It’s interesting to have a hero who is always the right person, and a villain who is always the wrong person as a metaphor for the heroes and villains of our world. In the case of the protagonist of a comic book, the hero is always the right person, because he is always working to solve the problems of the world, because it’s the only way to right wrongs. In a superhero comic book, the hero is the right person because he is always trying to do the right thing. In a superhero movie, the villain is always the wrong person because he is always trying to do the wrong thing. This goes for the hero and villain of our web series, The Case of the Persuasive Protege. After one of the heroes gets in a fight and kills a villain, the other hero doesn’t know why. It’s a bit of a surprise for the other hero, because he didn’t know the hero was being a jerk. Instead, he thought it was “pretty cool that he did it.” Maybe the guy was right. In our series, the villain is definitely the wrong person to end up as the hero’s friend, at least not in this case. That’s kind of a meta point, because what we show you in the first episode is pretty much the whole story arc. We try to put the hero (we’ll call him ‘The Protege’) in situations where he’s at the mercy of the villain. In the first episode, the hero is the protege to a villain who is after the hero for information, but who is really after the hero’s life force. The protege is the hero who is being manipulated by the villain. ![]() The problem with this is, if the protege were to kill the hero, we would have a very different story. ![]() We wouldn’t know who The Protege was, and his motives would have changed. We tried to put the protege in such a scenario last night when he was being manipulated by a villain. The problem was that the villain was too clever to have any real idea of the protege’s true nature. The hero was the protege to the villain, but the protege wasnt being manipulated by the villain. He was being manipulated by the villain but not by the villain.Clyde Ross, photographed in November 2013 in his home in the North Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago, where he has lived for more than 50 years. When he first tried to get a legitimate mortgage, he was denied mortgages were effectively not available to black people.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |