All Monsters are Human

Rarely has there ever been a human villain that has been successful in their goals. And by successful, I mean getting away with almost anything. I think Hannibal Lecter from the film and novel of the same name Silence of the Lambs emulates this trope perfectly.

We only first hear about Lecter through police files, and he’s already established to be a major threat by Frederick Chilton. When we finally see him in person, in the last cell, he stands at the end facing main protagonist Clarice Starling, as if he was expecting her to come. Instead of being rude upon their meeting, he’s very polite and courteous. He’s fascinated by her and gives her cryptic clues to Buffalo Bill's identity in return for painful memories of her childhood. She is eventually able to use these clues to track Bill down and kills him, but not before Lecter stages a dramatic and bloody escape, disappearing without a trace. He leaves two letters: one for Clarice, wishing her well, and the other for Chilton, promising gruesome revenge for the years of mistreatment he suffered at Chilton's hands. Chilton disappears soon afterward.

Hannibal’s first appearanceImage provided by Listverse.com

Hannibal’s first appearance

Image provided by Listverse.com

What makes Hannibal so terrifying is that he’s not like the typical ghosts and ghouls you see in horror films. He’s just a regular human.

In the prequel, Hannibal Rising, we get a glimpse into Hannibal’s childhood and progression into the famous killer we all know and love. In 1941, eight-year-old Hannibal Lecter lived in Lecter Castle in Lithuania. Hannibal, his younger sister Mischa, and their parents travel to the family's hunting lodge in the woods to elude the advancing German troops. Three years later, the Nazis are finally driven out of the countries soon to be re-occupied by the Soviet Union. However, during their retreat, they destroy a Soviet tank that had stopped at the Lecter family's lodge looking for water. The explosion kills the mother and father, leaving Hannibal and Mischa orphans. They survive in the cottage until five former Lithuanian militiamen, led by a Nazi collaborator named Vladis Grutas, storm and loot it. Finding no other food in the bitterly cold Baltic winter, the men look menacingly at Lecter and Mischa, implying cannibalism which we guess may have a starting point for his cannibalistic habit.

Young HannibalImage provided by Villains wiki

Young Hannibal

Image provided by Villains wiki

Eight years later, his father’s home has been remodeled into an orphanage, where he is abused by other children and by the dean. Lecter runs away, forms a quasi-romantic attachment to Murasaki after his uncle's death and commits his first murder when he decapitates a racist fishmonger who had insulted her which would lead to his killing style of anyone he finds vulgar and rude in his later years. While she is close to Lecter, she cannot turn him from his obsession with avenging his sister who was tortured and eaten by Grutas’ gang. To this end, he hunts down, tortures and kills every man who took part in her death, especially Grutas, when he mentions that Hannibal took part in eating Mischa (a memory that was suppressed), forsaking his relationship with Murasaki in the process. The last we see of Hannibal is when he drives away to commit more murders leading to the events of Silence Of the Lambs.

Unlike most villains, who lose their shit when things go wrong, Hannibal manages to maintain a calm and levelled front even when he’s angry. I think American Horror Story sums up the entirety of human villains like Hannibal Lecter with the quote, “All monsters are human.”


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Jhadiva Elliott

Hi, my name is Jhadiva. I’m a college student studying Professional Writing and the technical editor of this group. My hobbies are writing, watching movies and karate. My favorite genres to write about and watch are horror, action, thriller, mystery and fantasy. I enjoy being creative and I find the flawed characters of stories to be the most interesting.

How A Villain May Fall

Villains usually get the short end of the stick. Sometimes you laugh at them; other times, you feel sorry for them. Case in point, I think Azula from Avatar: the Last Airbender makes others feel a bit of both.

(Spoilers warning)

We first hear Azula mentioned through Zuko in Book One referring to her as his sister. He says his father stated that she was born lucky and that he was lucky to be born. Ouch. We know about what led to his burn scar and banishment, but being forsaken in favor of your YOUNGER sibling who seems to be better than you in every way. Zuko can’t seem to catch a break.

When we finally see Azula in person, she is tasked to be the one to bring down the Avatar by Fire Lord Ozai. We get a feeling she’ll be a formidable foe in the future. And we’re right.

During Book Two, she manages to topple the Earth Kingdom by conquering Ba Sing Se, with the help of the Dai Li and Azula’s ‘friends.’ And manipulate Zuko into coming back to his home nation, betraying Iroh in the process and killing Aang (he survives) while in his Avatar state. No joke. All while managing to be manipulative, level-headed and calm.

