@Insane Titan: Kang's uber manliness makes you too insecure mate.
Originally posted by operator616
Right. Hitler performed literal genocide on the Jews and nearly conquered Europe based on a pseudo-scientific ideology and yet you're crying about a fictional character having flawed ideologies and motivations? Who are you to say what passes as valid motivations for individuals? There are people who torture their daughters and rape them in dungeons for 30 years, apparently they have valid motivations behind their actions and act on them, but Bentley over here would say that a fictional character cannot have such lazy motivations. 😬
Yeah, let's delve into the difference between Works of fiction where we assume things are justified due to the choices of an author and the Randomness of the Whole creation. That'll settle our discussion in two minutes...
Originally posted by operator616
Individuals can have all kinds of weird and disgusting motivations, it's important to portray that they really believe what they're doing is true. And the movie succeeded in that regard.
So among those myriads of disgusting/unexpected/weird motivations we pick the more enticing and estimulating ones, the ones that fit to describe the kind of evil portrayal we choose. I'm not shooting down your observation about belief, it simply has little to do with providing an actually deep motivation.
Originally posted by operator616
Seeking the thrill of battle for conquest is a more valid motivation than trying to make the universe a better place because... Kang?
I already explained how Kang ticks and why his choices make sense from a storytelling perspective. Kang's quest is not about having a
Spoiler:
Obsesive Compulive fixation for balance or any made up scaling of personal morality
, it's about becoming a legend,
literal history, becoming the stuff of tales. It goes to explain a lot of his thrill seeking character and his willing to go in a quest to achieve greatness.
Originally posted by operator616
In the comics, Thanos' motivation for killing half the universe is because he loves a cosmic lady. Better yet, we're shown in his origins how he goes from world to world killing and slaughtering women and children just because "it's not enough" for his lady death. Even killing his homeworld and cutting up his mother piece by piece when he was 12 (because he was a sadist). These motivations you can understand, yes?
My point is not about understanding things (it's you who brought that up). For me twisted people having twisted goals doesn't mean writers get a pass for writting goals that aren't great for storytelling.