The Overlord
Superhero
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2002
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Even though he's rarely done anything harmless in the past 15 years (which, as I said, I credit to his interactions with Batman), what he does has been so varied and, in many cases, contradictory, that it supposed Morrison's idea. He's been a serial killer, a terrorist, a political assassin, a cult leader, a crime boss, a thief, and various combinations thereof. And even how he carries himself, from being a quietly smiling psycho to being a flamboyant and over the top cartoonish super villain, has varied.
I go with the Morrison approach for two reasons: One, it helps the continuity, tying all the various versions of the character together, and two, it's a hell of a lot more interesting than simply having him be an eccentric sociopath.
But the problem is, for the past 15 years, the methods may vary, but the core personality stays the same: evil psychopath, being over dramatic doesn't make one insane, Joker being a funny psychopath one week and more serious one the next doesn't really change anything.
Serial killer, terrorist, crime boss, cult leader those are just methods to reach the same goal, not different personalities.
The fact is for the past 15 years, he has been written as a psychopath, not someone who is criminally insane.