Alike and Antithetical Adversaries: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
Humans are naturally social beings, and we can tell a lot about a person by knowing what groups they're a part of. What's more, we can tell a lot about a conflict depending on who makes up the given groups. Authors can take advantage of this to design the [[Shades of Conflict|overtones of a conflict]] by engineering the groups at war into being homogenous (all alike) and/or heterogeneous (all different). This can have up to four combinations,<ref>or eight if it's a three sided conflict, but we won't go there)</ref>, as detailed below.
 
=== This comes in four flavors. ===:
* '''Heterogeneous Heroes vs. Homogenous Villains:''' The "classic" set up. This is used when an author wants to portray good as multicultural or what not and the bad guys as all alike and all equally evil. The good guys will often work by [[Teeth-Clenched Teamwork]] and be a very diverse [[Ragtag Bunch of Misfits]], both superficially (race, using [[Custom Uniform|Custom Uniforms]]s), socially, culturally, religiously, or temperamentally. To contrast, the baddies will usually be monochromatic in very obvious ways. At the very least they will [[Dress-Coded for Your Convenience|all dress alike]], and complement that overt gesture by being [[Knight Templar|ideological or religious extremists]], all the same [[Generic Ethnic Crime Gang|ethnicity]], being solely [[Always Male|men]] [[Mono-Gender Monsters|or]] [[Always Female|women]], or even ''[[Planet of Hats|species]].'' One extreme representation of this is to use a horde of identical [[Robot War|robots]], [[Bug War|insects]] or [[Opening a Can of Clones|clones]]. The symbolism here is that heroes can come from any walk of life, but villains are all the same. This can be especially useful when using non-human enemies or imaginary ideologies, as it can avoid designating any real world equivalents as bad.<ref>(Of course, it may instead make the kids at home think that all aliens are evil)</ref>.
* '''Homogenous Heroes vs. Heterogeneous Villains:''' Flipping the above has an interesting effect. Having the heroes share the same background (be it family, home town, or ideology) or world view [[How to Gather Characters|can make it easier to bring them together]]. The similarities don't necessarily have to be religious, ethnic or even in wardrobe, however they share enough similarities of one kind or another that viewers who know the characters can infer that good people share these same unifying trait(s) and values. Conversely, a bunch of [[Equal Opportunity Evil|diverse minions]] lead by the [[Cosmopolitan Council]] show that evil can take any shape, and warns that [[The Dark Side]] isn't exclusive in its membership (and avoid irate censors). One interpretation of this is that evil is divisive, while good is unifying. Heroes [[The Power of Friendship|can work together]], villains [[The Starscream|backstab]] each other [[Villain Ball|into failure.]]
* '''Heterogenous Heroes vs. Heterogenous Villains:''' Portraying both as heterogeneous groups has the effect of making a conflict seem [[Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism|very worldly,]] or possibly even [[Grey and Gray Morality|gray.]] By removing easily identifiable unifying traits it makes it difficult to tell apart heroes and villains, at least in terms of characterization, and allows the author to dive right into questions of just what separates good and evil, heroes and villains. In these cases the conflict may be characterized as [[The Federation]] against the [[Anti-Human Alliance]].
* '''Homogenous Heroes vs. Homogenous Villains:''' On the other hand, monochromatic bands of heroes and villains are very... well, archetypal. Here the differences between characters are drawn not from obvious background or appearance, but in motivation and character. A story where both bands are of "identical" groups can focus more on what brings entire groups into [[Always Lawful Good]] and [[Always ChaoticExclusively Evil]] territory, while spending time focusing on individual motivation.
 
It's worth mentioning that a story can begin with either side (or both) as homogenous and transition into a completely heterogeneous cast with the help of characterization, an [[Enemy Civil War]], and of course the [[Defector From Decadence]] who [[My Species Doth Protest Too Much|protests]] their brother's ways. If this is [[Speculative Fiction]], then sometimes [[In the Future, Humans Will Be One Race]] will come up.
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{{examples}}
 
'''==Het-H vs. Hom-V:''' ==
=== Anime & Manga ===
 
== Anime & Manga ==
* ''[[Berserk]]'' would be Heterogeneous Heroes (sort of, as there is a total of three black people; one character [Casca], one bystander, and the last one [Donovan] was an evil bastard on the same side as Guts) vs Homogenous Villains: The original [[Five-Man Band]] had a [[Scary Black Man]] (Pippin), and the one black character in the Band of the Hawk other than Casca. The human enemies tend to be all white (or later on, all brown). When you throw in the demons, which are all unique because of the different lives they led [[Was Once a Man|as humans]] and the different [[Despair Event Horizon|circumstances]] that led them to call on the Godhand to become demons, we get a case of Heterogenous Villains as well.
 
