Malevolence

May. 7th, 2012 01:08 pm
swan_tower: myself in costume as the Norse goddess Hel (Hel)
[personal profile] swan_tower
(The following post talks about The Avengers on its way to the actual point, but does not give spoilers.)

Interestingly, one of the moments that has stayed with me the most strongly from The Avengers is the speech Loki flings at Black Widow.

He has other Villain Speeches in the movie, of course. But this one stands out for its sheer, unbridled malevolence. He doesn't say those things out of megalomania or fraternal resentment or any other such understandable motivation; he says them because, quite simply, he wants to hurt her.

I've said before that I tend to write antagonists more often than villains. That is, I write characters who think they're doing the right (or at least the necessary) thing, who happen to be wrong about that. There are exceptions, of course; Nadrett doesn't give a damn what's right, only what he can get away with. But I have a harder time writing that sort of thing.

Which means -- of course -- that I want to study how it's done. So this is a Recommend Stuff to Me kind of post: what books/movies/TV shows/etc have those moments of pure malevolence, where the character is just trying to hurt somebody? Off the top of my head, there's Dunnett's Lymond Chronicles ("Stop sidling, my swan. I am going to hurt you, but I am not going to kill you, just yet. You are going to provide me with a deal of merriment still."), some of Angelus' moments in Buffy, and pretty much everything the main villains do in Tokyo Babylon and X, but I'm having trouble thinking of more. (Actually, that's a lie. I can think of plenty of sadistic villains. It's just that most of them are sadistic in a shallow, uninteresting way, and I want ones that really manage to get the knife between the ribs.)

Where have you seen this done well?


Edited to add: Please to be avoiding spoilers as much as possible. This discussion will necessarily involve a degree of revelation, but if you can use phrases like "the main villain" instead of the name (where the villain is not obvious from the start), etc, that would be much appreciated.

Date: 2012-05-07 08:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aliettedb.livejournal.com
Hum, not quite what you're looking for (strong comical element, plus I can't really pinpoint a scariest moment, except maybe his final scene), but Teatime in Terry Pratchett's Hogfather is a truly chilling villain.

Date: 2012-05-07 08:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ratmmjess.livejournal.com
Westley's "to the pain" speech in Princess Bride?

Date: 2012-05-07 08:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sarcastibich.livejournal.com
watch "House" as in the tv series with Hugh Laurie. I'd argue that he frequently is snarky/cruel/incisive just because he can be, although I know more often he does it to make a genuine point.

Date: 2012-05-07 08:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com
I could give you a good one from real life - the single meanest thing anyone ever did to me when I was an adult, out of sheer unmotivated malevolence as far as I could tell. But only if you want.

The most realistic fictional depictions of people doing stuff solely to hurt someone else, and not because they're cardboard sadistic villains, are in mainstream children's books, and depict the horrible things kids do to each other for no apparent reason other than that they can. I'm thinking particularly of the scene with the chocolate in Judy Blume's Blubber.




Date: 2012-05-07 08:52 pm (UTC)
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)
From: [personal profile] carbonel
Not exactly the same thing, because there aren't any villains by your terms, but The Lion in Winter sticks with me for how hard all the clever clever characters work at hurting each other.

Date: 2012-05-07 10:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
Like you say, few of them are interesting. Malevolence is usually so predictable, and smug malevolence is just boring.

Date: 2012-05-07 10:12 pm (UTC)
ext_17983: Photo of an orange tabby curled up and half asleep (Writing)
From: [identity profile] juushika.livejournal.com
Durarara!!'s Orihara Izaya is sorta almost this. The reveal of what exactly his nature/actions is sort of a spoiler, so ... I probably shouldn't post it because I can't use HTML tags. Grrrrr. But he falls along the lines of chaotic neutral while being fully cognizant of—and in his way benefiting from—the harm he causes.
Edited Date: 2012-05-07 10:13 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-05-07 10:16 pm (UTC)
ext_17983: Photo of an orange tabby curled up and half asleep (Anime/Game)
From: [identity profile] juushika.livejournal.com
The Evil Queen from The 10th Kingdom.

Evil is in the job description, so talking about her isn't a huge spoiler—she has complex motivations, but her end goal is to cause harm and she never balks at doing more harm to reach that goal—it's willful, well, malevolence, but never shallow in its reasons.
Edited Date: 2012-05-07 10:16 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-05-07 10:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prosewitch.livejournal.com
The villains in Elizabeth Hayden's Rhapsody were malevolent in really disturbing ways.

Date: 2012-05-07 10:42 pm (UTC)
twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)
From: [personal profile] twistedchick
The Dark Knight. The villain still sticks in my mind as the murderer of Heath Ledger, even though Heath was playing that as a role.

Date: 2012-05-07 11:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mindstalk.livejournal.com
Carcer in Pratchett's _Night Watch_? "I can see your house from here."

The elves in Lords and Ladies? Maybe they're shallow or just alien.

Twelve Kingdoms has character who seems neither sadistic nor "doing the necessary thing", he's lashing out in self-destructive petulant rage. There's another character who... we can't tell his motivation yet, but spiteful "let the world fall" destruction may be part of it.

