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Wednesday, April 24, 2024

A To Z Blogging Challenge 2024 - Villains! - V Is For Voldemort

 



Voldemort, known to his followers as the Dark Lord, is the main villain of the Harry Potter series. The people of the wizarding community call him “You know who”. In the last book, he has made sure to find anyone who uses his name.


We can think of him as the Hitler of the wizarding world. His followers are called Death Eaters, tattooed with the Dark Mark that will let them know when he wants them.


Voldemort was born Tom Riddle, a member of a family that is descended from Salazar Slytherin,  one of the founders of the wizarding school, Hogwarts, the one who believed those not born to pure Wizarding families shouldn’t be allowed to study magic, but they are poverty-stricken and when we see them in a flashback, they are basically the poor, unpleasant Ewells from To Kill A Mockingbird. Merope, Tom’s mother, falls in love with the local squire’s son and wins him using a love potion. When the effects run out, he leaves her to give birth and die in an orphanage, where Tom is brought up.


It would be easy to feel some sympathy for this orphan, due to his sad background, but when Professor Dumbledore comes to the orphanage to invite him to Hogwarts, he is uncomfortable to realise that this child has already done some very nasty things to his fellow orphans. Still, he accepts him for the school, though, as Voldemort says later, he never trusts him, unlike the other staff, who think Tom is lovely. They consider him a hardworking student who has made the best of his life. But Tom uses this to get the gentle Hagrid, then a third year student, accused of opening the Chamber of Secrets, where a basilisk lives. The problem for Hagrid is that he loves animals any animals, including even giant spiders. He has his wand taken and snapped, though he later gets a job as groundskeeper.


Tom leaves a diary with the voice of his sixteen year old self. Later, his Death Eater follower Lucius Malfoy, father of Harry’s enemy Draco Malfoy, slips it into the cauldron of Ron Weasley’s younger sister, Ginny, getting her nearly killed.


When Voldemort has unsuccessfully tried to kill Harry Potter as a baby, his spell rebounds on him, leaving him alive, but without a body. He is brought back properly in the fourth novel, Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire, when his minion Peter Pettigrew manages to get Harry within reach. 


Later, when the Death Eaters(read Nazis) have taken over the wizarding world, he makes sure Muggleborn, ie not pureblood wizards, are arrested and tried. 


Eventually he is killed in a final duel with Harry. There are some mixups over the Elder Wand, which is supposed to make its user invincible. He had killed double agent Severus Snape because he assumed Snape had been the “master of the wand.” He hadn’t. 


A couple of things: Voldemort had created “Horcruxes” to keep himself safe, killing people to insert a bit of his soul into different objects - a bit like Koschei the Undying(See my post about Koschei). 


He had tried unsuccessfully to get a job teaching Defence Against The Dark Arts at Hogwarts, so created a spell that ensured nobody else ever got the job for more than a year. An interesting explanation for why every novel had a different teacher of that subject! 


Also interestingly, the author seems to have at least a small amount of sympathy for him, describing him and Harry as the two orphans for whom Hogwarts was home. 


Tomorrow, W Is For Wanda Maximoff! 

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

A To Z 2024 - Villains! - U Is For Utgard-Loki

 

Utgard-Loki. Public Domain



Today’s visit will be to Norse mythology, in the Eddas. Utgard-Loki is not the Loki we know and love. He is the king of a group of giants living in a castle in Jotunheim, the land of the giants. 


Really, he isn’t particularly evil, just cheeky. But he does humiliate Thor, Loki and Thor’s servant, a young boy called Thjalfi. 


Travelling through Jotunheim, our heroes encounter a giant who introduces himself as Skrymir. They take shelter for the night in what turns out to be Skrymir’s glove. He snores loudly all night. When Thor tries to shut him up with his hammer Mjolnir, the giant murmurs in his sleep that an acorn must have fallen off the tree. Skrymir is Utgard-Loki. 


They journey on to the castle, where they are made welcome, but are expected to show what they can do to be allowed to stay.


 Thjalfi, an excellent runner, races with a young giant, Hugi, and loses.


 Loki, who is very good at eating, challenges a giant called Loge to an eating race. He manages to eat an entire meal at amazing speed, but the man competing with him gets through the meal and the plate in the same time.