Azula on the Earth Kingdom throneImage provided by fanpop.com

Azula on the Earth Kingdom throne

Image provided by fanpop.com

However, we surprisingly see some depth to Azula in the third and final book. Where it becomes clear that she can’t function in a normal-setting with other people her age (this is shown in the episode: The Beach), and even though she is Ozai’s favorite child, she believes her mother, Ursa thinks of her as a monster, even stating that she’s right, but it still hurts her feelings. But it isn’t until the Boiling Rock episode that we see precisely when Azula begins her descent, in which she confronts Mai over her helping Zuko. Mai roasts Azula, saying she doesn’t know people as well as she thinks and that she loves him more than she fears Azula, setting over the edge replying that Mai should’ve feared her more.

It appears there’s going to be a fight, but Ty Lee stops the emerging fight by Chi Blocking Azula. They try to escape, but guards catch them. When one of them asks what they should do with Mai and Ty Lee, Azula answers in a way we’ve never heard before, ordering that they put them somewhere where she’ll never see their face again and to let them rot. When the time comes for the Fire Nation to launch their forces to attack the Earth Kingdom and the Earth benders with Sozin’s Comet. Azula hopes that she and Ozai would attack and conquer together, but becomes genuinely shocked when he tells her to stay in the Fire Nation kingdom.

She protests stating that it was her idea to burn down the whole Earth Kingdom, but Ozai tells her to shut up quite harshly to his supposed ‘favorite’ child. He then gives her the position of Fire Lord, ruler of the Fire Nation, an empty title since he gives himself the position of The Phoenix King, supreme ruler of the world. Think about it, you do all the groundwork for your father, for whom you work so hard to honor, and all you get is a now worthless role. How sad is that?

The sting of Mai and Ty Lee’s betrayal and Ozai excluding her has changed her and not for the better by the series finale. Such as when she banishes her servants, the Dai Li agents and the imperial fire benders for even the most minor of indiscretions like banishing a servant for ‘leaving’ a pit in her cherry before demanding her feet be thoroughly scrubbed. Okay, her strive for perfection hasn’t changed, but it shows how much she’s slipping, especially in one scene where Azula is trying to style her hair herself but messes it up badly. So in a fit of rage, she cuts her hair and we get this exchange of dialogue with a surprise visitor;

You think that I'm a MONSTER Main Channel: http://youtube.com/korraspirit

This shows Azula's inner turmoil, her battle with herself. Ursa isn't there, so all of this is Azula telling HERSELF that she used fear to control her friends, she’s telling HERSELF that her mother truly did love her. But her negative qualities overpowered whatever good qualities she might’ve had.

Before Azula gets crowned Fire Lord, Zuko interrupts and declares that he’ll become Fire Lord. In response, she challenges him to an Agni Kai and he accepts, much to Katara’s shock. But he replies that he notices something off about his sister like she’s slipping. The thing is, he’s not wrong. Before the Agni Kai starts, she says “I’m sorry it has to end this way, brother.” with a creepy grin. Zuko replies, “No, you’re not.”

As the Agni Kai proceeds, we see that both have changed in character by fighting. Zuko manages to stay in one spot while blocking Azula’s attacks using styles from other benders, and Azula is constantly moving erratically like he used to. When Zuko mocks her about not using her lightning and being afraid he’ll redirect it, she loses it, but Zuko manages to keep his cool and Azula sees that, she plays dirty and directs her lightning… at Katara. Zuko gets in the way, saving Katara but becomes unable to continue. Katara takes over for him, though she finds herself powerless against the now completely insane Azula. That is until she sees a sewage system with a pile of chains and hatches a plan. When Azula finds her, she doesn’t hesitate to attack headfirst without noticing the sewer and Katara uses this to her advantage by freezing herself and Azula solid. Katara swims within the ice and chains Azula down, unfreezing them and tightening the chains before healing Zuko. At this point, Azula has a total meltdown, breathing heavily, screeching and squirming like a wild animal and breathing blue fire out of her mouth, before breaking down into sobs still chained down.

Remember when Zuko mentioned what Ozai told him about Azula being born lucky and him being lucky to be born? In reality, it was quite the opposite. Zuko went through many struggles but was successful in the end. He gained friends, became the Fire Lord, helped end a destructive conflict and reunite the nations. Meanwhile, Azula had everything, then lost everything and ended up insane. She lost her friends, her family and lost herself. The only luck she truly had was being born. And that sometimes is all too true for many villains.


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Jhadiva Elliott

Hi, my name is Jhadiva. I’m a college student studying Professional Writing and the technical editor of this group.