 
=== Film ===
* ''[[Star Wars]]: [[Return of the Jedi]]'' has the multi-species Rebels and the [[Putting Onon the Reich|implied in costume]] fascist Empire. EU material confirms the Empire to be speciesist, employing (mostly) only white male humans.
** In [[A New Hope]] all rebels are human as well, making it Hom-H vs. Hom-V. And in [[The Empire Strikes Back]], the use of the bounty hunters makes it more Hom-H vs Het-V. It is explained in the [[Star Wars Expanded Universe|EU material]] that in the beginning the military branch of [[The Alliance]] was indeed mostly human, because the Empire's treatment of non-humans made them distrustful of ''all'' humans and because humans are the only ones allowed into military training and only human worlds are allowed to have a militia.
* ''[[Monsters vs. Aliens]]'' has a group of extremely unique protagonists, led by a [[Reasonable Authority Figure]]. The villain is a standard [[Omnicidal Maniac]] who wants to [[Take Over the World]], and his plan mostly involves [[Send in Thethe Clones|cloning himself to create an army]].
* "The Matrix" takes this trope to the next level: it has a diverse group of characters as the rebellion, spanning multiple races, ages, and genders, but the villains -the agents- are as homogeneous as you can get: they have the same appearance, voice, costume, etc.
 
 
=== Live Action Television ===
* In ''[[Star Trek: the Next Generation (TV)|Star Trek theThe Next Generation]]'', the Federation was a peaceful amalgam of various species, while the Borg were a [[Hive Mind]] of complete conformity.
* The original ''[[Star Trek: theThe Original Series (TV)|Star Trek the Original Series]]'' also had this with the Enterprise bridge crew being ethnically diverse including a black woman, which would have been impossible at the time, and an [[Halfbreed|half alien]] where as the main enemies were the Klingons and Romulans who were portrayed as fairly homogeneous.
 
 
=== Western Animation ===
* By the end of ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender (Animation)|Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'', members of all four nations are working to defeat [[The Empire|The Fire Nation]], including characters from all over the already-highly-heterogenous [[The Federation|Earth Kingdom]].
* Subtly done in ''[[Saints Row 2]]'' (though you would ''hardly'' call the protagonists [[Villain Protagonist|heroes]]). While gangGang members atare thevery bottomskewed ofracially ato gangtheir tendethnic togroup beand anylocal genderwhites (or race, the further up you''just'' gowhites in a gang the morecase homogenous in race and origin they tend to be (for example,of the topone Roninlocal leadersborn aregang) all rich Japanese guys).but Rightright from the start, the generals in the Saints are [[Five-Token Band|a diverse group.]] and the generator for random Saints can generate all races.
 
'''==Hom-H vs. Het-V:''' ==
 
=== Live Action Television ===
'''Hom-H vs. Het-V:'''
 
== Live Action Television ==
* [[Mighty Morphin Power Rangers|Various breeds of Power Rangers]], most notably the first group, consisted of a group of teenage martial artists from Angel Grove fighting a seemingly random mishmash of human- and non-human-shaped monsters. Interesting, some of the human-shaped monsters came from a family that was predominantly monster-shaped, and vice-versa, further underscoring the heterogeneous mix that was evil.
 
 
=== Western Animation ===
* [[Captain Planet|The Planeteers]] are a good example of an on the surface diverse cast that is nonetheless homogenous. They all come from different continents and backgrounds, but share a common passion to save the planet. Meanwhile, their [[Rogues Gallery]] is amazingly diverse, being motivated by greed, pride, gluttony or sheer spite. While the good guys are all united in saving the planet for the same reason [[Shaped Like Itself|(which is that you should)]], the villains all have very different motivations.
* The early episodes of the ''[[Thundercats (Animation)|ThunderCats]]'': the titular heroes (with the exception of [[Non-Human Sidekick]] Snarf) were all Thunderian [[Catfolk]], while the mutants were several varieties of [[Petting Zoo People]]. As the setting developed, it became more Het-v.-Het, as the Thundercats allied themselves with other residents of Third Earth, including the Amazon women and robot teddy-bears.
** This pattern holds in [[Continuity Reboot]] ''[[Thundercats 2011 (Western Animation)|ThunderCats (2011)]]'', with [[The Hero]] Lion-O coming to understand that to defeat [[Evil"Alone with Prisoner" Ploy]] Overlord]] Mumm-Ra's multi-species armies, he must gather [[Petting Zoo People]] allies as well.
* ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic]]'' is another good example of an on the surface diverse cast that is nonetheless homogeneous, at least in the first five seasons. All of the Mane Six come from different backgrounds and have different (but sometimes overlapping) interests, but they all share common ideals of co-operation and friendliness [[Fantastic Racism|(toward ponies)]]. Only a few [[Token Heroic Orc]] types appeared in the first five seasons, like [[The One Guy|Spike]], [[Reality Warper|Discord]] (post-[[Heel Face Turn]]) and [[Supreme Chef|Gustave]] [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold|Le Grand]]. [[Only One Female Mold|They also look very similar apart from being different colours and having wings and/or horns]]. Their [[Rogues Gallery]] of villains and antagonists is far more varied, including a [[God-Emperor|God-Empress]] [[Winged Unicorn]] with [[Casting a Shadow|the power of Darkness]], a [[Jerkass]] [[Our Griffins Are Different|Griffon]], a group of [[Petting Zoo People|dogmen]] kidnappers, a group of Buffalo that are a [[Fantasy Counterpart Culture]] to [[Injun Country|the Native American tribes of the Great Plains]], a [[Mad God]] [[Mix-and-Match Critters|Mix-and-Match Critter]], a group of [[Teens Are Monsters|Teen Delinquent]] [[Our Dragons Are Different|Dragons]], a pair of [[Con Artist]] [[Unicorn]] brothers, a race of [[shapeshifting]] [[Insectoid Aliens|insectoid]] [[Emotion Eater|Emotion eaters]] led by a [[Hive Queen]], a [[Stoic]] [[Unicorn]] King with [[Casting a Shadow|the power of Darkness]], [[Demon Lords and Archdevils|a demonic]] [[Our Centaurs Are Different|centaur]] and a [[Superpower Lottery|powerful]] female [[unicorn]] obsessed with removing individual identity and [[Power Nullifier|powers]] because she believes [[Utopia Justifies The Means]] due to a [[Freudian Excuse]].
 
