View Full Version : Most Interesting Fictional Characters
SterlingNorth
06-04-2000, 12:23 AM
This thread is simply for the interesting characters from film, television, books, popular, obscure, whatever. The characters whom you'd like to know about. Characters whom are cooler than cool. Maybe those who'd you like to have a cup of coffee with, and find out why the act the way they do. I just want to place the restriction that they can not be real life people, living or dead. I do not want tortured logic just so you could list Jesus or Moses. Also, do not assume I'm culturally literate. Name the character, from what work that character is from, and why you think the character is cool.
(an if the character is from a movie or television show, it also helps to list the actor who portraying said character)
I'll open the forum with my picks.
Dr. Theodore Morris (played by Dennis Haysbert) "Now and Again" (TV 1999-2000)-- For those who missed this recently cancelled show from CBS, the premise of this romantic, sci-fi fantasy is that insurance salesman, husband, and father Michael Wiseman was killed by being hit by a subway. Actually, his brain was saved and placed in a "Bionic Man" type superbody.
Dr. Morris was the lead researcher and developer of this body. It is also his job to keep Michael focused on his duties for the US government and not on his family. He is a very logical, calm and collected person. He doesn't lose it even when he is angry. He is very book smart, but seems to be unbelievably dense in real life non-scientific affairs. For example, he always underestimates Michael's will to be reunited with his family. (Actually, I imagine him to be similar to David B. except for the street-smarts verdict.)
Ranma Saotome "Ranma 1/2" (Japanese TV 1989-1994)
Birdy Altirra & Tsutomu "Tetsuwan Birdy" (1996 TV) --There's always a certain amount of absurdity to be involved when the lead change genders but can't help it. This is the main plot twist in these anime titles. Ranma is the victim of a magical spring. Water serves as the catalyst. Cold=girl, hot=boy. But sadly enough, that's the least of the worries. His father is crazy, most of his friends want to cause him harm. His 'girlfriends' do cause him harm (particularly Akane). In as the case with many similar series, he also attracts the insane enemies like flies to honey. I'd be curious as to how he handles the insanity.
Tsutomu seems to be the Charlie Brown of anime character. He's a very bright Japanese high-school student, but life never seems to give him a break. He has the persistent hang dog near the edge of depression look on him. Kinda' like me at that age. However, he accidently gets involved in an intergalacted fight. How? He's accidently killed by the intergalactic on-duty officer with the unorthodox methods, Birdy. Well, innocents can't be killed in the line of duty, especially when the death was caused by an extraterrestrial. The UFOlogist might sieze on this evidence. (nothing for KO) So to save the kids life -- and to serve as a unique punishment and plot twist -- Birdy is forced to share her body with him. (Remember the Steve Martin movie "All of Me." It's pretty much like that, except physical transformations are involved also.) Why is Birdy so, reckless and hot-headed? I'd like to know. Why is Tsutomu is so morose? I'd like to know also. Because the series is abandoned after episode four.
Now that I've frightened you with my selections, (I've got more, but these are the most normal ones I can come up with at 1am) go right on and post. Have fun. Be creative.
SterlingNorth
Today's episode has been brought to you by death, resurrection, and gender confusion. This post has been partially funded by the "Institute for the Study of Self-Identity". What is your's?TM
Saint Zero
06-04-2000, 01:15 AM
Cowboy, from Hardwired. Doesn't lose his cool, and keeps his plan going until the end. Wonderful Book.
I could start a flame war with my pick for _Least Favorite Fictional Character_ but I'll wait for the thread. :D
Czarcasm
06-04-2000, 02:20 AM
Woodrow Wilson Smith aka Lazarus Long, from the book Time Enough For Love.
Lord Peter Wimsey, Dorothy L. Sayers' detective.
Samuel Weller, from Dickens' Pickwick Papers.
Ford Prefect
Sherlock Holmes
Mara Jade
SPOOFE
06-04-2000, 04:32 AM
Gandalf the Grey/White (depending on when you read the books) from J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit/The Lord of the Rings series. An ultra-powerful being hiding behind the guise of a crazy old wizard (most of the time). He finds amusement everywhere, and has a strength beyond that which his mortal body has. And he's not anal, either... not entirely.
I would also be intrigued with meeting Wedge Antilles, from the Star Wars trilogy (the GOOD trilogy) and the X-Wing books. He's one of those characters who's old beyond his years, with more experience than he should have... and he's fun, t'boot. Actually, just about anyone from the X-wing series ('cept Bror Jace... he was an ass).
