard of Earthsea<\/em><\/h1>\n\n Light and darkness met, and joined, and were one.<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nOften, a villain reveals something about the hero, about which the hero was previously unaware. The Shadow is one of these villains. While not actually being much of a ‘character’ per se, it first appears when main character and wizard Sparrowhawk is naughtily looking through an advanced book of magic in his master\u2019s collection. He wants to impress a girl he\u2019s just met and so chooses a spell that turns out to be too powerful for him to control. It goes terribly wrong and the Shadow is born.<\/p>\n
Despite being banished for a short time by his master, it becomes evident later on that this strange entity is linked to Sparrowhawk in a way he doesn\u2019t initially understand. No other wizard can tackle this terrible beast except Sparrowhawk himself because, as we discover later, the Shadow is a part of him. At first, he tries to run, but in doing so, the Shadow kills one of his friends, making him realise that he is just delaying the inevitable. He is going to have to face this thing<\/em> alone. The Shadow makes you look within yourself and think about your darker side and how best to tackle it. The decision for Sparrowhawk to leave the safety of Roke takes great courage, knowing full well what lies out there somewhere\u2026 waiting for him.<\/p>\nThe Phantom\u2014The Phantom of the Opera<\/em><\/h1>\n\n ‘Can you even dare to look, or bear to think of me\u2014this loathesome gargoyle who burns in hell, but secretly yearns for heaven…’<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nThe Phantom was a misshapen child who broke free of a circus and went to live in the bowels of an opera house in Paris. He became an architect, inventor, musician, composer and tutor and would have been famous for it had it not been for his deformity. Society shunned him and so he hated the world, until a grieving child\u2014Christine\u2014was brought to his opera house. From then on, he made it his life\u2019s goal to train Christine to sing and used his knowledge to write, design and compose an opera in which she would star.<\/p>\n
Living in the dark for years in seclusion did nothing to improve his opinion of the outside world and the people in it, so when the members of the opera house turned against him (out of fear of him), he reacted in the only way he knew how, through violence and cunning. His character is so well developed that you pity him and understand how he feels and why he does what he does. Also who couldn\u2019t love a mysterious guy in a cape who lives by an underground lake, plays music to you while you sleep, writes melodies for you by the light of numerous candelabra and has a shrine of you in his bedroom topped with a life-size model of you in a wedding dress\u2026? He also gets the best songs in the musical.<\/p>\n
GlaDOS\u2014Portal<\/em><\/h1>\n\n ‘Despite your violent behaviour, the only thing you’ve managed to break so far is my heart.’<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nMean, witty and malicious, the main antagonist from the extremely clever game Portal<\/em> actually goes unseen for about 95% of the story. As you make your way through the seemingly endless test levels in the Aperture Science Enrichment Centre, GlaDOS’s voice instructs and guides you, as well as pokes fun at you before giving way to simply threatening you (comically) with various methods of death because you didn’t die, as planned. But GlaDOS isn’t simply an artificial intelligence that doesn’t like the fact you’ve outwitted her.<\/p>\nIn Portal 2<\/em>, her character is fleshed out, as it were, and you discover what she truly is\u2014that she was once the thing she despises most: a human. This initiates a character arc in which GlaDOS aids you in your struggle against an even greater adversary, and your second chance at freedom from Aperture Science.<\/p>\nMagneto\u2014X-Men<\/em><\/h1>\n\n ‘Better that we die on our feet than live on our knees!’<\/em>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\nNone of the above examples better demonstrates the Shakespearean idea that there is no good or evil, that only thinking makes it so. The reason why Magneto (Erik Lehnsherr\/Max Eisenhardt\/all the other names he’s had) inspires such a following in the X-Men universe is that, while he does have questionable methods most of the time, his overall goal is a noble one. One of the most powerful ‘mutants’ ever born, Magneto believes that he and his brethren are not actually ‘mutants’ at all, but rather the next step in human’s evolution: “homo superior”\u2014and he’s probably right. He’s sick of how he and his kind have been treated by common humans\u2014experimented upon, used, abused, discriminated against and murdered\u2014and makes it his life’s mission to encourage this evolution, by forcefully putting homo superior on top.<\/p>\n
His fight ignites the “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter” argument, and indeed, he is truly fighting for the freedom and advancement of his own people, but he chooses the path of violence, making him a villain in the eyes of most. And that is why he is such a great antagonist\u2014you can understand his motivations. He is not just a man out for power, glory or wealth\u2014he is fighting for the freedom of many from cruel suppression in a world where he and his kind are feared and mistrusted.<\/p>\n
Other notable villainous characters<\/strong><\/p>\nFrancisco Scaramanga\u2014The Man with the Golden Gun<\/em>
\nDarth Vader\u2014Star Wars<\/em>
\nSaren\u2014Mass Effect<\/em>
\nHeathcliffe\u2014Wuthering Heights<\/em>
\nMr Hyde\u2014The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde<\/em>
\nDolores Umbridge\u2014Harry Potter<\/em>
\nGod\u2014The Bible<\/em>
\nIllusive Man\u2014Mass Effect<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"There is no good or evil, only thinking makes it so. Here’s me having a think.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/476"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=476"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/476\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":489,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/476\/revisions\/489"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=476"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=476"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/carmelsealey.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=476"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}