Then it’s Thor’s turn. Utgard-Loki sneers at him. Thor challenges the giants to a drinking competition, which he loses despite three huge gulps from the drinking horn. Utgard-Loki suggests, laughing, that he try lifting the castle cat, but he is only able to lift a paw, which must be humiliating for someone who is proud of his strength. 


Finally, Utgard-Loki suggests that he will go easy on Thor  by having him wrestle Utgard-Loki’s old nurse, Elli. But the old lady is a lot tougher than she looks. Thor can’t beat her. 


The party is only too glad to leave next morning after their humiliation. Utgard-Loki walks with them.


He tells them that they did a lot better than they realised. Instead of destroying Skrymir, Thor created some valleys with his hammer blows.


Hugi is Thought, and nobody can outrun thought, not even young Thjalfi.


Loki was challenged by Fire, so of course it ate the dish! 


Thor was trying to drink the sea. He couldn’t finish it, but he did create tides.


The cat was the Midgard Serpent. Even lifting its paw was impressive.


The old woman he wrestled was Old Age, which nobody can defeat. 


Utgard-Loki is extremely disturbed by how well they did and lets them know that they are not welcome to return! At this point, Thor swings his hammer at the giant, but he disappears, as does his castle.


Utgard-Loki appears in one of Rick Riordan’s Magnus Chase novels, very annoyed at how many people get him mixed up with the better-known Loki. That Loki, by the way, really is a villain in the Magnus Chase trilogy, not the MCU anti-hero-to-hero, or the likeable rogue of the later comics. 


See you tomorrow for V is for Voldemort! 

A To Z Blogging Challenge 2024 - Villains! - T Is For Thanos

 Thanos is a major MCU villain. I haven’t read the comics, so will stick to the films. He is a part of the Infinity Saga, in which the Avengers have to fight him.


Unlike other villains, he is not interested in ruling the universe - in fact, once he has done his dreadful deed, he retires to a farm. 


He is a villain who thinks he is the good guy. Okay, most villains think they have the right to do what they are doing, but he really thinks he is helping! Never mind that nobody asked him to help in this way, or wants him to.


Thanos is on a quest for the six Infinity Stones. Once he gets them, he can put them on a gauntlet and snap half of the universe out of existence. His argument is that there are not enough resources for everyone, so why not get rid of half and then the rest can have enough. He has minions, of course, and an army, plus two adopted daughters, Gamora and Nebula, from worlds he has already cut down. He has encouraged them to fight each other and has punished Nebula savagely for every fight she lost. 


 In quest of one stone on Earth, he sends an invasion fleet to New York, led by Loki. Another stone, the Soul Stone, is on Vormir, guarded by Red Skull(see R Is For Red Skull). When Red Skull tells him the only way he can get the stone is to sacrifice what he loves most, he shoves Gamora off a cliff. Who wants that kind of love? 


He finally gets them all and snaps his fingers. The result is devastating, of course. Among the people turned to dust are Peter Parker - Spider-Man - and Dr Strange. Both return after the Avengers’ Time Heist in the next movie, when they collect the Infinity Stones from the past - Thanos has destroyed them. Dr Strange returns to find, to his annoyance, that he has been replaced as Sorcerer Supreme. 


Of course, Thanos gets a taste of his own medicine…


He appears in an episode of the animated series What If…? In that episode, Wakandan Prince T’Challa(hero of Black Panther) is accidentally carried off, as a child, by the Ravagers instead of Peter Quill(Guardians Of The Galaxy). T’Challa takes over the band of misfits and becomes a sort of space Robin Hood, much admired. Thanos is one of his band. T’Challa has talked him out of carrying out his genocidal plans, though he still thinks it’s a good idea. Nebula is whole, and they have a good relationship.


So, even a villain can reform, right?




Sunday, April 21, 2024

A To Z Blogging Challenge - Villains! - S Is For Servalan

 



Supreme Commander Servalan is the main villain of British SF TV series Blake’s 7. 


Blake’s 7 is set in a dystopian future centuries after a nuclear war. People are still living under domes, though the nuclear fallout is long over - and the government makes sure it stays that way. Despite that, there is a rebel movement, led by Roj Blake, who was on his way to a penal colony when he and his comrades escaped on a wonderful alien ship, the Liberator


Servalan is the head of the military forces of the evil Federation.  She doesn’t wear a uniform, though, but seems to be in a different ball gown in every episode. She is, of course, after the Liberator, and is hoping for help from Blake’s computer expert, Kerr Avon. Avon is the one who is always talking about betraying his friends, and how stupid Blake’s rebellion is, but in the end, she uses his care for Blake to get her way.