Flutterby
06-04-2000, 06:05 AM
Okay for me I'd have to go with
Sydney from Pretender and played by Patrick Bauchau. I'd really like to ask him why he stayed with the center when he knew what they were doing. (Was it really just for Jarod? Or his own personal reasons?) And why did he not leave when Jarod had escaped? To be his connection back in? Or so he could easily keep track of where he had been and what he had done? I could understand the latter but not the former. Jarod could get in whether or not Sydney was there and he would always call to talk to him no matter where he was because Sydney basically was his father.
Lessa from Dragonriders of Pern. I really want to talk to her about Dragons and possibly meet Ramoth..
Killashandra from the Crystal Singer trilogy. I'd like to know about crystal singing and the planets she's visited (as long as it wasn't a violation of the Hepatite Guild..)
Hmm thats all I can think of right now. I'll get back to you if I think of any others I want to meet.
Annie-Xmas
06-04-2000, 08:24 AM
Kinky Friedman from the Kinky Friedman mysteries.
Dr. Zhivago
Dr. Who (Tom Baker)
Malder & Scully from the X-files
Goose
06-04-2000, 09:12 AM
Tanis, Dragonlance Choronicles- He was the wise leader who kept the party of opposites together. Even Raistlin would listen to Tanis and Tanis wasn't nearly as powerful as Raist. Plus he was a Bastard Half-Elf which is enough problems right there. I want to know what he saw in Kit and why he chose Laurana.
Mr. Clark, Without Remorse, Rainbow Six- I just want to drink a cup of coffee with this man and know his views on gun control and hippies.
Theo Bell, Clan Novel Brujah- Any Vampire would do, but if I had a choice I'd want to talk to this Brujah. He is in your face and tough and I'd want to know his thoughts on the whole undead thing. Is it a curse or a blessing?
RealityChuck
06-04-2000, 10:05 AM
Death -- both the Terry Pratchett version and the Neil Gaiman one.
Ebeneezer Cook from THE SOT WEED FACTOR
Tyrone Slothrup from GRAVITY'S RAINBOW
Sherlock Holmes
Krazy Kat
as_u_wish
06-04-2000, 11:40 AM
My top pick--Lord Peter Wimsey is already taken. And my second--Lessa of Pern. I shoulda stayed in bed.
I will nonetheless offer:
Nero Wolfe (Rex Stout's NYC detective)
There are a lot of minor characters around (like Treebeard and Puddleglum and James Bond's buddies in Q branch) that I'd like to know more about, but that's probably a whole 'nother thread.
AuntiePam
06-04-2000, 12:38 PM
I'd love to spend a week or so with Leonard Pine and Hap Collins. Joe Lansdale's creations -- redneck Renaissance men, they are.
PunditLisa
06-04-2000, 01:48 PM
The winner, hands down, is Gus from Lonesome Dove. A cowboy. Funny, clever, a man's man. I'll never forgive Larry McMurtry for killing him off. Cretin.
Jamie Fraser from the Outlander series. Mmm-mmm. An ideal male as envisioned by a female. Can quote Shakespeare AND swing a mean broadaxe. Plus, he has an accent, ye ken, and can fill out a kilt. Gawd, I'm getting horny.
Moses from the Bible. God speaks to him. Need I say more?
Darth Vader from Star Wars - turns to the dark side, then back again. Great storyline, great character.
Rhett Butler from Gone With the Wind - dashing, loyal, charming, but an achilles heel. Ya gotta love that in a guy.
ThisYearsGirl
06-04-2000, 02:37 PM
Andy Dufrense from "Shawshank Redemption"--how could you not totally fall in love with him?
I can't remember his name, but the guy who played the drums in Pagan Kennedy's "The Exes." I thought he was clearly the coolest character, but he only had a few pages dedicated to him.
James from Elizabeth McCracken's "The Giant's House."
Everyone in Tim O'Brien's "The Things They Carried."
Czarcasm
06-04-2000, 02:58 PM
Y'know, on second thought I'll change my vote.
The greatest fictional character broke his first bronc and became the blood brother of a Blackfoot Indian medicine man by the age of six. At age sixteen, he traveled to the farthest reaches of Asia. One year later, in 1928, he left school and returned to the Orient.
In 1929 he resumed his schooling and took up atomic and molecular physics. During his college years he became a national correspondant and photographer for the most distinguished aviation magazine of his time.
Today, he is considered to be one of the most acclaimed science fiction writers of all time, a field he revolutionized.
Can anyone name this fictional character? :)
Goose
06-04-2000, 03:08 PM
Slythe
I thought it was Indy Jones until it said Sci-Fi writer. I don't know but I want to add Indy Jones on my list now. :)
Kallessa
06-04-2000, 03:09 PM
Corwin from Roger Zelazny's "Amber" series--one of my all time favorites, very cool. A warrior
in the true sense of the word, a gentlemen, and a philosopher, albeit a reluctant one. And he's
part of a great family!
John Carter from E.R. Burroughs "Warlord of Mars" series--a Virginia gentlemen, with the spirit
of the Warrior in his soul. It's the accent, combine it with a sword--I'm a pushover.
Han Solo--arrogant but vunerable, who could want more?
Coren from Patricia McKillip's "Forgotten Beast of Eld"--a great book by a great author. For
that matter, I wouldn't mind spending time with Sybel from the same book. He's just an all
around romantic hero, willing to give up his vengence for his lady, ready to fight for her heart, a
and forgive when her pride gets in their way.
Rumpole from John Mortimer's books. Because I like lawyers.
And, of course, Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Owl, Eeyore, Kanga and Roo, and Paddington
Bear, 'cuz girls just want to have fun.
Sealemon88
06-04-2000, 03:12 PM
A couple off the top of my head:
Obie: from The Well Of souls series. He's a sentient computer with a reality changing apperatus. His character seems very interesting and moral, esp. considering the power he wields.
Jesse, from The Preacher comic book series. He's a down to earth character with the word Of God (Hmm. seems to be a patern here).
Bruce Wayne, AKA Batman.
Sten, from the sci fi series. Also, from the same series, I'd like to meet the immortal emperor,
Sealemon88
06-04-2000, 03:16 PM
Paksennarion(sp?), from The Deed Of Paksennarion. A female paladin (Holy warrior), she faces trails and tribulations that knock her down, but never break her. A strong, moral, female character in a sword and sorcery series. Pretty cool.
Martha Washington, from Frank Miller's Give Me Liberty graphic novel series.
mazirian
06-04-2000, 04:44 PM
Can anyone name this fictional character? :)
El-Ron?
;)
Czarcasm
06-04-2000, 05:44 PM
Ding-ding!
mararian wins the booby prize. I had my doubts about L. Ron Hubbard as a fiction writer, until I read his biography in the back of Battlefield Earth. :)
Goose wrote:
I thought it was Indy Jones until it said Sci-Fi writer. I don't know but I want to add Indy Jones on my list now. :)
I can't believe I forgot Indiana Jones!
as_u_wish wrote:
My top pick--Lord Peter Wimsey is already taken.
You can have him on alternate weekends, Easter, and Guy Fawkes Day.
Narile
06-04-2000, 06:18 PM
Havelock Vetinary, the Patrician of Anhk-Morpork. One of the great manipulators of fiction. He adapts everything to his plans...that is if he hadn't already planned it to happen that way.
Sealemon88, Paks did get broken in the second book...she got better though. :)
Drzzt might be interesting to meet and talk to.
Cadfael....He is one whom I'd love to meet, especially since Nero Wolfe isn't available anymore. ;)
Narile
06-04-2000, 06:22 PM
*Thwap to the forehead.*
Forgot another -
Lord D'Arcy. How would you like to be a detective in a world of magic? Others have done the idea also, but Randal Garret did it first and best. :)
SarumanRex
06-04-2000, 06:30 PM
In case it isn't obvious from my username, I think the evil wizard Saruman from Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" is a great character. He begins his life as the single greatest force for good in all of Middle Earth but before it's over he becomes infected with the evil of the world and is consumed by it. By the end he is a withered husk of what he once was, but still capable of evil "in a small mean way" as Gandalf put it.
Most people admire the good wizard Gandalf (or the embodiment of all that is evil Sauron) but these characters are pure fiction like Santa Claus or the boogey man with no basis in reality. When you're a kid they drive your imagination but as you get older you realize how one dimensional they are. The real hero of the story is, of course, Frodo and the real villain IMHO is Saruman.
Johnny Angel
06-04-2000, 07:40 PM
I think villians make the most interesting heroes. The willingness for an amoral person to stand up for something or somebody is a lot more powerful than for a person for whom morality is not even an issue. Take, for example:
The Continental Op, as he is at the end of Dashiel Hammett's The Dain Curse.
Phillip Marlowe, Raymond Chandler's drunken misanthrope who time and time again busts his ass to help out people who can't pay what his services are worth.
Leon from the movie The Professional, who kills without remorse, but is somehow enobled by his humility and his capacity for caring.
Mr. White from Resorvoir Dogs who sacrifices himself for a fellow thief, who turns out .
Jimmy from Laws of Gravity who gets in trouble because he won't turn his back on a friend just because he's an asshole.
labdude
06-04-2000, 11:14 PM
The winner, hands down, is Gus from Lonesome Dove. A cowboy. Funny, clever, a man's man. I'll never forgive Larry McMurtry for killing him off. Cretin.
You took my pick, and I was so sure noone would pick Agustus. We must be soulmates. Meet me at the church tommrow.
michael
Kilgore Trout
06-04-2000, 11:20 PM
Kilgore Trout.
Alex, Our Humble Narrator.
Cecil Adams.
Flutterby
06-05-2000, 12:56 AM
I thought of a few more that I wanted to talk to as well.
Veralidaine Sarrasri Or Daine for short from The Immortals series by Tamora Pierce. I'd like to talk to her learn what its like to be the child of a god and a woman who was made a goddess and what its like to have wild magick and talk with the animals etc
Alanna of Trebond and Olau (sp?) from the Lioness Rampant series by Tamora Pierce I'd like to know what it was like to learn to be a knight and a mage and maybe talk with Jonathan and George while I'm there. (The King and ex prince of thieves respectively)
Masterharper Robinton I can't believe I forgot about him I mean look at him a wonderful guy, singer, greatest man on Pern. (At least according to some people) It would be wonderful to sit down with him for some Benden White and talk the night away about whatever comes to mind. (Was I the only one who cried when he died? Please tell me not.)
PunditLisa
06-05-2000, 06:36 AM
labdude, you didn't say WHICH church.
Lisa, waiting a bolt of lightning to strike Kilgore Trout...
Fleetwood
06-05-2000, 06:47 AM
Travis McGee
Inspector Frost
Rosebud
06-05-2000, 08:12 AM
Igraine, from Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon. Her lineage, her choices, the fact that she lived in a castle (Tintagel)... other characters get more attention in that book, but she's a key figure.
I'd like to spend a day with any of the women in Richard Adams's book Maia.
And, of course, I'd love to meet Harry Potter ;)
Ukulele Ike
06-05-2000, 09:09 AM
I'm gonna go with The Bellman, from Lewis Carroll's great verse epic The Hunting of the Snark.
One can see he is wise the moment one looks in his face.
Also, he's the guy I'd want at my elbow if the Snark is a Boojum. True, he wasn't much good to The Baker, but the Baker had driven the poor Bellman half-mad due to his limited abilities (he could only bake bride-cake, for which we may state no materials were to be had). Plus he keeps a Beaver, who had often (the Bellman said) saved them from wreck, though none of the sailors knew how.
-- Uke, charming with smiles and soap
annalamerino
06-05-2000, 09:34 AM
Sherlock Holmes. Smarter than Cecil, and sometimes carries a gun.
labdude
06-05-2000, 09:48 AM
labdude, you didn't say WHICH church.
Lisa, waiting a bolt of lightning to strike Kilgore Trout...
de one at da end of de street. I waited and waited all day. I just wanna be loved. Is that so wrong.
michael
Dumbguy
06-05-2000, 12:33 PM
I was going to say Gus and Phillip Marlowe, both of which have already been mentioned. I hate being average.
I just read the sequel to Lonesome Dove, and it was not nearly as good, mostly because of it's pronounced Guslessness.
rackensack
06-05-2000, 05:32 PM
I'm gonna go with The Bellman, from Lewis Carroll's great verse epic The Hunting of the Snark.
One can see he is wise the moment one looks in his face.
Also, he's the guy I'd want at my elbow if the Snark is a Boojum. True, he wasn't much good to The Baker, but the Baker had driven the poor Bellman half-mad due to his limited abilities (he could only bake bride-cake, for which we may state no materials were to be had). Plus he keeps a Beaver, who had often (the Bellman said) saved them from wreck, though none of the sailors knew how.
-- Uke, charming with smiles and soap
...he had only one notion for crossing the ocean, and that was to tinkle his bell. And there's that business of the bowsprit getting mixed with the rudder sometimes. Not exactly the sort of flexible responsiveness to circumstances one might wish for from one in his position.
vandal
06-05-2000, 06:01 PM
Here is the list that immediately comes to mind...
John Clark - Leader of Rainbox Six team in Tom Clancy's novel, Rainbox Six.
John Connor - Leader of the human resistance in the Terminator series.
Jules Winnfield - Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction. So did he go on that "mission" or what?
Lt. James Curran - Michael Biehn in Navy Seals. What a freakin genius.
