Magnificent Bastard/Live-Action TV: Difference between revisions

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== ''[[Babylon 5]]'' ==
* Alfred Bester epitomizes this trope. He combines ruthless scheming with an infuriating charisma that drives the heroes crazy even as they are forced to respect his skill.
* Speaking of ''Babylon 5''... Londo Mollari!
** ''[[Babylon 5]]'s'' characters tend to evolve with such complexity that nobody knows just who is going to be the bastard at any given time. Londo careened between comic relief, [[Magnificent Bastard]], and [[Tragic Villain]] countless times throughout the series.
*** Londo was always a Magnificent Bastard at his core. Case in point: A meeting between himself and one of his allies of the moment, Lord Refa. Londo invites him out to Babylon 5 to discuss recent Centauri military activities (re: starting twelve wars and depending on the Shadows for assistance). Londo does not approve. He offers Refa a drink, and runs down why this plan is a disaster waiting to happen. When Refa asks why he should do anything Londo says, Londo replies "Because I have asked you. Because your sense of duty to our people should override any personal ambition. ''And because I have poisoned your drink.''" He goes on to describe how the poison comes in two parts, one of which was in Refa's drink. If he does not comply, one of Londo's agents in the Royal Court will introduce him to the second half of the poison. Finally, Londo lifts his own glass while Refa is sitting there ashen-faced and [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|jovially proposes a toast to Refa's health.]]
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* Speaking of ''Lost'', this trope also belongs to {{spoiler|UnFlocke}}. Manipulative Bastard? Check. And as {{spoiler|The Candidate}} shows, he is [[Gambit Roulette|one hell]] of a Chessmaster ( {{spoiler|even if it didn't work fully, it was still a badass plan}}). The way he {{spoiler|manipulated Ben}} to {{spoiler|kill Jacob}} was just classic. Jacob himself also counts
* I{{who}} would say Sawyer counts as well. The episode where he manipulated almost all the main characters so he could get the guns and take over the group is still this tropers favorite moment in the series.
 
== ''[[Supernatural]]'' ==
* Azazel of ''[[Supernatural]]'' is no slouch on the bastardry, but with [http://www.buddytv.com/slideshows/supernatural-azazels-master-plan-43052.aspx the revelations of the end of season 4], [[Fridge Brilliance]] kicks in, and he becomes the magnificent bastard we know and loathe. For starters, we find out that his master plan, previously hinted at, was to {{spoiler|release Lucifer himself, and for kicks, exclusively torment one family.}} He starts by {{spoiler|arranging the release of Lucifer's firstborn, Lilith, who is the LAST of the 66 (of 600+) seals necessary to free Lucifer. He then tricks various parents into signing away their unborn children's futures as incubators for demon blood, specifically so that they can kill said firstborn. The master stroke here being picking a favorite future mother, killing the parents of [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|Mother Mary]] brutally, possessing the dead father, killing her future husband for the first of TWO times, THEN''then'' tricking her into unwittingly signing away her child's future, with a deal of bringing back John, the future husband. This "bargain" was of course done for the sole purpose of creating the child he'd had her sign away. The deal was sealed with a kiss, again, [[Squick|between Mary and her dead father, whom Azazel was wearing]]. Of course, leaving right afterwards, [[Arson Murder and Jaywalking|no doubt making her carry the body away]].}} This takes place a few decades before the series begins.
** During the course of the show, on the other hand, he has a couple of pet projects: plotting to get his hands on a gun that kills everything, attempting to kill the entire remaining Winchester family, choosing an heir to herald the armies of hell, and attempting to literally open the gates of Hell. He succeeds in ALL''all OFof THEMthem''. The kicker is, his greatest victories, as well our knowledge of ANY''any'' of his true plan, only come ''after'' he dies, with the knowledge that he's basically already succeeded in everything he set his mind to. MAGNIFICENT''magnificent''.
