I hate incredibly stupid trope of a villain who thoughtlessly kills people all the time, especially their subordinates. Unless the person is a psychopath and killing is basically the point of their villainy, then they should never do this.
Why? Because murder tends to create more problems that it solves, and they lose well trained personnel.
In terms of organised crime, killing subordinates is done for a specific purpose- when a person has become a traitor and all the rest need to see it as an example to so no one else does the same thing, or to solve internal power struggles. There's usually good reasons for taking such harsh measures. They don't just kill a person because they make a joke or wear the wrong pants…
Darth Vader kills a general in the first Star wars movie to show the audience how dangerous he is, to indicate how evil the empire is, but also (within the story) it's to consolidate his power at a high level within the military structure.
In those examples there are good in-universe reasons for killing.
I was just watching a series called "The Catch". A character who is the head of a high profile international criminal organisation thoughtlessly murders subordinates and rivals. It's a great example of piss poor writing.
The reason they do it is to show that he's a psychopath with no regard for human life, but within the world of the story what it actually does is undermine the character-
By killing trusted subordinates he losses experience, training, and loyalty, weakening the structure of his organisation.
By needlessly killing low level enemies it undermines his own premise- why does he need to be the head of a criminal organisation that constructs clever cons to steal millions if he's perfectly happy to murder (and deal with the complications that causes), he can simply slaughter his way to what he wants…
In reality that type of behaviour would mark them for death within their own organisation.
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The trope of villain who kills their subordinates constantly is stupid
It's a weakness in writing for sure, and for the villain boss character, a risky action – unless he's surrounded by a hardcore bodyguard group he never touches, who will shoot any subordinate who attempts revenge for the death of the guy he just killed. Or maybe it's allowed if the victim is an outsider, separate from his inner henchmen cadre. Click, trapdoor, piranhas, the penalty for failure. Everybody else, pull your socks up! YASSSS BOSS!
Pre modern world life was a lot cheaper and a powerful person could kill subordinates as they wanted.
Reading some Anglo-Saxon history and they usually killed everybody whenever they overcame someone. Put them all to the sword. The Normans were a breath of fresh air because they just imprisoned people because there were the first slivers of chivalry.
But a modern crime boss? He's going to run out of followers.
bravo1102 wrote:People considered enemies perhaps yes, but not people in general, your own villagers or family or subordinates.
Pre modern world life was a lot cheaper and a powerful person could kill subordinates as they wanted.
Reading some Anglo-Saxon history and they usually killed everybody whenever they overcame someone.
It's a trope that all life was cheap in the past but there are a lot of reasons it wasn't…
- We've had legality for as long as there have been people, and killing unlawfully was punishable. Even in the simplest tribal groups.
Now the big caveat is that it could be lawful for a lot of reasons, like the person was part of an enemy culture or ethnicity, they went against the king or ruler, they're a slave or a prisoner or hostage, they did something criminal. etc.
- Incurring revenge and feuds was a good reason not to kill. BUT once you HAVE incurred them then they would drive people to kill, but not randomly.
- Life really wasn't that cheap, there weren't as many people around, man-power was important, people were living repositories of valuable skills, and family connections were important.
Though it depended on the culture. Roman emperors seemed to get away with a lot… till they didn't.
I only had a villain kill someone who worked for him once, but that was because he had betrayed his employer by trying to change the deal.
The villain tasked a thief to get something, but the thief decided to take the money, steal the thing, and then try to sell it elsewhere. Didn't work out for him.
Except that with modern research techniques they've found that there was actually depopulation larger than previously thought. At one time it was thought to be exaggerated or extreme and life really wasn't all that cheap and now with more detailed means at hand to count a population impact on the land– oh boy, it really was that bad.
The trope has turned out to be true as more research is done using various ways to see the impact of population on the land. Like William the Conqueror's "harrying the land" as it's called in the Anglo-Saxon chronicles. Definite population decreases all documented. Same seen any number of other occasions, even down to blood feuds wiping out families.
But someone in power could kill wantonly. He'd be labeled and censured but he would still kill. There were some who literally had to kill something every day. The books are full of people in charge killing their minions. You don't kill a skilled minion or an important flunky, but there's always some worthless skank around to kill because you can. People will care, might call in a religious type to curb your impulses and make you do penance but the killing will happen.
So if you have a psycho in charge there can be wanton killing. People scurrying around trying to covef it up, but an awful lot of inconvenient people conveniently dying is a sign that there's some killing going on.
But there are always consequences. That is what makes for better story telling. Life is still cheap but there are consequences. It depends on who you are and who you kill. You don't kill the craftsman but there are always others. And then you wonder why the taxes are down. Because you killed everyone!
bravo1102 wrote:I think your interpretation is off here-
Except that with modern research techniques they've found that there was actually depopulation larger than previously thought. At one time it was thought to be exaggerated or extreme and life really wasn't all that cheap and now with more detailed means at hand to count a population impact on the land– oh boy, it really was that bad.
They could kill people from another culture, ethnicity, or rival group with a different political affiliation, but killing your own people, even by someone in power, wasn't the norm.
It WAS the norm (at times) to utterly wipe out people considered as enemies.
It's exactly like the tribal groups in most places were more than happy to completely wipe out every member of any other group, down to children and pets, but harming a member of their own group was a completely different matter.
So "life" wasn't cheap, but your enemy's lives were.
