The Guard
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2002
- Messages
- 34,040
- Reaction score
- 1,390
- Points
- 103
Fish Mooney is really a small part of the show. She's basically there to show how entrenched and narcissistic certain criminal elements are.
I don't think people who are going to murder children are "caricatures". In any sense. Unhinged, sure. Caricatures? No.
They should be searching out "Cooler" freaks?
Like a guy who models himself after a flightless bird? A guy who models himself after riddles? A clown? A device designed to scare away birds? A children's book character who holds tea parties? A cat? A poisonous plant? Clay?
The charm of Gotham's supervillains has always been that they twist the relatively harmless and mundane into something terrifying and dangerous.
With GOTHAM, we are seeing the beginnings of that "movement" and evolution.
I wouldn't describe Episode 3 to my friends as "This goofy Balloonman villain killed people". Because tonally, that's not what happened and not all that happened. I don't see a guy taking out white collar criminals and corrupt cops after getting fed up with the city's response to crime as ridiculous. I see it as a troubling commentary on the state of the city.
Nor is attaching someone to a balloon inherently ridiculous.
It's probably a horrible way to go, when you think about it. Probably not being able to breathe very well. Never knowing when you were coming down. Perhaps not realizing HOW you would come down.
And the guy's not running around calling himself "Balloonman". He's not calling himself anything. It's the media that dubbed him that. That's pretty telling in itself, and I suspect we'll see more of that as the show goes on, with Gotham's media sensationalizing the villains.
I don't think people who are going to murder children are "caricatures". In any sense. Unhinged, sure. Caricatures? No.
They should be searching out "Cooler" freaks?
Like a guy who models himself after a flightless bird? A guy who models himself after riddles? A clown? A device designed to scare away birds? A children's book character who holds tea parties? A cat? A poisonous plant? Clay?
The charm of Gotham's supervillains has always been that they twist the relatively harmless and mundane into something terrifying and dangerous.
With GOTHAM, we are seeing the beginnings of that "movement" and evolution.
I wouldn't describe Episode 3 to my friends as "This goofy Balloonman villain killed people". Because tonally, that's not what happened and not all that happened. I don't see a guy taking out white collar criminals and corrupt cops after getting fed up with the city's response to crime as ridiculous. I see it as a troubling commentary on the state of the city.
Nor is attaching someone to a balloon inherently ridiculous.
It's probably a horrible way to go, when you think about it. Probably not being able to breathe very well. Never knowing when you were coming down. Perhaps not realizing HOW you would come down.
And the guy's not running around calling himself "Balloonman". He's not calling himself anything. It's the media that dubbed him that. That's pretty telling in itself, and I suspect we'll see more of that as the show goes on, with Gotham's media sensationalizing the villains.