** And he only died because he made the mistake of underestimating Dean, John happened to raise out of hell at the last minute, and there was one bullet left in the Colt that could kill (almost) anything. Leaving both Dean and John alive and uncorrupted was an ''integral part'' of his plan, {{spoiler|as one of them would need to be pure so that they could break the first seal by becoming a torturer in hell. Assuming John had remained in hell and would eventually break, Azazel planned to use that last bullet to kill Dean, the future host of Michael, thus ensuring Lucifer's victory in bringing about the Apocalypse. When John escaped without breaking, that left Dean to break the first seal that paved the way to setting Lucifer free}}. Magnificence again.
*** It turns out Lucifer's the [[Man Behind the Man|magnificent bastard behind the magnificent bastard]] Azazel, since he told Azazel what to do. But Azazel's still the one who set up that [[The Plan|magnificent plan]].
** It's debatable that The Trickster {{spoiler|AKA the Archangel Gabriel}} and Zachariah deserve a mention.
** And Crowley. The guy's got style.
*** His crowning moment comes in the season seven finale -- he [[Playing Both Sides|plays the Winchesters and Leviathans against each other]], and ensures that he ends up being the only winner of the season. By the time the dust has settled, {{spoiler|latest [[Big Bad]] Dick Roman is dead, Dean and Castiel have been banished to Purgatory, Meg and Kevin are his prisoners, and Sam is alone and powerless.}}
** After the end of the sixth season, {{spoiler|Castiel}} ascends to this level. Through his scheming, he's managed to {{spoiler|[[A God Am I|become God]]}}. Its hard to get more magnficiently bastardish than that. Even if Death does call him out {{spoiler|as nothing more than a "mutated angel" who has almost literally bitten off more than he can chew}}. I mean, Death already said he'd ''reap God''.
 
== Other works ==
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** His [[Evil Twin|counterpart]] from [[Alternate Universe|Earth-2]] seems to be having a good run at himself, naturally enough. "Cutting out your daughter's heart to save your son because you're a Magnificent Bastard" should be a facebook group.
** Major Zod, Season 9's [[Big Bad]] is a non-Luthor example, in sharp contrast to his [[General Ripper]] [[Cloning Blues|genetic source material]]. He manages to use pretty much everyone in-show, including [[Manipulative Bastard|Tess]], and [[The Chessmaster|Amanda Waller]] and [[Government Conspiracy|Checkmate]] to fullfill his own ends, and does it all while more or less flying by the seat of his pants. He's less of a [[Chessmaster]] than Lionel was, but even more of a [[Trickster]].
* Azazel of ''[[Supernatural]]'' is no slouch on the bastardry, but with [http://www.buddytv.com/slideshows/supernatural-azazels-master-plan-43052.aspx the revelations of the end of season 4], [[Fridge Brilliance]] kicks in, and he becomes the magnificent bastard we know and loathe. For starters, we find out that his master plan, previously hinted at, was to {{spoiler|release Lucifer himself, and for kicks, exclusively torment one family.}} He starts by {{spoiler|arranging the release of Lucifer's firstborn, Lilith, who is the LAST of the 66 (of 600+) seals necessary to free Lucifer. He then tricks various parents into signing away their unborn children's futures as incubators for demon blood, specifically so that they can kill said firstborn. The master stroke here being picking a favorite future mother, killing the parents of [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|Mother Mary]] brutally, possessing the dead father, killing her future husband for the first of TWO times, THEN tricking her into unwittingly signing away her child's future, with a deal of bringing back John, the future husband. This "bargain" was of course done for the sole purpose of creating the child he'd had her sign away. The deal was sealed with a kiss, again, [[Squick|between Mary and her dead father, whom Azazel was wearing]]. Of course, leaving right afterwards, [[Arson Murder and Jaywalking|no doubt making her carry the body away]].}} This takes place a few decades before the series begins.
** During the course of the show, on the other hand, he has a couple of pet projects: plotting to get his hands on a gun that kills everything, attempting to kill the entire remaining Winchester family, choosing an heir to herald the armies of hell, and attempting to literally open the gates of Hell. He succeeds in ALL OF THEM. The kicker is, his greatest victories, as well our knowledge of ANY of his true plan, only come ''after'' he dies, with the knowledge that he's basically already succeeded in everything he set his mind to. MAGNIFICENT.
