Showing posts with label Comparison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comparison. Show all posts

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Tusk and Spinal: Warrior and Viking

When the fighting game series Killer Instinct got rebooted in 2013, everything changed for the better. The character who was changed the most was Spinal, who went from a comically frail skeleton experiment gone wrong to a Swedish ghost pirate doomed to walk among the living via a curse cast by another fighter. Many people think that the Norse representative of the series is the heroic Tusk. In truth, Spinal is not only anther Norse representative, but one that specifically fills in the gaps left by Tusk. The reboot turned Tusk into an immortal guardian who purposefully styled himself after norse culture when he took a liking to their ways.

What has become to me as I’ve read various sagas is that “Viking” and “Nordic Warrior” are two different things. Warriors are men of honor and loyalty who fight for kings and such, while Vikings are raiders who live as outlaws to all but other vikings. Spinal is a Viking, and Tusk is a Nordic warrior. Tusk has the typical Aryan look of pale skin, blonde hair, and turquoise eyes (sometimes entirely blue, other times more so green). He wields a great-sword reminiscent of Icelandic crusaders and named blades such as Balmung. Tusk’s stage is Icehaven, which is a blatant expy of Icelandic shores with a frozen viking ship decorating the background. Spinal’s stage, in contrast, is Shipwreck Shore, a shipwreck in the Caribbean (probably to highlight the fact that despite in most aspects being Swedish, Spinal’s curse is Babylonian) that resembles a nightmarish rendition of Tusk’s stage.

Spinal on the surface seems unrelated to Tusk or vikings, but it takes little digging to unearth the connection. Spinal’s condition is very similar to the draugr of Norse myth rather than a generic undead skeleton. He possess supernatural strength and cursing abilities, he is a fully corporeal corpse (his flesh has simply rotted away due to having been animated since the time of ancient Babylon) as opposed to any sort of specter. The most obvious and decisive evidence, however, is Spinal’s theme in the reboot: “Warlord,” one of many excellent compositions by Mick Gordon. The lyrics to the song are Scandinavian chants that incorporate old Norse terminology into traditional Swedish. The translation portrays Spinal as a pagan war deity deserving of all titles including some exclusively used by old Norse culture.

Tusk and Spinal are explicitly stated to be enemies, which is more than a little fitting. Tusk is an immortal warrior who follows Norse traditions and follows their way of life. Spinal is an undead viking raider whose ship was wrecked and he was cursed to forever walk the earth. For all his malevolence, however, Spinal is not a being of pure evil. His malice is born out of his curse; he has plenty of personality that shows a sadistically jovial warrior who lives for battle much like a Berserk. Speaking of Berserks, Tusk’s rage mode is quite literally a berserker rage. Spinal is outright stated in his story bio to be nothing more than a mischief maker at heart and this is portrayed through how he seldom takes the side of the main villains of the series such as Fulgore and other Ultratech combatants.

Tusk is honor, loyalty, order, faith, and life. Spinal is chaos, bloodlust, pagan, undead, and maniacal. Both Tusk and Spinal represent the Nordic warrior; they each represent an extreme of the spectrum. Spinal is the pagan Viking raider, and Tusk is the crusading honor-bound warrior who serves a higher power to keep order and tradition. It’s entirely possible the yin-yang relationship between the two was unintentional. The game refers to Spinal as a pirate raider and Tusk as a Viking, but Spinal’s theme shows that at least some of those working on the game understand the connection. All of that being said, Spinal is easily my favorite character on the Killer Instinct roster. If not for reading the sagas of Njal, Egil, and Grettir, I never would’ve realized that he was more than a simple skeletal pirate, and much of Tusk’s nods to old Norse culture would’ve been lost on me.

Sunday, September 23, 2018



๐Ÿ˜บ๐Ÿ˜ŽGrettir the Strong vs. Aragorn II, son of Arathorn II (King Elessar Telcontar)๐Ÿ˜„๐Ÿ˜Š

G
rettir the Strong and the Lord of the Rings go together like Oreos and milk. This is because, as multiple scholars have reiterated over the years, J.R.R. Tolkien drew from Viking sagas to create his enthralling works (https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/c4c5/814378fb305cff5511623c9c3c12ada0db7c.pdf). And why not? He was a genius linguist, an expert on Old English and Old Norse literature at Oxford University from 1925 to 1959 who “went to parties dressed as a polar bear, chased a neighbor dressed as an axe-wielding Anglo-Saxon warrior, and was known to hand shopkeepers his false teeth as payment” (http://mentalfloss.com/article/59736/10-things-you-might-not-know-about-jrr-tolkien). If anyone could use Viking culture to tell a good story, it was him!
So, unsurprisingly, a lot of characters in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings books, and in Peter Jackson’s fantastic early 2000s movie trilogy sharing the title, are clearly similar to certain mythical Viking figures. One example: Aragorn, a brooding loner fated to become a generous king, is very like his predecessor, the complicated lead Grettir in his namesake Icelandic saga. Antiheroes from shady beginnings, they are brothers in more aspects than one, though they come to drastically different ends.
An artist's rendition of Grettir the Strong being a boss:)