In the third season of the show, Servalan becomes President of the Federation, though she is backstabbed by someone else who wants the job.  By Season 4, she has been rumoured to be dead and is posing as “Commissioner Sleer”, still in ball gowns, but all black ones.


Servalan is only too happy to backstab and betray to get what she wants, including her second in command, Space Commander Travis. He is definitely not a nice man, and she makes use of his obsession with Blake, but he doesn’t deserve what she does to him. In one episode, while he is under arrest, we meet a former soldier of his, who respects him highly. Whether Servalan’s troops respect her is unclear, but it’s unlikely. For her, only her needs are important, and she doesn’t care who dies.


Servalan is a Villain with a capital V.


SF author Lois McMaster Bujold, a Blake’s 7 fan, created a character based on Servalan for one of her Miles Vorkosigan space operas, The Vor Game. Cavilo is the villain of that novel, and leader of a mercenary fleet. She is small and blonde, where Servalan is dark, but very like her in personality. She even appears in one scene wearing a costume that looks like one worn by Servalan in the Blake’s 7 episode “Gambit”,  bright red with a stiff upstanding collar around her. She captures Miles and his cousin Gregor, Emperor of the planet Barrayar, and decides she can dump the fleet and marry the Emperor. She doesn’t succeed, being the villain, of course, but it is a very Servalan thing to do. 


Though if she succeeded, Servalan would arrange a nice  assassination soon after becoming Empress. 


If you want to see what Servalan - and hence Cavilo  - looks like in that red dress, here is a link.


https://archivetvmusings.blog/2015/10/18/blakes-7-gambit/


Saturday, April 20, 2024

A To Z Blogging Challenge 2024 - Villains! - R Is For Red Skull And Ravonna Renslayer

 Today I am talking about two villains from the MCU. I only know them from the films, not having read those comics in particular, so those are the versions I will discuss. 


Red Skull is the nickname for Nazi officer Johann Schmidt, in the MCU. He first appears in Captain America: The First Avenger, which was set during World War II. He is nicknamed Red Skull because, after taking a super soldier serum, he goes red. 


Schmidt starts HYDRA, an evil Nazi organisation. Although he doesn’t stick around, HYDRA is still there in the present day, taking over the government agency SHIELD. 


He manages to acquire the Tesseract, a blue cube that contains the Space Stone, later used by the villain Thanos as one of six Infinity Stones which he uses to snap half the world out of existence. (And a variant of Loki uses it to escape after his attack on New York). 


He sends a HYDRA agent to kill Dr Erskine, creator of the super soldier serum that turns ninety pound weakling Steve Rogers into Captain America. As he succeeds, there isn’t, for the moment, any more of the serum, leaving Steve Rogers as the sole superhero of his kind. 


Schmidt tries to use a fleet of planes to bomb world cities, but is defeated by Steve. The Tesseract cube breaks up enough to make him touch the Space Stone. He disappears, assumed dead.


However, he ends up on the planet Vormir as guardian of the Soul Stone, another of the Infinity Stones. Anybody who wants it has to sacrifice something he loves. For Thanos, that’s his adoptive daughter Gamora, who’d been snatched from her friends in the Guardians of the Galaxy. 


What happens to Red Skull after that isn’t clear. Anyway, not a nice man! 


Ravonna Renslayer is the villain of the TV series Loki. In the first of two seasons, she is a judge in the Time Variance Authority, an organisation that exists outside of time, to keep a single Sacred Timeline going and wiping out any other. They have analysts, “Minutemen”(the soldiers) and boring old office workers, all of whom believe they were created by beings known as the Timekeepers. They weren’t, of course. They were, as they eventually discover, variants, stolen from their own timelines which were blown up.


Ravonna Renslayer, who had been Rebecca Tourminet, a vice principal on the Sacred Timeline, was a soldier in the TVA before promotion to judge, and led the group that arrested young Sylvie, a Loki variant, as a child while she was playing at being a hero with her toys. When adult Sylvie asks her if she remembers the “nexus event” which resulted  in her arrest, Ravonna smirks and says she doesn’t remember. Judging by that smirk, she is clearly lying; Sylvie was almost certainly arrested for not being interested in being a villain. We don’t get any other hints. 