Hopefully, more to come later.
Eposia
06-05-2000, 07:49 PM
Masterharper Robinton I can't believe I forgot about him I mean look at him a wonderful guy, singer, greatest man on Pern. (At least according to some people) It would be wonderful to sit down with him for some Benden White and talk the night away about whatever comes to mind. (Was I the only one who cried when he died? Please tell me not.)
[/list]
Not. ;)
There are too many favorite characters to list them all, but I'll try to name a few...
Lady Sally McGee , from Callahan's Lady and Lady Slings the Booze, by Spider Robinson. Not a famous author, but quite good.
Heris Serrano, from the series by Elizabeth Moon which includes Winning Colors (can't remember the rest right now...)
The Rowan, from the Talent series by Anne McCaffrey. Also Tirla, same series, different book.
Mrs Murphy, the cat detective in the mystery series by Rita Mae Brown (also a great author -- her fiction stuff is better than the mysteries...)...(first book was Wish You Were Here)
Also, going with the felines, the cat in the book Summon The Keeper, by Tanya Huff (one of the funniest books I have ever read)
Skandranon, from the Black Gryphon series by Mercedes Lackey.
Vlad Taltos, from the Jhereg series by Steven Brust. Also Sethra Lavode, same series.
In addition, some great ones have already been listed, like Jules, Paksennarion, Lessa, Killa, Robinton, Corwin, Indy, etc. :)
Kakkerlak
06-05-2000, 08:10 PM
Guess I've been laying off the fantasy for too long; I don't recognize 70% of these characters or books.
Last winter I couldn't get Owen Meany out of my head. The hero of John Irving's "A Prayer for Owen Meany" is a remarkable intepretation of the apostle Paul.
And then there's John Galt. My whole engineering career, though not exactly earth-shattering, has been because I picked up a copy of Atlas Shrugged when I was seventeen.
betenoir
06-06-2000, 02:32 AM
Gee, I thought I'd be the only one to mention Rocketman (AKA Tyrone Slothrop)
And also Neil Gaiman's Death. And Dream. Delirium I've already met.
And while we're on comics, John Constantine (Hellblazers), and King Mob (Invisibles)
And...
Dr. Benway
Kilgore Trout
Humbert Humbert
Sr. Stephen
and Gregor Samsa (after)
JavaMaven1
06-06-2000, 02:41 AM
The thing is, I haven't read any fiction book is so long, I'm really trying to think of fictional characters--and all I'm coming up with is Anne Rice ones...
Lestat, from the Vampire Chronicles
Mona, from the Mayfair Witches Trilogy
from movies--it HAS to be Indiana Jones (really well-written hero, Joseph Campbell would have been proud)
my favorite people from my non-fiction reads have been Queen Elizabeth I and M.F.K. Fisher.
Satchmo
06-06-2000, 10:09 AM
Well, someone already mentioned Lazarus Long, so I'll have to go with Mycroft Holmes from Heinline's 'The Moon is a Harsh Mistress'.
Also Louis Wu from Niven's 'Ringworld' and Beowolf Shaeffer from various 'known space' stories.
And as a slght hijack, groups of interesting characters you'd like to hang out with. I've got two similar groups that come to mind: the buckaneers that work with Buckaroo Banzai and the group surrounding Doc Savage. Oh great, now I've got to go home and search through boxes of old books.
<sigh>
barton
06-06-2000, 10:41 AM
Hmm. Here's a few...
Felix, the near-invincible scout in John Steakley's Armor, and the amoral Jack Crow from the same book.
Thomas C., the Unbeliever, from Stephen Donaldson's two over-the-top but brilliant trilogies. A great anti-hero.
The mysterious, uber-powerful Count Fenris from Dune. I've never wanted to know more about a secondary character.
Someone mentioned Nero Wolfe - how about the master of disguise, Saul Panzer? What does that guy do with that talent when he's not working for Nero and Archie?
I forget his name, but Vlad Talto's sidekick from Steve Brust's novels - starts with a K, I think - with his hilarious, completely unexplained ability to remain unnoticed, i.e. "Um, I'm right here, boss..." Hard to kill a guy if you can't notice him sitting next to you.
Corwin from Amber is a good pick, but I think his brother Random is more fascinating. A professional jazz drummer, hanglider, and poker player becoming King of all Order? That's RZ for you.
This could get very long so I'll stop now. :)
gobear
06-06-2000, 01:03 PM
My picks:
Capt. Harry Flashman--He's a liar, womanizer, poltroon, and accidental hero who always manages to show up at famous 19th century military engagements from the Sikh War to Little Big Horn. He's the protagonist of a series of humorous historical novels by George MacDonald Fraser.