** And he only died because he made the mistake of underestimating Dean, John happened to raise out of hell at the last minute, and there was one bullet left in the Colt that could kill (almost) anything. Leaving both Dean and John alive and uncorrupted was an ''integral part'' of his plan, {{spoiler|as one of them would need to be pure so that they could break the first seal by becoming a torturer in hell. Assuming John had remained in hell and would eventually break, Azazel planned to use that last bullet to kill Dean, the future host of Michael, thus ensuring Lucifer's victory in bringing about the Apocalypse. When John escaped without breaking, that left Dean to break the first seal that paved the way to setting Lucifer free}}. Magnificence again.
*** It turns out Lucifer's the [[Man Behind the Man|magnificent bastard behind the magnificent bastard]] Azazel, since he told Azazel what to do. But Azazel's still the one who set up that [[The Plan|magnificent plan]].
** It's debatable that The Trickster {{spoiler|AKA the Archangel Gabriel}} and Zachariah deserve a mention.
** And Crowley. The guy's got style.
*** His crowning moment comes in the season seven finale -- he [[Playing Both Sides|plays the Winchesters and Leviathans against each other]], and ensures that he ends up being the only winner of the season. By the time the dust has settled, {{spoiler|latest [[Big Bad]] Dick Roman is dead, Dean and Castiel have been banished to Purgatory, Meg and Kevin are his prisoners, and Sam is alone and powerless.}}
** After the end of the sixth season, {{spoiler|Castiel}} ascends to this level. Through his scheming, he's managed to {{spoiler|[[A God Am I|become God]]}}. Its hard to get more magnficiently bastardish than that. Even if Death does call him out {{spoiler|as nothing more than a "mutated angel" who has almost literally bitten off more than he can chew}}. I mean, Death already said he'd ''reap God''.
* Olivia Pope, the heroine of [[Scandal]] is on the verge of being one. {{spoiler|Her [[Arch Enemy]] is a straighter example.}}
* Jack from ''[[Tru Calling]]''. His Bastardry comes from his mission: to keep the protagonist from saving the lives of the dead people who ask her to do so. His Magnificence comes in the way that he does it. Where Tru tends towards attacking the problem at its source, Jack thinks sideways, poisoning people against Tru before she even shows up. He also tends towards taunting her with little notes and snide commentary. He managed to infiltrate her inner circle with a mole, thus allowing himself to garner all manner of info on her without her knowledge. By [[Too Good to Last|the end]] of the series, he literally has 3 people connected to Tru and her gang that they are entirely unaware of. Imagine the [[Bolivian Army Ending]] when the good guys don't even know the army is ''there''.
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* Richard Cross in ''[[Murder One]]''. A fabulously rich developer with a love of fine wine and Renaissance art, who has a marvellous public image through his various donations to charities. He also helps out South American drug lords just for the hell of it, and after one of these affiliations goes very, very wrong he spends the entire first season wildly improvising to keep himself and his associates in the clear, all while appearing completely unruffled and dangling his involvement in the faces of the show's heroes. It also doesn't hurt that he's played by the indescribably charismatic Stanley Tucci.
* [[Knight Templar|Holtz]] from ''[[Angel]]'' falls under this, mostly for his sheer ''efficiency''. [[Cosmic Horror|Jasmine]] spent millenia with godlike power manipulating events to come to earth, lasted less than a week, and died at the hands of {{spoiler|her most loyal servant}}. Wolfram and Hart spent five seasons with nigh-limitless resources trying to corrupt Angel and all they accomplished in the end was {{spoiler|letting him know who to kill}}. Meanwhile Holtz, had no powers [[Badass Normal|whatsoever]], was [[Villains Blend in Better|out of his own time]] and had no allies but those he created for himself. And in half a season he managed to {{spoiler|[[Manipulative Bastard|convince one of Angel's closest friends]] to kidnap Angel's son, then escaped into a hell dimension with him, raising him [[Laser Guided Tykebomb|to be Angel's worst enemy]]. Then his assisted suicide actually made things [[My Death Is Just the Beginning|worse]] between them.}}
{{quote| '''Angel:''' You ''took'' my ''son''!<br />
'''Holtz:''' I kept your son alive. You murdered mine. }}
** [[Amoral Attorney|Lilah Morgan]] also comes to exemplify this trope by mid-season three, having begun the series as more of a [[Smug Snake]]. The turning point is probably either "Billy", in which Lilah {{spoiler|coldly executes the title character}}, or {{spoiler|Darla's pregnancy storyline}}, over the course of which Lilah gets some great one-liners and becomes legitimately scary for the first time. In season four she's every inch the Magnificent Bastard, ruthlessly {{spoiler|dispatching her former superior Linwood}}, leaving significant emotional scars on {{spoiler|Wesley}} and ably defending herself from a rampaging {{spoiler|Angelus}}. It's only the complete shock of {{spoiler|Cordelia's possession by Jasmine}} that catches her in the end.