In the first season of the show, Ravonna kills one of the soldiers, Hunter C-20, for finding out that she - and everyone else - has been lied to by the TVA - and lies about it. When analyst Mobius,  a close friend, says he wants to go home to his old life, she sends him to the Void, at the end of time, along with all those she has sentenced for not following the script. She locks up Hunter B-15, a formerly loyal officer, when she finds out the truth from Sylvie. When Mobius returns, Ravonna packs a bag, saying she is going off in search of free will. 


She returns in Season 2, when we learn that she was one of the two founders of the TVA, who had fought in the multiversal war alongside He Who Remains, a villainous variant of Kang the Conqueror, and then set up the TVA, before he wiped her memory so that she, like everyone else, believed in the Timekeepers. 


No matter what anyone else says to her, nothing persuades her to change her mind. She travels into the past in search of another Kang variant, scientist Victor Timely, to support her in her plans. When he leaves with the good guys, Loki and Mobius, instead, leaving her, she tries other ways. There are people at the TVA who still want to wipe out timelines, but even they realise she just wants to look after her own interests and refuse to join her. She kills them horribly, crushing them to death. 


She ends up in the Void herself - sheer karma! 


There is a skit on YouTube in which Captain America is brought into her courtroom for trying to change history by killing baby Hitler(he fails). He makes an argument as to why what the TVA does is illogical. 


She releases him, embarrassed, and sends him off to be with his beloved Peggy Carter, then complains about Mondays. 


Monday’s  horrible person - Servalan, the villain of Blake’s 7


Thursday, April 18, 2024

A To Z Blogging Challenge 2024 - Villains ! - Q Is For Quirrell

 



Professor Quirinus Quirrell, teacher of Defence Against The Dark Arts in Harry Potter And The Philosopher’s Stone, is the first teacher Harry Potter meets when he is being introduced to Diagon Alley by Hagrid the groundskeeper. He is wearing a turban. There is a reason for that as we learn in the course of the novel and film. 


He seems timid and stammers, gaining the sympathy of Harry and his friends, who suspect Professor Snape as the villain plotting to steal the Philosopher’s Stone hidden in the school. They witness Snape apparently threatening him and take it for bullying. At the school’s Quidditch match, Hermione assumes Snape is casting a spell to knock Harry off his broom, killing him, and distracts him with a fire spell. 


In fact, Snape is protecting Harry from Quirrell, who is next to him and is the one casting the spell. 


In the course of the novel, Quirrell lets loose a troll, which goes to the girls’ toilets, where Hermione is hiding out crying. Fortunately Harry and Ron go to warn her, and Ron finally gets the “Wingardium Leviosa” spell right, knocking out the troll with its own club.


He tries to kill Harry at the Quidditch match.


He kills a unicorn on behalf of his master and drinks its blood, which is meant to bring back life. 


We eventually learn what’s under that turban: the face of Voldemort, whom he met while travelling through Albania, where the villain was hiding out in various animals. 


All this time, he has been playing a part. He is happy to admit that to Harry when they meet under the school, where Harry, Ron and Hermione were on a quest to find and protect the Philosopher’s Stone from being stolen for Voldemort, who needs it to bring himself back to full life. 


Harry finds the stone in his pocket while confronting Quirrell at the Mirror of Erised. That is when Quirrell takes off his turban, revealing the face of the Dark Lord underneath.


Voldemort orders Quirrell to kill Harry, but Harry’s mother’s love has cast a protective spell that doesn’t allow Voldemort - or his host - to touch him. Harry faints, Quirrell dies, abandoned by Voldemort. 


What can we say about him? He’s hosting Voldemort, but not possessed by him. He seems to know what he is saying in that last scene with Harry; he’s speaking for himself, not his master. I see him as one of the many people who has been fooled by whatever persuasion Voldemort has used to gain his followers. Some of those have come to regret it, such as Draco Malfoy. By the end of the series, Draco has lost his enthusiasm for being a Death Eater; Quirrell hasn’t. He might be regretting being forced to touch Harry, which hurts, then kills him, but until then he is desperate to get that stone for his master.


In my opinion, a true villain. What do you think?