Oliver Wiswell, from the eponymous novel by Kenneth Roberts.
He's a Yale student who fights the American Revolution on the Loyalist side.
Judge Dee, from the mystery novels by Robert van Gulik. He's
a wise magistrate administering justice in Tang China.
Horace Rumpole, as played by Leo McKern in the TV shows based on the stories by John Mortimer. He quotes Wordsworth,
drinks and smokes too much, and always defends the innocent and not-so-innocent against the British legal system.
wevets
06-06-2000, 02:22 PM
How about Ace Rimmer from Red Dwarf?
Or Miyamoto Usagi from the, er... Stan Sakai's comic books (can't spell the title)
Earl Snake-Hips Tucker
06-06-2000, 03:21 PM
Kosh
Indiana Jones
06-06-2000, 03:56 PM
My two favorites have already been mentioned: Indiana Jones (obviously) and Louis Wu from the Ringworld novels. Also John Christian Falkenberg. And Legolas and Gimli son of Gloin.
Nightingale
06-06-2000, 05:37 PM
My vote goes to Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind, with Honorable Mention to Rhett Butler. She is one of the most comoplex, sometimes-you-hate-her-but you-can't-help-loving-her characters ever created.
Edwardina
06-06-2000, 06:55 PM
The ones I want to actually know:
1. Spenser, from the novels by Robert B. Parker
2. Donald Shimoda, from Illusions by Richard Bach
3. Adoan, from the Black Cauldron by Lloyd Alexander
4. Jean-Luc Picard, from Star Trek: TNG
5. Jubal Harshaw, from Stranger In A Strange Land, and others by Robert Heinlein
6. Richard Rahl, from The Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind
7. Lan, from the Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan
8. Mythos/Adam Pierson from Highlander the TV series
9. Daniel Jackson from the movie Stargate
10. Marcus from Babylon 5
11. Aslan, from the Chronicles of Narnia
12. Skink, from Stormy Weather by Carl Hiaasen
13. Constable Benton Fraser, from Due South the TV series
14. Rick O'Connell from the movie The Mummy
15. Maximus from the movie Gladiator
Rincewind
06-06-2000, 06:58 PM
The Discworld series is full of interesting characters.
Death and the Patrician have already been mentioned.
I'll add
Commander Samuel Vimes
Captain Carrot Ironfoundersson
Granny Weatherwax
and my namesake, Rincewind the Wizzard
tracer
06-06-2000, 09:05 PM
I don't know about the most interesting fictional character, but without a doubt, the most well-known fictional character has got to be Superman.
Or Jesus, if you think the New Testament is fiction like I do. ;)
Narile
06-07-2000, 12:43 AM
Wevets,
I assume you are refering to Usagi Yojimbo
Tracer,
I thought that Robin Hood was the second best known fictional character after Sherlock Holmes.
wevets
06-07-2000, 09:49 AM
Yes, that's how you spell it! Thanks, Narile. :)
Eposia
06-07-2000, 04:04 PM
I forget his name, but Vlad Talto's sidekick from Steve Brust's novels - starts with a K, I think - with his hilarious, completely unexplained ability to remain unnoticed, i.e. "Um, I'm right here, boss..." Hard to kill a guy if you can't notice him sitting next to you.
Kragar, I think. I find it ironic that we can't quite remember the name of the guy who no one can ever quite see... :)
Eposia
Flutterby
06-07-2000, 04:17 PM
How could I misss some of these?
Jean-Luc Picard, from Star Trek: TNG
Constable Benton Fraser, from Due South the TV series
Daniel Jackson and Captain O'Neil from the movie Stargate (and the TV show as well :))
Onto the ones that haven't been listed yet
Menolly from the Harper Hall series. (If anyone can't guess I love the Pern books. I have listed 3
people from them that I'd love to meet)
Robin Hood
Mr Chapel from Vengence Unlimited
Jarod from Pretender
Boy I have a lot of people I want to meet but I can never think of them all at once. If I come up with more (and I probably will) I'll be back!
Me!! Joe!!!
06-07-2000, 04:25 PM
My vote for most interesting characters:
in print: Ignatius J. Reilly from "A Confederacy of Dunces" and Easy Rawlins and Mouse from Walter Mosley's "Easy Rawlins" books
in movies: Tallulah Bankhead's and Walter Slezak's characters in "Lifeboat", or Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly in "Rear Window."
in television: the entire cast of "Northern Exposure", but especially Marilyn.
in comic books: Reed Richards, Ben Grimm and Dr.Doom from The Fantastic Four.
