KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
Sammy Boy (post: 1386304) wrote:What about Richard B. Riddick from the Chronicles of Riddick?
ich1990 (post: 1386169) wrote:Teru Mikami (Death Note)
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1387386) wrote:'Cause killing lazy people is totally fine and beneficial to society.
rocklobster wrote:I consider McClane an anti-hero because some of his methods seemed kind of questionable. I mean he got that whole "turn in your badge" schtick at one point in one if not two of the movies.
It's soon after he's given the Death Note, and even Light questions his motives.ich1990 (post: 1387436) wrote:Killing lazy people? I must have missed that part of the story. I was referring to how he contributed to the virtual annihilation of crime.
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1387445) wrote:Also, I wouldn't call a world where everyone is crapping themselves fearing that they'll be killed a desired world.
Hohenheim (post: 1387564) wrote:Macbeth (from Shakespeare's play Macbeth)
Have you read any Frank Miller Batman? He certainly goes into the category under Frank Miller.Batman (even though I don't consider him an Anti-hero)
ich1990 (post: 1386169) wrote:If we are operating under the assumption that an anti-hero is someone who uses means that most people would question, to achieve results that most people would agree is beneficial
The antihero is a character who fills a heroic role despite a lack of certain heroic attributes, including sharing qualities usually associated with villains. A paper-thin example would be a character who is openly misogynistic and spiteful towards women, yet when the chips are down will always save the girl. They're people who ultimately do the right thing, despite appearing (at least superficially) the wrong person for the job.Scarecrow (post: 1386318) wrote:A lot of these these I wouldn't have consider an anti hero perse. But maybe I'm a bit confused of what exactly an anti hero really is. An anti hero I always thought was ... Basically a corrupt character who is the hero of a story and one you're supposed to root for or feel sympathetic towards. Maybe these are just more "extreme" versions of anti-heros. I dunno.
Fish and Chips wrote:Macbeth would actually be more commonly associated as an antivillain - having many good and genuinely sympathetic traits, yet still turning down the path of the wicked of his own accord, to his own demise.
Hohenheim (post: 1387564) wrote:Ben Linus (from the TV show 'Lost')
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