On the most basic level, Grettir and Aragorn each get pretty rough starts in life. Due to an unfortunate mix of uncontrollable temper and misunderstood positive intent, Grettir finds himself outlawed in both Norway and Iceland, which perhaps should be considered a feat in itself (Penguin Classics: 116-117). As a result, he spends the majority of his time house-hopping, running from the law under a false moniker (at one point, he refers to himself as “Gest”) and relying on the hesitant hospitality of family and friends agreeing to take him in for a short span until he can locate another place to stay (132). His literary pal Aragorn is equally familiar with transitory living. Although he is of royal descent (with a ridiculously long and awesome lifespan of around 140 to 250 years) in Middle-earth and retains the right to return to the city of Gondor as its king, he begins his tale as a Ranger (http://lotr.wikia.com/wiki/Dรบnedain). He is a chieftain of the Dรบnedain people, the remnants of his family, after several wars—hiding his identity (he is called “Strider”) and protecting the communities he wanders through (http://lotr.wikia.com/wiki/Rangers_of_the_North). Grettir and Aragorn know all too well how it feels to sleep outside in the rain and gather or hunt breakfast yourself.
An interesting component of Aragorn’s long-term traveling is his personal trepidation that, in addition to having to face the evil forces that attacked his ancestors in order to be able to reclaim the throne, he is not worthy of doing so (The Fellowship of the Ring). Being an heir of Isildur, a former monarch in Gondor infamous for refusing to destroy a Ring of Power belonging to Sauron, their world’s greatest villain, and capable of ruining all things living—he had fallen prey to its magical allure—Aragorn is afraid that he will make his scorned relative’s mistakes (http://lotr.wikia.com/wiki/Aragorn_II_Elessar). In that regard, he and Grettir are in outlawry not only externally—physically, visibly—but also, in a sense, mentally. Their societies possess negative perceptions of them that are based in erroneous assumptions: for instance, that Grettir burned a home full of innocent men on purpose; and, in Aragorn’s case, that he will be as undependable as Isildur was (92).
How everyone feels watching Gandalf fall fighting the Balrog;)
Luckily, they are epic dudes and use their redeeming qualities to set the record straight. First: innate advantages. Grettir is stronger than anyone in the history of planet Earth, except possibly the Hulk, and carries full-grown oxen on his back (114). Aragorn, for his part, is magically endowed with healing abilities and can revive half-dead warriors (The Return of the King). Second: fighting prowess. Grettir saves a farm from bandits (48-49). Meanwhile, Aragorn saves little Hobbits from ghostly Ringwraiths (The Fellowship of the Ring). And, a final third: selfless sacrifice with attendant near-death experiences. Grettir battles monsters, including an undead creature—Glam—and a pair of trolls (85, 150-153). He takes these challenges to help plagued families and almost dies during them (85, 150). Aragorn, not to be outdone, pledges himself to a Hobbit whom a rather divided Middle-earth council selects to undertake a quest to throw the Ring into a pit of fire in Sauron’s territory and melt it (The Fellowship of the Ring). Jackson’s films illustrate two consequent harrowing moments when a gruesome Orc soldier and a towering troll just about do him in (The Fellowship of the Ring, The Return of the King). These heroes are hardcore.
               However, Grettir and Aragorn, for all their similarities, couldn’t finish their accounts more differently. Grettir is killed by ignominious sorcery, his head chopped off, and Aragorn, after successfully assisting Frodo in popping that Ring into Mount Doom, takes his kingdom back, marries his independent, gorgeous equestrian master of an Elvish bride, and settles into a peaceful reign (185, The Return of the King). What else would you expect for Grettir, a supposed “snake,” as opposed to Aragorn, a man of—his contrasting name states—“kingly valor” (68, https://www.quora.com/What-does-the-name-Aragorn-mean)? Maybe it’s Grettir’s selfishness—his cruelty to animals, his thefts—that earns him such a sad death (27, 117). Or maybe, since Glam curses him, he is simply the victim of an unjust fate (85). Either way, he and Aragorn are alike in the legacy that they leave: they are forever known as underdogs everyone saw overcome odds and rescue others, and they are not to be messed with.

…..........Who is Aragorn? He's like Batman, only better:D



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