Just a few of my personal favorites...
Medea's Child
06-07-2000, 05:04 PM
This is a beautiful thread, its going to make me re-read so many good books to re-join some of my favorite fictional people.
Patience from Orson Scott Card's Wyrms is the top of my list. Strong, intellegent, ruthless, and blind to her own weaknesses. She's lovely to follow through the course of the book and I would enjoy an afternoon with her.
tracer
06-07-2000, 06:15 PM
How about Marrissa from the Steven Ratliff series of Star Trek: The Next Generation fan fiction? :)
(Here's a link: http://pinky.wtower.com/mst3k/cgi/misting-search2.pl?search_category=on&category=SR WARNING: Ratliff has been called the Ed Wood of Star Trek fanfiction. The link I've just given is to those works of Ratliff which have been deservingly subjected to the Mystery Science Theater 3000 treatment -- which is the only way to make his works palatable.)
Narile
06-07-2000, 08:14 PM
The amazing thing with Ratliff's ST:TNG Fanfic, is that he takes the MST'ing in stride and doesn't really mind it. He can't write worth a damn, but at least he has a sense of humor.
And if you want the definition of truly evil fanfic...beware, I send you to the.....Eye of Argon (http://www.ibmpcug.co.uk/~owls/eye.htm).
This must be read to be (dis)believed, if you can stomach it. It is used at SF Cons to weedout the weak and feebleminded, to read more than a few paragraphs without loosing it, is a mark of insanity or total lack of brainpower.
HomeSlice
06-07-2000, 08:50 PM
Sebastian from Cruel Intentions...I'd like to learn some stuff from him. :D
Flutterby
06-08-2000, 08:15 AM
Narile that's just.. just.. *shudders* Look at this
Grignr leashed his mount forward as the hoarsely piercing battle cry
of his wilderness bred race resounded from his grinding lungs. A
twirling blade bounced harmlessly from the mighty thief's buckler as
his rolling right arm cleft upward, sending a foot of blinding steel ripping
through the Simarian's exposed gullet. A gasping gurgle from the soldier's
writhing mouth as he tumbled to the golden sand at his feet, and wormed
agonizingly in his death bed.
I can write better then that! Actually I have written better deaths then that (considering
I have lost c's in roleplay to random killers) *winces* I couldn't go on past that.
tracer
06-08-2000, 03:11 PM
The Eye of Argon has also been MSTed: http://pinky.wtower.com/mst3k/cgi/mstdisplay.pl?htmlmode=off&filename=argon.01.AC.txt.
And here's the official Stephen Ratliff Marrissa Storys [sic] MSTing Archive: http://www.crosswinds.net/~mblackwl/mst2.htm.
Tally-Ho
06-08-2000, 03:35 PM
Eposia, you and I need to start our own McCaffrey/Lackey fan club. You covered most of my faves.
I'd like to meet Anita Blake from Linda K. Hamilton's ongoing series. (Guilty Pleasures and Lunatic Cafe to name two of the series.)
Anita is one tough lady who winds up going through hell each book.
Also I'd love to live with a tribe of Tayledras (sp?) from Lackey's Valdemar series. What's not to like about a group of people whose favorite pastime is sitting naked in a hot spring with all one's friends? :D
Chrisbar
PunditLisa
06-08-2000, 03:45 PM
Chrisbar, are you a Richard or Jean-Claude fan?
Personally, I'm a dog lover, so I'm rooting for Richard. Vampires suck.
:)
I think Galadriel is intriguing. Beautiful, good but defiant, and married to an idiot. I keep wondering why? I am intrigued that she seems to be able to spot evil and defy it, yet marched forth after Feanor and his lot. She also seems to defy the stereotype that people who seek power should not be allowed to have it. She wanted a place of her own to rule, got it and made a beautiful, peaceful land of it.
I also am intrigued by Vampire Hunter D. I really want to know the story behind that talking hand of his. I don't know about you, but i am quite glad my hand isn't capable of arguing and doesn't talk!
Edwardina
06-08-2000, 04:46 PM
John Crichton from Farscape on the Sci Fi channel.
Czarcasm
06-08-2000, 10:18 PM
Look, I don't mind the threads about bad movies, horrible songs or even anal sex, but there will be no more quoting from The Eye Of Argon!
My ghod, have you people no decency??
