Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-31330278-20190813233236/@comment-31330278-20191204153750

BOT: Taigokumaru's PE proposal is out:

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Markim99/PE_Proposal:_Taigokumaru

Taigo's main competition comes from Naraku and Hakudoshi. However, unlike them, Taigo have relatively scarce resources. Killing his own son with glee just for disapproving his son's choice definitely doesn't help his case. And i'm yet to mention the part that Taigo kept his daughter in law alive just so she could carry on his legacy. Like Carver in his attempts to bring back his unborn baby and corrupt children into becoming like him.

1. Just got to the part where Alastor shoved himself into the hotel. His overall demeanor reminds me of Willy Wonka (Johnny Depp style), even though I would not be hasty about trusting him with a chocolate factory. "I lacked inspiration for decades" is a clever 4th wall reference. The cobra guy would appreciate it. The fictional history favors people with style indeed. Does his dreaded reputation will calm Kate down, or will her spider persona take the better of her reporter persona on that matter? I wonder how Vaggie's flamboyant spider accomplice will handle the presence of someone who's both scarier and possibly funnier.

2. I have a new theory that Beth is one of Milton's birthchildren. She's a complete psychopath just like him (10 out of 12), and i'm sure her parents never truly cared about her, at least not as Jill's mother cared about her. Living on the streets for most of her life, in addition to parental neglection if not abandonment, might indicate that it must be hard for her mother to see the constant reminder of her rape. Having Milton as a birthfather can explain why Beth is misandrist and why she couldn't hide her sociopathic nature the way most of the other killers did. Add that to the fact she never had true friends until she met Amir (she seduced him to have one person who completely believe her, but I do consider the possibility that she wanted to feel desirable), and you got a female Koba.

3. Maybe this good movie could be better with another tragic villain as the protagonist. Joker is a very well-built character, but isn't the first pick for a villain to sympathize. The good people could write him as a Koba, and show that society made him pure evil, just like the aforementioned Joker ape. This movie wanted to show that society shapes people into tragic villains. While I writing these line, I just realized that there's another "Batman" villain who could work fine for this premise, and have a great movie. Bane. Or maybe the tragic version of Scarecrow that you told me about in our first thread. If we take Bane/Scarecrow to a movie built on 2019 "Joker"'s premise, do you see them beginning from a lifesaving medicine and then going to drugs due to deals with people that are dubious at a good day?

4. The announcing guards are doing the right thing on that one. Pedophiles and such are just the kind of people that deserves to be left unguarded for the other prisoners to do justice against them. I can guess the inmate who used to work with your dad would kill one of those scums too. Now you gave me an idea for rehabilitating inmates: Train them to track down and kill pedophiles and uncaught violent criminals (such as serial killers, mobsters, terrorists, Ku Klux clan and neo Nazis, and so on). I call it "Project Jamal", named after Harlemface. The fictional Harlemface rid the world of 3 shitheads, and real criminals like him can be trained to do the same and fill the gaps for the cops and judges. What do you say?