Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-31330278-20190813233236/@comment-31330278-20190906224911

1. Good point. Panda does make sense as protective and tragic (does being devastated about Red's death is being remorseful?) rather than honorable. Tiago won't kill Hermes, because an herrerasaurus with accountant qualities is just too useful to be disposed, but he's very likely to dispose another soldier. Hermes will be killed by Marley for protecting he adopted carnotaurus baby. What can a motherly cop do to turn someone who kill even children (the carnotaurus baby is far from Hermes' first intended victim) to a scapegoat?

2. Recently I got an idea for a wish fulfilment regarding to parental Jills. Maybe the son in question might not become better, but a new female character from "Neimerhold" might do. A drawing in DeviantArt, featuring Josh the fox hitting on a young tiger lady, gave me the idea of writing General Tiger's daughter. Since he's very likely to be pure evil, it's likely that he'll see his daughter as his magnum opus and successor of his empire vs how a father should see his daughter. Think about William Carver's vision for Clementine, but cutting deeper. If I merge "Tiger Lily" with the possible rogue daughter from part 2, how do you see her getting a grip over her life?

3. Here are some of his darkest moments:

A. When Alice entered the palace as part of her mission, Stayne attempted to rape her and fooled his queen into thinking Alice is stealing him from her.

B. Burning the mad hatter's hometown and family was Stayne's idea. Many of Red Queen's cruel ideas came from Stayne.

C. There was a scene where Red had doubts and showed a great sadness about not being loved. Stayne showed his black heart when he told her that people should fear from her rather than love her.

D. When the white queen condemned him and Red into eternal solitude, which means only they can talk with each other, he was quick to draw his knife and jump on his former queen's throat. One might say being stuck with a psychopath with anger issues is a fate worse than death, except Prince Blackheart have a major part of what his queen became.

E. He sent a bloodhound to chase Alice and Mad Hatter under the promise he'll release the bloodhound's family, except he and his horse were very specific about not keeping his word. The horse even said "dogs believe everything". It's a man who ride on other people's back, and treat to anybody he can't ride on his/her back as if they were fighting dogs under an animal abuser's ownership, so you can see where the horse got it. His connection to his horse is only like how many psychopaths act toward their super-competent henchman as long as he/she is useful.

Just like you said, I should stick to the known canon facts. But is educated guesses based on common sense and directions inside the movie considered as speculations?