Narile
06-09-2000, 10:57 AM
tracer....How the hell do you MST3K the Eye of Argon I mean, I can see the methodology, but where is the difficulty in that? Somethings are just to easy to try. (And yes, I know, it wasn't you whom MST3K'd it, you have more respect for your skills than that.)
Slythe, you want to hear the really scary part, at one of the cons I attend, C.J.Cherryh mentioned that the publisher whom received the original manuscript, has received sequels to the eye, from the same person.....
As for how I could do it? As I've said before, being Chaotic evil means never saying 'I'm Sorry'...... mwhahahahahahaha!!!
yESTERDAY mAN
06-09-2000, 12:34 PM
James Bond has got to be in here, of course. Bond is da man! He drives cool cars, carries a gun, and gets all the women.
Monique, God, and Satan from the comic strip Sinfest. Monique is hot (for a cartoon), God is funny, and Satan wears bad-ass suits.
Chronos
06-10-2000, 02:44 AM
Yeah, Gandalf is cool (Quite literally two steps below God), and Frodo's important, sure, but the main character in LotR is Samwise. I mean, Frodo goes to Mordor because it's his high-and-mighty destiny... Sam goes because he's loyal to a friend in need. It seems to me that he had more of a choice in what he did, and should be respected the more for it.
Prospero, from Shakespeare's The Tempest. My dream role to play sometime. He commands the very elements, brings together all of his enemies in one place, and then... releases them and gives up his art.
Natty Bumppo, AKA Deerslayer, AKA Hawkeye, AKA Pathfinder, AKA Leatherstockings, AKA... from the books by James Fenimore Cooper. I'm not sure how to put him through in writing, just read the books. You'll be glad you did.
Narile
06-10-2000, 12:04 PM
Buck Godot - Living in a rather interesting reality, fun but twisted. Remember, in New Hong Kong, there are No Laws, but that doesn't mean there are No Rules
Flutterby
06-10-2000, 02:43 PM
Sorry slythe I just had to share that little bit of mutilation of the art of story telling.
Narile SEQUELS? I would have died just reading the first one completely through. I wonder what it would take the guy to learn that his writing wasn't all that good. (He could try to improve. Maybe he needs writing classes) I'm just thankful we have editors who aren't gonna print that kind of thing.
Wordsmith
06-10-2000, 07:13 PM
I'm glad someone mentioned Jean-Luc, but let's not forget Data. The TNG writers really did a great job exploring the consequences of a wholly logical mindset in a nonetheless moral being. A corollary to Data, of course, is Spock, but he's not positronic, so he takes second place.
Take Data and remove the morality module, and you have Wolf Larsen of Jack London's The Sea-Wolf. I have never encountered a more fascinating character in literature, although I hear that one of the characters in Blood Meridian is far better. Hopefully this will prove to be the case.
I'm restricting myself to the characters no one has mentioned yet. Ford, Rimmer, Raistlin... what better characters can be conceived?
Edwardina
06-12-2000, 12:55 PM
I'm with you 100% on Raistlin. He's interesting, alright. *has one of those pleasurable shudders*
I nominate Clete Purcell from the novels by James Lee Burke.
Another interesting one: Willy Wonka.
rackensack
06-12-2000, 04:42 PM
Prospero, from Shakespeare's The Tempest. My dream role to play sometime. He commands the very elements, brings together all of his enemies in one place, and then... releases them and gives up his art.
Natty Bumppo, AKA Deerslayer, AKA Hawkeye, AKA Pathfinder, AKA Leatherstockings, AKA... from the books by James Fenimore Cooper. I'm not sure how to put him through in writing, just read the books. You'll be glad you did.
From the sublime to the . . . well, have you ever read Mark Twain's "The Literary Offenses of Fenimore Cooper"? You'll never read a Deerfinderstockingeye book with straight face (if at all) again.
sewalk
06-13-2000, 09:00 AM
Since my first and second choices have already been mentioned (Woodrow Wilson Smith and Mycroft Holmes from Heinlein, a 4000 year old man and a sentient computer with a sense of humor), I'd probably go with Jubal Harshaw(Stranger in a Strange Land).
Hannibal Lecter would definitely qualify as interesting. Exceedingly well-educated, a man of passions and a love of the arts, it would be interesting to share a meal with him, so long as he did not prepare it.
sewalk
06-13-2000, 09:20 AM
I just realized another interesting, or in this case, cool, fictional character: Chili Palmer. All of Elmore Leonard's characters have great lines but none embodies coolness like Chili Palmer. Definitely the coolest guy in fiction.
For those who've never heard of Elmore Leonard, Chili Palmer was John Travolta's character in Get Shorty.
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