Analysis Of Villainous Rescue: Rescue By Hero

1281 Words3 Pages

Saivikash Nalli
Eng-112
Final Paper
Villainous Rescue: Rescue by Hero

It’s the hero’s job to save person in distress from the bad guys, but sometimes it’s the bad guys who are in danger. We see a similar pattern that repeats in almost every movie and T.V. This “Villainous Rescue” trope we see when the hero rescues the villain. It shows how the hero character is good and even shows the mercy towards the villain. This trope has change over time because in early 2000’s most fiction works that had villains rescued by heroes converted to become good guys, but in modern times the trope had evolved over time because most modern villains that are saved by the heroes stay villains.
I have seen many movies to prove my point that villainous rescue, and how it is helpful …show more content…

The final episode of this show. During the final battle between Ezra (hero) and Tseebo (villain). It was in the top of the big building, and the Tseebo about to fall off and he were holding on to the cliff. Ezra don’t want to kill him, he was about to save Tseebo. But before he let it go of himself, he said, “You have no idea what you unleashed today, there are something far more freighting than death” and then he let it go. He fell of from the building into the fire. Ezra facial expression shows that he doesn’t want to kill him. He was kind of sad about it and he was knelling down to get him. I think they show us this scene because they don’t want us to see that Ezra is bad. They also show the emotion when Tseebo fell of the cliff on Ezra’s face to tell that felt sympathy of the villain’s death. So, he can be a good character. At the end of the season one they show preview of the season two. In that preview Tseebo was survived and he put the some kind of mask, I think because of the fire. They showed him with anger because he eyes are red color and they were become brighter, and his scary mask tells the he was become more evil than

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