**Seasons 5 and onward start to trend toward Het-H versus Het-V. Several previously villainous characters and races are given [[Heel Face Turn]]s and races previously portrayed as [[Always Chaotic Evil]] are now shown to be not always so, giving the ponies more non-Pony allies and friends. The villains still remain diverse and mixed to the very end, and the [[Legion of Doom|final villainous trio]] consists of [[Demon Lords and Archdevils|a demonic]] [[Our Centaurs Are Different|centaur]], a [[Hive Queen]] (albeit no longer the leader of a race of insectoids) and a [[Enfant Terrible]] [[Pegasus]].
 
'''==Het-H vs. Het-V:''' ==
 
== = Comic Books ===
* The [[X-Men]] vs. bigot group of the week. Seriously. The X-Men, being mutants, come from diverse walks of life, and the humans who "hate and fear them" and routinely mess up their front yard are also (usually) very diverse. The message being that bigotry and intolerance can come in any shape and size.
 
 
== = Film - Live-Action ===
* The prequel trilogy in ''[[Star Wars]]'' uses this in the leader heroes and antagonists to demonstrate just how morally gray the war is. The Separatists aren't all bad, nor are the heroes fighting for the right reasons. They're all [[Big Bad|Darth Sidious']] [[Manipulative Bastard|pawns.]]
 
 
== = Literature ===
* In ''[[Animorphs (Literature)|Animorphs]]'', both sides of the conflict are very heterogeneous, both in species and personalities. Yeerks, by their very nature, must essentially '''become''' different species (in addition to more traditionally recruiting other species, like the Taxxons, for their uses). Humans, Hork-Bajir, and Andalites all oppose the Yeerk forces. Both factions have individuals who switch sides or change beliefs or alliances, and a major theme of the series as a whole is that no one species is all good or all bad.
 
 
== =[[Live Action Television]] ===
* ''[[Star Trek Deep Space Nine (TV)|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' featured The Federation, the Klingon Empire, and {{spoiler|[[Enemy Mine|The Romulans]]}}, against The Dominion ,<ref> itself made up of several different species</ref>, the Caradassians, and {{spoiler|The Breen}}. This, [[Grey and Gray Morality|along]] [[I Did What I Had to Do|with]] [[What the Hell, Hero?|many]] [[This Means War|other elements]], went along with this show being [[Darker and Grittier]] than ''[[Star Trek: theThe Next Generation (TV)|The Next Generation]]'' had been.
 
 
=== Video Games ===
* The Alliance and the Horde in ''[[World of Warcraft]]'' each consist of five or six different races united towards common goals. Graying things up further is that, despite their own animosity, the Horde and Alliance have (reluctantly) worked together in the face of common enemies.
** A much less gray example from the same game is Twilight's Hammer (villainous) vs. The Earthen Ring (heroic).
 
 
'''==Hom-H vs. Hom-V:''' ==
 
== = Film - Animated ===
* ''[[Fire and Ice (Filmanimation)|Fire and Ice]]'' has the heroes all represented as caucasian, while the bad guys are [[Beast Man|Beast Men]] who are led by [[The Man Behind the Monsters]].
 
 
=== Film - Live-Action ===
* In the ''[[Star Wars]]'' prequel trilogy, the infantry troops are all nearly identical, whether genetically or by being the same model of robot.
 
 
=== Literature ===
* ''[[Harry Potter (Literaturenovel)|Harry Potter]]'' has courageous heroes motivated by The Power Of Love and cruel villains motivated by self-interest, prejudice and insanity (in varying quantities).
* Though in terms of alliances ''[[The Lord of the Rings (Literature)|The Lord of the Rings]]'' has '''both''' sides of the conflict employ diverse peoples and even species, on the ground Sauron was the only one to employ mixed forces with Goblins, Orcs, Uruk Hai, Trolls and Easterlings. The hero factions only unite on the field on a handful of occasions. Interestingly, the diversity of The Fellowship is often remarked upon.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Good and Evil For Your Convenience]]
[[Category:Alike Andand Antithetical Adversaries]]
[[Category:Alliterative Trope Titles]]
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