Ask almost any cartoon/comic/movie villain what
he wants for Christmas. You’ll get a few answers like, ‘One million dollars!’ or
‘That Wascally Wabbit!’. But those are just villains being petty. Keep at it.
Ask them what they really, really want.
After much guffawing and moustache twirling, (speaking
of which, you think the Joker wakes up every morning and shaves? What a nice
young man! Wait, I diverge), the answer is almost certain.
World domination. Global Conquest. Bow before
______.
Loki wanted it. Lex Luthor wanted it. Vandal Savage,
Dr. Evil, The Sinister Six… point being, it’s what makes every villain need a
new pair of underpants when they wake up. With the slight exception of Bane of
the not-yet-watched-but-soon-planning-to Dark Knight Rises; he just wants to
take over Gotham. Big muscled, small minded villain that he is.
But the principle of conquest is a constant.
Ask any comic book geek, they’ll tell you the same.
Of course, no matter the diabolical plan, no
matter how big or grand or evil, they can never and shouldn’t ever get it.
Because for every villain, there’s a hero to fight for justice, liberty and all
things sugary in the world. And given a long enough timeline, the hero always
wins. It’s the way it is. And with good
reason too. Not just for the good of the world and the hero. But for the
villain too.
Villains must fail. Their scheming plans must
have a loophole to exploit. They actually, secretly need to fail. Let me
explain.
So a villain takes over the world. Then what?
A crowning ceremony would be in order, yes. One
of proportions that would get residents of the most parched parts of Somalia
salivating somehow. Only fit for a villain. But then what?!
Then,
with the diamond studded throne and all riches that come with it, must come the
sword that hangs above it. Not assassination. Something far, far worse. Administration.
So, the Villain of villains, the ruler of as-far-as-the-eye-can-see-and-then-some
has to make slaves while the sun shines.
He’ll have to reform the employment schemes or
abolish them. Put a system in place. Who are the slave masters going to be?
Who’s going to be the slave master’s masters? A pyramid of hierarchy must be made, with the throne
on top. Maybe that’s why the Egyptians built the pyramids in the first place.
Huge, blatant hierarchy-for-dummies charts.
And then, there’s the ever-present matter of
corruption. If it can’t be stopped today, Lokpal or not, then in a world ruled
by a villain, would villainy be encouraged or dissuaded? Would said villain see
promise in young criminally-inclined upstarts who pilfer riches, or throttle
them? It’s something to think about. Note: if a villain runs a perfectly clean,
completely efficient system, it might just affect his street cred.
Of course, there’s the boredom of it all. What’s
a villain to do once he gets everything he wanted? There is only so much
guffawing and posturing you can do to maintain your villain status, from there
on you’re a leader, just another leader. In fact, villainous boredom is such a
good reason, they made a movie on it. Watch Megamind. Not just for proof of my
point, but it’s a complete laugh riot too.
To cure boredom, he could always try to take
over nearby planets, but then that would involve admin work too. Launch a space
program, an offensive one. Make a note to self to allot a certain percentage of
taxes collected to space research. Hire a bunch of scientists. Yawn.
No wonder, no villain ever succeeds. They try.
But secretly, all they want is to just shoot themselves in the foot. Probably
explains why villains will spill every little detail of their plans to the
temporarily captured heroes instead of just shooting them in the face. It’s a veiled,
little cry for help.