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In places like India you have the caste system where the lives of different groups are worth different amounts, with Dalits at the bottom. But it's a highly regulated, organised system even so.
In the USA traditionally black people have had justice applied to them in an unequal manner, the same with the native peoples, so their lives were seen as not being equal to "white" lives.
Then we have Ukrainians at the moment- the West sees their lives as being worth a lot (the Russians don't), while the West considered Afghanis and Iraqis to have much less worth…
It's a long way of saying the we have the same system in place now that the Anglo Saxons did in the dark ages. :)
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Yes, "Consequences" are the important thing.
When there are no consequences for a killing, the killing lacks meaning. This can be waved away if the person was an enemy during a war-like situation, but when it's not and there are still no consequences then things start to unravel and the story will stop making sense.
bravo1102 wrote:
Pre modern world life was a lot cheaper and a powerful person could kill subordinates as they wanted.
Reading some Anglo-Saxon history and they usually killed everybody whenever they overcame someone. Put them all to the sword. The Normans were a breath of fresh air because they just imprisoned people because there were the first slivers of chivalry.
But a modern crime boss? He's going to run out of followers.
Yeah, there is a reason that Roman emperors were usually assassinated and it wasn't because they were great people.
Ozoneocean wrote:
So "life" wasn't cheap, but your enemy's was.
But the reasons for one being the enemy could be awfully flimsy. Anglo-Saxon you were outlawed – put outside the law so anyone could kill you.
Whole areas could be outlawed so that anything could be done. Burn and pillage indiscriminately. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles said they were "our people" the leadership disagreed. Look at the original documents and Chronicles. Puts lie to your point. Say someone is outside the law for any reason and they could have anything done to them.
The same with lynching in the US. See any number of works on Reconstruction and African-American history. Still killing but you say they aren't your people when they are.
And the archbishop was asked what were the crusaders to do if there were true believers among the heretics.
"Oh kill them all, God will know his own."
Any reason was good enough to say a group or individual wasn't "our people" so they could be killed. Not very convincing that the killing wasn't indiscriminate even to contemporaries let alone modern sensibilities.
OzoneoceanYou know this topic has got me thinking about what to do in my current comic. What if someone thought there were too many consequences and decided to form his own nation so there wouldn't be any anymore. So he could decide who's the enemy any way he wants to so he can kill indiscriminately. He's now the law.
Yes, "Consequences" are the important thing.
When there are no consequences for a killing, the killing lacks meaning. This can be waved away if the person was an enemy during a war-like situation, but when it's not and there are still no consequences then things start to unravel and the story will stop making sense.
But make very certain to remove all those who would disagree. Cover his butt better than a Nero or Caligula. Make sure there are enough folks honestly praising you who have lots of power, alienate and kill the powerless and rule. All the people who matter love you and those who don't you kill. Any reason will do.
But there is always someone keeping score and so you're never safe and so begins the vicious circle of paranoia that eventually so worries those once closest to you that you have to be removed before you kill them. Consequences.
I agree with you about a villain killing off their underlings. What a stupid, passé steriotype. I know, there’s that whole Machiavelli thing about, “is it better to be loved or feared.” If I was a professional worker in a mob operation, and my boss was killing off my coworkers, and I screwed up on a job, I wouldn’t be going back to see the boss at best, or I would be killing the S.O.B. at worst.
Any kind operation has its own possibility of success or failure. It’s all liquid. And, your coworkers will pay attention how the boss handles those.
I thought it was badass in The Empire Strikes Back when Darth Vader would choke out his underlings. It showed how the Empire was made up of a bunch of useless Yes Men. There were a thousand dull-witted gray coats running around, but there were only a few like Vader and Grand Moff Tarkin and they were streets ahead.
Then there was that idiot General Zod who wanted to save the Kryptonians and decided it was a good idea to assassinate Jor-El while he was trying to do the same thing. Years later Zod tries to revive his people and decides to fight Jor-El's son to the death because he also wants to revive his people.
Just stop fighting for 5 minutes and you will realize you are on the same side. Seriously guys.
sleeping_gorilla wrote:It's nuanced for me in Star Wars. You can see they're not useless fodder, they're all very high ranking, important people. Vader gets away with killing that guy because of his weird, super special status, and Takin tolerates him. I Like that the giant, super special overboss guy actually has someone who is even more superior than him (in Tarkin), before the stupid emperor shows up.
I thought it was badass in The Empire Strikes Back when Darth Vader would choke out his underlings. It showed how the Empire was made up of a bunch of useless Yes Men. There were a thousand dull-witted gray coats running around, but there were only a few like Vader and Grand Moff Tarkin and they were streets ahead.
It's not that they are useless Yes-men, it's that Darth Vader is a very unusual figure, not part of the usual military order… he's something more special and dangerous.
That's where that kind of killing works. If it was Tarkin killing someone it'd be bad because he'd be messing up the order of which he's part and which gives him his power, so he'd be undercutting himself. With Vader it makes sense
It's not that they are useless Yes-men, it's that Darth Vader is a very unusual figure,
Yes-men is not quite the term. They were high-ranking officers, but uncreative. Officers in the Empire were always watching their backs for the ambitious subordinate trying to gain their position. Darth Vader was the special inquisitor and effectively the voice of the Emperor and could do what he wanted.
One of the things I did not like in the Obi-Wan series was that Vader kept rewarding Third Sister for failure. She would completely screw things up and she he would promote her.
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