Friday, June 22, 2012

Who Is Your Number One Antihero?

Antihero: A protagonist whose character is contrary to that of the archetypal hero, yet typically retains many heroic qualities. They are bad, but not evil. They often fight villains, but not out of a sense of justice. They do it for selfish reasons, for personal gain, for revenge, and they're often amoral and lack positive qualities. The trope has been around for centuries, obviously, but series' long antiheroes are relatively new to the television medium, finding popularity in characters like Tony Soprano and Spike from "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel." Typically, for an anti-hero to be successful on television, there needs to be an opposing villain who is much worse.


Boyd Crowder, "Justified" -- Crowder is also a tough nut to crack. He is not above evil deeds, but he is not an evil character, either. He has at times been depicted as racist, xenophobic, a drug-dealing religious nutjob, and a ruthless killer, but part of what allows him to be a antihero is the fact that there are more evil opponents than him on "Justified," plus his friendship with the show's hero, Raylan Givens, makes him sympathetic. He's much like one of the all-time great anti-heroes, Omar Little, in that he's evil, but likable because he abides by a code and has a strong sense of loyalty.


Check out the list of anti-heroes by going here. I love that they included that little bastard Cartman on the list. He is pure genius. I can watch him orchestrate his shenanigans all day long. His brilliance as a character is only balanced by his truly evil twisted nature. If not for himself, Cartman would rule the world. He always gets distracted at his moment of victory - his brand of failure is delicious to me.


8 comments:

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

Malcolm Reynolds from "Firefly" if we're talking about "Classic" television.

I also hope that when they adapt when they adapt Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger into Power Rangers Pirates in 2015, that they keep the protagonist's self centered attitudes. Seeing antiheroic Power Rangers was an absolute treat compared to the usual bland altruism of the US Franchise. Such contrary charteristics gave them greater depth and development throughout the season and cemented my interest in the Japanese side of the series.

Kal said...

Is Malcolm really an evil guy though? He will give up the money if it means doing the wrong thing to get it.

I always wanted to see how different those power ranger series were in Japan and the US. They must have been totally sanitized on our side of the pond.

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

"I aim to misbehave." Mal's not evil, just human.

Its interesting to compare and contrast US vs Japan Power Rangers material. It all depends which season you watch. Seasons like the US's Wild Force vs Japan's Gaoranger are more or less the same.

But then you get something like Japan's lighthearted "Go-Onger" which features the rangers and their talking cars fighting robot villains who routinely sing about their evil plans. Compare that against its stateside adaptation as "Power Rangers RPM" which used the same footage but was much darker. Here most of the world has been nuked by a Skynet style computer which seeks to capture and convert humans into cyborg soldiers. The Rangers defend a city of refugees with the aid of a preteen supergenius who has spent most of her life getting her brain poked in a government lab.

Stuff like that can make your head spin.

Kal said...

I prefer the simple stories we got. Everyone just wore the same color and the robot was the good guy.

DrGoat said...

I saw the list and I'm going with Boyd.

D.I. Felipe González said...

Heisenberg is the one.
Followed closely by Cartman.

Debra She Who Seeks said...

My favourite anti-hero is Stewie Griffin and he didn't even make the friggin' list! What the deuce?

Kal said...

It's the accent. He sounds too 'ethnic' for American audiences. I would love to see a Cartman/Stewie match-up.