The Other and Bangladesh Dupree and Old Heterodynes in Girl Genius. Given free rein, the Jaegers and Castle.

Ges, Serg, and Cavilo in Bujold.

Date: 2012-05-08 03:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] akashiver.livejournal.com
It depends on how dark you want to go. A lot of us don't *want* to spend time with truly evil people, so we prefer antagonists to outright villains. True evil is often banal, too, so while I find the "villains" of True Stories like Wild Swans horrible, I don't know that they'd make good fictional villains. At least, they wouldn't make good *super*villains, of the sort you secretly kinda root for and find compelling and charismatic.

I have one suggestion though: the main villain of In the Company of Men.

Also, I just watched Snowtown, a hard-to-watch Australian film based on a series of (real) serial killings in the 1990s. (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1680114/) It's a compelling portrait of evil, and one of the most realistic things about it is that the villain's motivation is basically very simple: he enjoys power. Anything that demonstrates his power - insulting people, seducing people, torturing and killing people - is fair game.

I bring it up not because the film features torture but because it struck me as an utterly convincing portrait of a non-Hollywoodized psychopath. And because it's seen through the eyes of a bystander, most of the powerplays in the first part of the film are very domestic and ordinary. They're social challenges, and at heart, they're nasty. It's an interesting film but one I'd only recommend if you honestly think you can sit through it.

Date: 2012-05-08 03:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lowellboyslash.livejournal.com
The main villain of Rebecca!

Oh yeah.

Date: 2012-05-08 04:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] akashiver.livejournal.com
"Oldboy."

Thinking about this question made me realize there's an unwritten rule in most storytelling: even ignoble villains can't enjoy hurting people directly. They can kill people on their way to a goal (Hans in Die Hard, the Joker in Dark Knight); they can manipulate their victims to hurt themselves and others (Iago, Oldboy), but they cannot be shown to enjoy physically hurting people.

I was thinking about Hans in particular. He's a great villain. But his position is very carefully crafted in the film so that the audience will want to watch him for long periods of time.

1) He's clever and witty and a figure of power. His people obey him unquestioningly. This is "supervillain" appeal, but honestly, it's not enough. If he killed a puppy in scene 1 the audience would want him dead by scene 2, no matter how witty he was.

2) He's a figure of mystery - his plan and his motivations are hidden until very, very late in the film. So his screentime is justified because the audience wants to figure out what he's doing.

3) While he plans to kill innocent people, he only actually kills 2, and both of his victims are complicit in their own deaths. They had choices. The boss could have told him the code to the vault; the slimey guy could have not tried to betray McClane. So the audience is implicitly reassured: Hans will threaten innocents, but he won't wantonly kill them. And he is only shown killing people who "deserve it."

4) He does not kill people because he enjoys it. He kills them en route to his goal. He does not torture them or prolong their deaths.

5) While he's the villain, he's shares antagonists with McClane. He's out to defeat the same figures of dumb authority (FBI, cops) that McClane has to contend with. So in a way, every villainous victory he scores further justifies the hero's position.

Particlarly after watching Snowtown, I'm thinking that readers/viewers have very low tolerance for full-on evil. If a character kills a "real" innocent deliberately - not by accident as they're trying to kill the hero, for example, - the audience will want that character punished, like, now.

Ditto with sadism. It's one thing to have the hero (whose moral worth we're assured of) torture for information or revenge (Girl with the Dragon Tattoo). But the villain?

The instant a villain tortures an innocent the audience will be rooting for his/her destruction. They'll hate that character whenever she's onscreen. So either the person tortured has to be the protagonist-who-escapes (in which case, the audience is reassured that the protagonist will punish the villain later) or it has to happen near the end of the story so that the villain will be punished quickly.

(I think.)

Date: 2012-05-08 05:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dark-towhead.livejournal.com
Robert Mitchum as Max Cady in the original Cape Fear (a role reprised by Robert De Niro in the remake) kind of embodies well-done malevolence. Also, Mitchum's turn in Night of the Hunter is somewhat malevolence-incarnate. Mitchum's strength is in selling these characters as authentically creepy instead of cartoonish.

At the risk of giving you flashbacks...

Date: 2012-05-08 08:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moonandserpent.livejournal.com
Oldboy.

Edited to add: Doh, she beat me to it...
Edited Date: 2012-05-08 08:03 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-05-10 07:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sandmantv.livejournal.com
The villains in Trigun, an anime series.

Vamp in Metal Gear Solid 2

Marlo Stanfield in the Wire

Mr. Hyde in the BBC's new version of "Jekyll"

Human villains in "Deepness in the Sky"

Villains in the last 2 books of the Mistborn series

Peter in "Ender's Game"

Comedian in Watchmen

Desire in Sandman



(though qua my other post, I don't really agree with you in your definition of villains)

Date: 2012-05-13 03:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] boannan.livejournal.com
I was struck by that scene in the movie as well.

I'd add Niska, during the War Stories episode of Firefly, with Malcolm Reynolds. He's obviously sadistic, but he also has an unnerving obsession with the connection between pain and what he might describe as "character".

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