{{quote| '''Translator:''' Well, this should be fun!<br />
'''Lilah:''' No. This shouldn't be fun. What it should be is done by morning -- or I'll have your family killed. }}
* Spike from ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' was sometimes seen as this before [[Badass Decay|his infamous (and highly arguable) "Spikeification."]] However, he has a large strike against his cred in his admitted tendency to "get bored" and rush into things without thinking, something a full fledged Magnificent Bastard does not do. That being said, whenever he ''does'' take the time to plan things out, he can hang with the best of them; most notably in episodes like "The Yoko Factor", where he nearly tore the Scooby Gang apart, or the second season finale in which he seemed to realize rushing into things against [[Complete Monster|Angelus]] would not be a smart move and thought a successful plan out in advance, all behind his boss' back.
* [[Satan|The Devil]] in ''[[Reaper]]'' not only arranges for Sam to get an apartment next to a pair of rebel demons whose plan to destroy him would actually have worked, and manipulates Sam into infiltrating the rebellion with a new (doomed) plan to kill him, he also signs Sam's lease with his name and sends him clues as to what is going on that Sam, Sock and Ben can only work out moments after it is too late to do anything about it. Then repeats this plan with the few survivors of the rebellion, and is still witty, charming and diabolically [[Affably Evil|affable]]. Ray Wise's portrayal is just so good that fans now think he may actually ''be'' [[Satan|The Devil]].
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* [[Affably Evil|Sheriff]] [[Satan|Lucas Buck]] of ''[[American Gothic]]'' fulfills this trope again and again throughout the series. Among the worst (or best, depending on your point of view) offenses would be his [[Mind Rape]] of Dr. Crower, beginning with forcing him to [[Break the Cutie|relive his past tragedies]] ({{spoiler|his alcoholism, its destruction of his career, and the terrible accident which cost him the life of his wife and daughter}}), which nearly makes him {{spoiler|fall [[Off the Wagon]] again}}. This then continues on to the convoluted [[Gambit Roulette]] wherein {{spoiler|he convinces Dr. Crower via a woman who claims to be his mother [[Captain Obvious|that he is the Devil Incarnate]].}} Armed with this [[Cassandra Truth]], Matt morphs into a [[Stalker With a Crush]] (only without the crush, [[A Worldwide Punomenon|unless you take it to mean wanting to crush Buck to death]]), so that in the end he gets dragged away, [[Go Mad From the Revelation|having gone off the deep end]], and [[Put On a Bus|is last seen]] {{spoiler|locked away in an insane asylum}}. Talk about a [[Downer Ending]]...but so ingeniously pulled off.
** Honorable mention also goes to the number Buck pulls on the orderly in "Eye of the Beholder", Carter in "Damned If You Don't", and the talk show host in "Resurrector" he forces to kill his wife...{{spoiler|[[Faking the Dead|or at least, he thinks he does]]}}.
* Avon, of ''[[BlakesBlake's Seven7]]'', is an example of a [[Magnificent Bastard]] protagonist.
** Whatever Avon did though; Servalan did better, and in high heels.
* Joey Heric from ''[[The Practice]]'' gleefully eludes justice for one blatant murder after another with his expert manipulation of the legal system, confounding both the district attorney's office and his own defense firm with theatrics, misdirection, and at times even the truth. His ability to shed reasonable doubt into just about everything he does is so uncanny, he can even imply responsibility for crimes he's legitimately not involved in and still have people conviced he might have something to do with it.
