Complete Monster/Analysis: Difference between revisions
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* The [[Complete Monster]] can [[Tropes Are Not Good|sometimes]] be indicative of lazy writing: a villain with no redeeming qualities can be viewed as exceedingly simplistic. A particularly poorly-executed [[Complete Monster]] will fail to engage the audience.
* The story's context is important in establishing such characters—what may seem like an act of ultimate evil in one story could be just business as usual in another. The reaction to such acts by other characters is usually most telling.
* The tone of the work and
* The scale of a villain's actions
* When applying the heinous standard of any given work to a candidate for this trope, a bar graph must be visualized. A villain with a rap sheet of deeds that are treated as the most heinous sort of evil by the work's story is the bar-setter. A villain with that AND no redeeming features to speak of is an example of the trope, thus becoming the work's heinous standard. If the work features more than one example, then those examples have to equal or even ''surpass'' the villain who's at the top of the bar in order to qualify.
* Moral agency and the capacity to make choices is a requirement for this trope. Groups cannot qualify for the trope, only individuals with moral agency can. Neither can beings [[Made of Evil]] or animals qualify because they act upon instinct, not choice. A true [[Complete Monster]] has to be a villain who has all the capacity to not do evil in the world, yet consciously decides to be evil and commit the absolute worst kinds of evil for inexcusably selfish and petty reasons.
* Not only must an example of this trope lack a [[Freudian Excuse]] that's adequate enough to explain away or justify their present day deeds, but they must also lack any truly redeeming qualities. If they had any such qualities in the past, they lack those specific qualities in the present.
* A character crossing the [[Moral Event Horizon]] does not alone make them a [[Complete Monster]]. This trope isn't just about what the character does, but about what the character ''is''. Their monstrous characters are reflected in their heinous deeds, which is what puts them a cut above the regular villains. And whatever their position, a [[Complete Monster]] has to go the full mile and meet all criteria: they are the worst they can possibly be in their role, in the space and scale they occupy.
* While [[Offscreen Villainy]] is advised against, a few exceptions can be made depending on how clear the results of said villainy are. [[Gory Discretion Shot]] is common for this, as are explanations of the monster's deeds being coupled with displays of results that speak for themselves.
* This trope is strongly associated with propaganda. In most cases, to become extra-evil, a character will be given [[For the Evulz|stereotypically "evil" and unrealistic motivations]] and prevented from [[Character Development]], thus compromising any real complexity the character could potentially have, to the point that said character has [[Flat Character|little personality]] beyond the evil. A particularly poorly-executed [[Complete Monster]] will fail to engage the audience and may in particularly bad instances lead to (depending on who the villain is and what their business is) [[Unfortunate Implications]].
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