True, the villian-turning-good thing is a super hero comic staple- -exactly how many times has Magneto taught at the X-Mansion? Not to mention that Noah was the
original villain "face of evil" on the show, and his sheer cool factor made him into a white hat- -but with Sylar...I don't know. He was such a complex and
damaged bad guy that I hate to have it shown that it was just nature that made him that way- -not a combination of having an apparently-useless superpower and a neurotic, stifled upbringing. Yeah, sure, there are some serial killers that are just, y'know, serial killers- -and if we get backstory saying Sylar has that kind of past (killing animals as a kid, that sort of thing), then I'm all for it. I just liked how the powers+personality mixed to create a kind of really messed up psychopath.
Like, the new guy on the block, whatever his name is- -Knox?- -who gets more and more powerful when people are afraid of him. What a metaphor- -how can that power give a guy ANYTHING but supervillainy as a career path? You'd have to have Batman-level self control to use that for good. GOing back farther, even The Shadow was a black hat at some point- -fear based powers lead to corruption, because of the charge people get from it. That's a neat way to tie the powers together. Sylar's power of intuitive aptitude+crazed desire to be super+neurosis about being normal+having it shown that he is special, but then yanked away from him=Serial Killer.
The new equation is just Intuitive Aptitude=Serial killer.
Meeeeh, rubs me the wrong way. But after reading this thread, I had a thought- -maybe it's supposed to. After all, Peter looked
horrified at what he'd done...maybe...just maybe...the writers are taking us for a ride.
I mean, I coined in the Spikeification of Sylar, but it wasn't a direct analogy so much as a reference to tvtropes.org- -but I think I'm gonna withhold my comments on the Gabriel Gray front, at least for a while. See, I had a thought- -the prevailing mindset that I have about Sylar turning good, like what I hear a lot, is that I
think that the writer's are going: "Zach Quinto is the biggest Non-McDowal star on this show...he's starring in a Paramount tentpole feature next summer...shit, we NEED to keep him on the show. If he keeps being evil, we'll have to kill 'em off, or make him useless- -both would suck- -I know, make 'em a good guy!" ...Thing is, there are plenty of ways to turn him good, plenty of gut-wrenching, dramatic opertunities contained therein. Instead, we're getting this seemingly shoehorned in "Sylar is
the third Summers brother!" storyline.
But I'm gonna buy into it. Maybe it isn't faulty writing...Heroes has always been predictable-but-good. Or as it was put to me, predictable-except-when-you-want-it-to-be. This season, though, has been going at a mile a minute, and I'm not sure what direction they're taking it in. They can't possibly be...flipping everything on it's head, and...Suddenly, I realize that this is a good thing.
So until the end of the season- -at least until the end of the Villains arc- -I swear not to say a word about Sylar being a good guy. I'm adopting an official 'wait and see until all the chips are cashed' policy. Even if last night was the last we see of it- -or if the next episode details how Sylar and Noah crash vegas and accidentally marry some strippers- -I'm just going to hold off and see if or how Sylar's being manipulated, or is manipulating everyone, and how it plays out.
At least, that's the story I'm sticking to for
this week, anyways...