My hobbies are writing, watching movies and karate. My favorite genres to write about and watch are horror, action, thriller, mystery and fantasy. I enjoy being creative and I find the flawed characters of stories to be the most interesting.

The Journey of Vengeance

Everyone has been wronged at some point in their life. Which brings up the question; How far are you willing to go to get revenge? Which brings me to my main topic: The bride AKA Black Mamba: the main protagonist of Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill Vol 1 and 2.

(Spoilers warning)

When we first see The Bride in Volume 1, she’s already on her vengeance spree targeting her former comrades. She’s in Pasadena and goes to Vernita Green AKA Copperhead’s house. We see that Vernita is now living under the name Jeannie Bell, now married and has a daughter named Nikki. They both plan to have a final battle out at a baseball diamond, but Vernita plays dirty and attempts to shoot her with a gun in a cereal box. However, the bride is quick to respond and kills Vernita with a knife in front of Nikki. Though she does apologize and say that she’ll be waiting if Nikki decides to get revenge when she grows up, implying that she knows deep down the repercussions of her mission, but going through it anyway.

Prior to this, we see a black and white shot of The Bride lying on the ground bruised, bloody and heavily breathing with an unseen man standing over her (Bill) before getting shot in the head and the opening credits being shown soon after.

The bride before getting shotIMage provided by filmstudies2270.wordpress.com

The bride before getting shot

IMage provided by filmstudies2270.wordpress.com

Next, we see the first target on her list and the main antagonist of Volume 1, O-Ren Ishii, AKA Cottonmouth (please keep in mind that not everything in these films is chronological). We get an anime segment detailing O-Ren’s backstory.

O-Ren was born to a Chinese American father and Japanese mother on an American military base in Tokyo. As the Bride tells us, O-Ren made her first acquaintance with death at the age of nine. At that age, she witnessed her parents’ death at the hands of a yakuza boss, Boss Matsumoto. When the carnage is over, her house is set on fire, but she escapes and swears revenge. And she gets it a couple of years later when she brutally murders Boss Matsumoto in his bedroom. By 20, O-Ren is one of the top female assassins in the world globally, shown in a pretty funny scene where O-Ren assassinates a politician with two women present and after the deed is done, the women look at the body for a couple of seconds before letting out a scream. At 25, she was there with the other vipers during the El Paso wedding massacre that would put the bride into a four-year coma and kill her unborn daughter (the bride was pregnant, and it’s implied she had a miscarriage because of the beating she received).

The bride goes to Tokyo and eventually kills O-Ren by scalping her in a sword fight. Before the movie ends, we hear this wise quote from Hattori Hanzo: “Revenge is never a straight line. It's a forest. And like a forest, it's easy to lose your way. To get lost. To forget where you came in.”

By the time we get to Volume 2, her priority hasn’t changed, though this time she’s bringing closer to her main target: Bill. We find out more about the Bride and her relationship with Bill before the massacre put her on the warpath, to begin with. First, she tries to kill Budd, AKA Sidewinder, but the plan fails, and she gets trapped underground in a coffin.

During this time, we get a flashback seeing how the bride was taught how to fight. Back when she and Bill were still lovers, he dropped her off at the temple of Pai Mei, Bill’s former master, to receive more formal training. Before Bill leaves, he gives her warnings about Pai Mei and his… less than pleasant personality. “He hates Caucasians. Despises Americans and has nothing but contempt for women.” Despite hearing this, she proceeds onward, and when she meets Pai Mei, he’s everything Bill said he was. Worst of all, much to the bride’s and the audience’s surprise, he kicks her ass easily in a fight but then again, he was the one who trained her, so it was also expected. We then see a montage of the bride’s training, and boy is it brutal. But we do see that over time, Pai Mei sees how hard she’s working without any complaint, gradually making a lot of progress and respecting her more in turn, even though she represents everything he hates.

When the bride does eventually get out of the coffin using the one-inch punch taught to her by Pai Mei in the flashback, Elle Driver, AKA California King Snake, comes to Budd’s trailer and kills him using a real black mamba. We finally get the Bride’s real name: Beatrix Kiddo. Elle and Beatrix have a battle during which Elle says she killed Pai Mei by poisoning his fish heads after snatching out her eye, though to be fair, Elle called him a miserable old fool. Beatrix avenges him by plucking out Elle’s remaining eye and squishing it, leaving her blind with the black mamba. Beatrix had a shred of remorse for killing O-Ren and Vernita, but she felt no remorse for Elle.