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** Strangely, one of the biggest ones in the series is one of the few examples of a good guy being a [[Magnificent Bastard]]. Lester Freamon is, without a doubt, the most intelligent character in the series. He's a cop [[The Chessmaster|who moves everyone, whether they be criminals, politicians, or fellow cops, on the board like they were chess pieces.]] He even outwits Clay Davis. He's also manipulative, just not in a negative way and plays himself off as a harmless old detective that won't give much trouble. But if he's after you, your days as a free man are numbered.
* Malcolm Tucker from ''[[The Thick of It]]'' and [[The Movie]], ''[[In the Loop]]''. As the Prime Minister's chief spin doctor he has made a whole ''career'' out of [[Magnificent Bastard|Magnificent Bastardry]], and MP Hugh Abbot even coined the term "Malciavellian" to describe his particular brand of it. He gets by on his frankly terrifying degree of charm, which he greatly enjoys abusing. Considered a bastard even by the standards of other spin doctors, his colleagues can't help but grudgingly admire him:
{{quote| '''Nick Hanway:''' ''"Fuck you very much, you unscrupulous bastard."''<br />
'''Malcolm Tucker:''' ''"[[Insult Backfire|Scruples? What are they]]? Those low fat Kettle Chips?"'' }}
** Even his choice of [[Bastard Understudy|understudy]] is bastardly: he appointed the [[Violent Glaswegian]] Jamie, knowing that he lacked the charm and intelligence that would be required to overthrow him.
* In ''[[George Lopez]]'', there's an episode where George and Vic get into a fight, and Vic puts a lock on George's garage because George could only build it because of a loan Vic gave him. George spends a few minutes trying to get the combination to the lock, he finds out his son Max was given the combination. But he runs into some problems.
{{quote| "He gave the combination to a dyslexic fifth grader. ''The man is an [[Magnificent Bastard|EVIL GENIUS!]]''}}
* Hugo deVries in the ''[[Inspector Morse]]'' episode "Masonic Mysteries". Basically spends the entire episode ten steps ahead of ''everyone'', jerry-rigs Morse's home stereo to play really awful Opera (''[[Up to Eleven|LOUDLY]]''), sets Morse's house on fire with Morse inside, frames Morse [[Everything Is Online|using the Internet]], ''and'' delivers some utterly fantastic [[Just Between You and Me|monologuing]] and [[Deadpan Snarker|Deadpan Snarkery]] to boot. The fact that he's being played by [[Large Ham]] Supreme [[Star Wars|Ian McDiarmid]] is really just gravy at this point.
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** Nikita herself, in her dealings with Division, Oversight and Gogol. Her former handler/teacher and lover, Michael, shows some signs of this as well. Her adversaries - Percy, Amanda and, to a lesser extent, Ari Tasarov - are this as well.
* Torrence, the [[The Charmer|charismatic]] [[The Sociopath|sociopath]] played by Eddie Izzard in 2009s [[The Day of the Triffids]] starts of as a pretty Magnificent Bastard but suffers [[Villainous Breakdown]] when his plans start to go awry, revealing himself to be more of a [[Smug Snake]], albeit a very high-functioning one.
* ''[[Sanctuary (TV series)|Sanctuary]]'' has an intermittent [[Magnificent Bastard]] in Nikola Tesla. Yes, ''that'' Nikola Tesla. The {{spoiler|vampire one}}.
* Alex Russo from ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'' often has her moments as this due to how sly and manipulative (and good at it) she can be.
* Morgan Pendragon from the Starz television series [[Camelot]] is the [[Self Made Orphan|daughter]] of [[Complete Monster|the former king]] and the [[Succession Crisis|legitimate heir]] to the throne of England. [[Ambition Is Evil|Ambitious]], [[Insufferable Genius|intelligent]], ruthless and a [[Manipulative Bitch|great manipulator]] with a talent for the [[The Plan]], she'll stop at nothing to become queen and gets most of the English people on her side, given the fact that in this show, [[The Scrappy|King Arthur]] is apparently useless. Morgan is seemingly intended to be a villain but her incredible [[The Charmer|charisma]], the fact that she's actually more relatable than the supposed protagonists and being played by [[Eva Green]] mean that most of the fans are cheering her on. In fact, most of the people on the show are even cheering her on.