Basic Blonde Boy
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2021
Avatar is typically credited as the best villain redemption series in western animation, and for good reason. Zuko was a character constantly teetering on the side of good. I think many neglect that fact when trying to parrot him. Zuko was a confused teen from an abusive household, but inside was never evil, just trying to justify himself to his father. The show also went to great lengths to show his good nature while he was a villain. He protected his crew rather than pursuing the Avatar, protected the village from bandits, saved the Avatar multiple times, and his arc in Ba Sing Se played up his humanity greatly. It also helped that his origin was him making a humane call to save the lives of men, which angered his war lord father. By all accounts, Zuko was a good person thrust into a complex situation, and his actions reflect that.
Iroh is a different form. Iroh was a ruthless war lord back in his day, but you really see how blatantly unaware of the damage he is causing was. As such, he suffered for his poor traits and had to learn to humble himself. His kid dying from his own decisions was a massive punishment for his character and the correcting he performed was even larger.
Avatar had two distinct redemptions. Where it succeeds where its followers fail is that one is shown to be good throughout the series, so his redemption was for seen from the start, and the other suffered and had to undergo a character 180 to be redeemed. Many redemptions now are too simple. The character is a monster that just says I will stop. There is no loss, no showing of compassion in the past, and no worldview change. They are simply redeemed.
Before I end off, I want to discuss my favorite redemption, one that really isn’t a redemption. In you initial post you say @Oats12345, but there is one character where this was done extremely well in modern times:
Ice King! Fucking Ice King! The definition in how a retcon practically saved a character and built him to be the best part of the show. The Simon plot line was a random addition, but by God did it change Ice King for the better.
Ice King is my favorite villain redemption, mostly because it isn’t. Ice King is actually never redeemed, but rather the characters learn to deal with him better. Going back, I absolutely love how mature and well done they handled this plot line, and I like how it fits into AT’s larger themes of maturity. At the start, Ice King is a bumbling joke villain just there for Finn to pick on. Then the Simon plot gets revealed, and we start to see dynamics shift. Finn is still apprehensive towards him, but sympathizes a lot more. By the later parts of the series Finn starts acting like a parent and friend to the Ice King. This is one of my favorite scenes to highlight that:
I love this redemption as it is pretty much the opposite of one. Ice King doesn’t change, Finn changes and learns to deal with him better, and as such Ice King is way less hostile. Ice King is an old man clearly suffering from mental lapses and dementia, him being a villain is the by product of things out of his control. Finn learns to recognize this more over the course of the series and starts accommodating for him. Along with Finn, characters like Marceline and Bubblegum also seem to accommodate for his condition, though on lesser scales. I really like this switch up and I believe it made for the perfect, “they aren’t really evil” trope. Ice King isn’t evil. He is an old man clearly suffering and ostracized for such, whether right or wrong. The redemption being that characters learn to work around his faults and include him more is honestly a really interesting change to the trope. Given that many do suffer conditions similar to Ice King, especially elderly people, it is a really sweet and kinda mature way of handling a redemption. Again, Ice King never changes as he has multiple relapses to prove that. He can’t change, but others can learn to work with him and nullify the bad, and in the end, it created some very sweet relationships between him and the rest of the cast.
While I am glad Simon got to be saved, I honestly feel like leaving him to just being Ice King would have been equally as good of a move given how much the show highlighted that he was a different entity but worthy of as much care.
Iroh is a different form. Iroh was a ruthless war lord back in his day, but you really see how blatantly unaware of the damage he is causing was. As such, he suffered for his poor traits and had to learn to humble himself. His kid dying from his own decisions was a massive punishment for his character and the correcting he performed was even larger.
Avatar had two distinct redemptions. Where it succeeds where its followers fail is that one is shown to be good throughout the series, so his redemption was for seen from the start, and the other suffered and had to undergo a character 180 to be redeemed. Many redemptions now are too simple. The character is a monster that just says I will stop. There is no loss, no showing of compassion in the past, and no worldview change. They are simply redeemed.
Before I end off, I want to discuss my favorite redemption, one that really isn’t a redemption. In you initial post you say @Oats12345, but there is one character where this was done extremely well in modern times:
I really want to focus on the end point about retcons as it can be done well.Because most of the time writers think that means a character can't be a villain anymore for instance Loki and alot of times there even retcon shit just to show that " said villain was never really evil the whole time"
Ice King! Fucking Ice King! The definition in how a retcon practically saved a character and built him to be the best part of the show. The Simon plot line was a random addition, but by God did it change Ice King for the better.
Ice King is my favorite villain redemption, mostly because it isn’t. Ice King is actually never redeemed, but rather the characters learn to deal with him better. Going back, I absolutely love how mature and well done they handled this plot line, and I like how it fits into AT’s larger themes of maturity. At the start, Ice King is a bumbling joke villain just there for Finn to pick on. Then the Simon plot gets revealed, and we start to see dynamics shift. Finn is still apprehensive towards him, but sympathizes a lot more. By the later parts of the series Finn starts acting like a parent and friend to the Ice King. This is one of my favorite scenes to highlight that:
While I am glad Simon got to be saved, I honestly feel like leaving him to just being Ice King would have been equally as good of a move given how much the show highlighted that he was a different entity but worthy of as much care.