Beatrix’s final fight with billImage provided by The Code Is Zeek

Beatrix’s final fight with bill

Image provided by The Code Is Zeek

By the time she finally finds Bill, she gets caught by surprise when she sees… her daughter, who is still alive with him (Hey, I did warn you about spoilers). And when they put BB to bed, Bill and Beatrix have a discussion before their final battle ending with her saying “You and I have unfinished business.” Bill replies “Baby, you ain’t kidding.” and Beatrix kills him with the five-palm exploding heart technique (another move taught to her by Pai Mei). Although you couldn’t tell, Beatrix still loved Bill despite everything, even sharing a heartfelt goodbye with her crying in a mix of relief and sorrow.

But in the end, Beatrix has things work out for her and her daughter. But keep in mind, revenge is the solution to some things; it’s not the solution to everything.


IMG_0351.jpg

Jhadiva Elliott

Hi, my name is Jhadiva. I’m a college student studying Professional Writing and the technical editor of this group.

My hobbies are writing, watching movies and karate. My favorite genres to write about and watch are horror, action, thriller, mystery and fantasy. I enjoy being creative and I find the flawed characters of stories to be the most interesting.

How Sunset Shimmer went from Villain to Hero


We’ve all asked ourselves this question at some point in our lives: is redemption possible, and if so, how do we get it? I will be breaking down and analyzing what goes through a redemption arc: Sunset Shimmer, the main antagonist of My Little Pony: Equestria Girls movie. (Spoiler warning)

Image provided by IMDB

Image provided by IMDB

The movie starts when Twilight, the main protagonist, has been adjusting to her royal title as the princess of friendship. While she and her friends are asleep, we see a mysterious figure (Sunset) has infiltrated the castle and attempts to steal Twilight’s crown (also her element of harmony), switching it with a fake replica. Still, luckily, Spike trips her causing Twilight to wake up and see her crown was being stolen, and a chase begins, which ends with Twilight tackling, but the crown falls out the bag ends up passing through a mirror, which turns out to be a portal to another world.

The thief escapes and goes through the portal, and only soon after does Celestia reveal who Sunset Shimmer is. She was a former student who began her studies not long before Twilight, but when Sunset did not get what she wanted as quickly as she liked, she turned cruel and dishonest. No matter how much Celestia tried to help, Sunset decided to abandon her studies and pursue her own path. So far, we have established our villain; now, it’s up to Twilight to follow Sunset into the other world and get her crown back.

When Twilight gets to the other world (the human high school world) and manages to find Sunset, Twilight, and we see it’s clear that she’s as cruel as Celestia said and a definite bully. She’s at the top of the food chain, winning every school competition and is widespread. When Twilight wins the crown and tries to return home, Sunset holds Spike hostage and threatens to destroy the portal if Twilight doesn’t give her what she wants. When Twilight refuses, a fight ensues and ends with Sunset wearing the crown, turning into a demon and mind-controlling the other students into taking over Equestria.

Twilight and her friends manage to defeat her and save the day; Sunset comes out of the crater as a tear-streaked, remorseful mess. Despite everything, Twilight is willing to give Sunset a chance to learn about friendship and leaves in the care of her new friends, helping to clean up the messes she made. However, we don’t see this concept develop any further until the sequel.

By the time we see Sunset again, she has become an outcast due to the previous film’s events, with only the rest of the Mane Six (except Twilight) willing to be her friend. Though Sunset appears to be okay, at this point, she is unsure of herself and where she stands, which later becomes a problem when the group begins to fall apart and doesn’t say anything because she doesn’t feel like she has a say in the group. It isn’t until the climax when the group gets into a massive argument, that Sunset finally speaks up and says what she had been feeling his whole time and is the one who gives the lesson rather than Twilight.

In the finale, Sunset rises against the villains and helps the Mane Six defeat them. Does she finally feel like she’s part of the team? Yes, she does. I admire Sunset’s development because she genuinely learned from her mistakes and didn’t fall back into old habits throughout the film. Even trying not to fall in the rabbit hole of harsh but true remarks that the current villains say about her.

Sunset finally becoming part of the groupImage provided by TVTROPES.com

Sunset finally becoming part of the group

Image provided by TVTROPES.com

The way I see it, redemption is possible (for most people) and the way to get it is by first expressing remorse for any evil deed, then asking and wondering, “what can I do to make things right?” and actually doing those things so you can make up for your past mistakes and show that you can and will be redeemed.


Jhadiva Elliott

Hi, my name is Jhadiva. I’m a college student studying Professional Writing and the technical editor of this group. My hobbies are writing, watching movies and karate. My favorite genres to write about and watch are horror, action, thriller, mystery and fantasy. I enjoy being creative and I find the flawed characters of stories to be the most interesting.