The real acid test would be an anti-hero who is a loner and doesn't give a fuck about anyone but himself. I can't think of a single drama that has pulled that off, or even has tried to.
Seriously, Profit and the Urquhart movies are the only ones that really fit the bill, so far. I concur that FU is extraordinary viewing. I would add the Michael Douglas movie, Falling Down.
Thing is, if the villain isn't fighting a worse villain, he becomes an anti-hero a la Macbeth, who is certainly villainous but not the villain.
Thing is, if the villain isn't fighting a worse villain, he becomes an anti-hero a la Macbeth, who is certainly villainous but not the villain.
I'd argue Macbeth is the villain. If he isn't, I'm not sure who would qualify (unless you count the witches).
As to Lost's failure, if I were collecting residuals I would have a different criterion. I for one couldn't imagine rewatching the season centered on pushing the damn button knowing that it wouldn't end the world if it wasn't pushed. And that there was never a reason the button pushing couldn't be automated. That sort of thing holds for hours and hours and hours of Lost. That's failure. What Lost is successful at is invention. Sideways in time does nothing to save the Big Story but it is genuinely novel.
Shows...movies...everything is about the hero...what about the villain? Would you watch a show called "LexCorp"? Or a movie called "Joker"...all about the villain???
The hero would come in but it would show how the villains get to where they are and focus on them...does this interest you???
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