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[personal profile] rowyn
[livejournal.com profile] ankewehner wrote on tumblr about not relating to the "love to hate" phenomenon, where a large part of the audience hates a character but enjoys seeing that character anyway.

I don't have the same "how could you feel this way?" reaction to it that Anke expresses, so I was pretty sure I must have felt this way about some villain at some point. But it took me a while to think of an actual example. Some counter-examples:

DC's the Joker: I don't love to hate the Joker. I just hate him and wish Batman (or anyone) would kill him. Lut was talking about watching the intro to one of the Batman video games, where Batman is escorting the Joker back to the asylum and the Joker is apologizing for not killing more people on his way out the last time and gloating about how many more he'll kill during the next escape. Me: "And the game doesn't let you kill the Joker here." Lut: "NO." Me: "See, this is why I wouldn't want to play it." Lut: "Y'know, if I were one of those armed guards standing around while the Joker was brought in AGAIN, I'd shoot him dead. And then I'd hand Batman my gun and say 'You can arrest me if you want to. But the only two people who are going to be sorry that bastard is dead are you and Harley Quinn. AND I'M NOT SO SURE ABOUT HARLEY.'" That would be AWESOME. Anyway, I know a lot of people like seeing the Joker vs Batman conflict play out again and again, but I am not one of them.

Marvel's Magneto: I don't love to hate Magneto either, but unlike the Joker, my response to Magneto is generally BE GOOD ALREADY DAMMIT. I like Erik and I want him to do good things and stop being so Machiavellian. I don't want him to be an unforgivable murderer. I sympathize with him, but I don't like watching him be a villain.

I can readily think of other characters that fall into one of those two camps: unsympathetic villains that I hate, and sympathetic ones that I want to see reformed. But coming up with a villain that I enjoy as-a-villain is much harder. The one I did produce is an actual classic:

Shakespeare's Iago: No, not Disney's snarky parrot, but the antagonist of "Othello". Iago is throughly villainous and almost completely unsympathetic, but he is very good at being a villain. It's been a long time since I read "Othello" and I've never seen it performed, but here's how I remember the play's structure: Iago comes on stage, gives a soliloquy listing his resentments and desires, and then explains how he's going to manipulate everyone in the next few scenes into doing what he wants them to. In the next few scenes, Iago uses a masterful combination of fabrications and apparent empathy and feigned good intentions to get everyone to do their part, most of them unwittingly, in his plan. Repeat until end of play. I cannot like him, or root for him, but there's a certain admiration for how well he executes his plot.

I am not sure that's the same emotion that most people associate with the phrase "villains you love to hate", but I think it's as close as I come. It's a hard category to get into, because it requires the character to be an unsympathetic, unapologetic villain, and yet have enough class/style/brilliance to make them entertaining despite that. And of course, it's subjective -- I'm sure there are people who feel that way about the Joker, or Moriarity, or Loki*, but I don't. So I'm curious -- what villains make the cut for you?

* Loki (in both the Norse myths and the recent films, oddly) is more in the want-to-see-reformed camp , although the end scene of Thor 2 was pretty awesome. Moriarity, I just hate.

Date: 2014-06-17 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] duane-kc.livejournal.com
I have *despised* the Joker for years. He shouldn't be in an insane asylum in the first place; he's a sociopath, yes, but he is *not* legally insane. He plans his crimes, he makes escape plans, he's *not* just J. Random Psychopath. I think even Alan Moore pointed this out once, and then in the same story negated it by having the report being written by Dr. Harleen Quinzell. In a sane justice system, the Joker would be in Blackgate Prison on Death Row, not bouncing in and out of Arkham every other week.

As much as I applaud the casting of Nicholson as the Joker in the 1989 Batman film, I also applaud his death at the end of the film as well. Done in, not by Wayne trying to prevent his escape, but his own minions being too clueless (or possibly too homicidal; there is no helicopter pilot in the world who could not tell when his turbine was being overstressed like that) and killing him accidentally.

My absolute favorite Joker demise, though, comes from fanfiction. Ben Hutchins, AKA "Gryphon", over at Eyrie Productions has a positive *gift* for redeeming characters you thought were beyond redemption...and he killed off the Joker, and started off Harley Quinn's redemption arc in the same story. http://www.eyrie-productions.com/Forum/dcboard.cgi?az=read_count&om=123&forum=DCForumID24 is a great, and a fairly quick read, and is one of the best HQ redemption stories ever, although if you're not familiar with the "Undocumented Features" universe, some bits may not make a lot of sense. :)

Magneto: I like the version from the movies; about the only thing I like about the movies. The version in the comics rationalizes killing to get his way or make a point too often for my taste.

O, however; there's a character I *love* to hate. John DeLancie is a fantastic actor, and has made me thoroughly despise this character almost every time I've seen him, right up until the NexGen series finale...and of that I'll say, he (and the writers) managed to both surprise me and redeem Q for me.

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