Books - Captain Jonathon Randall from the “Outlander” series
TV - that lady from “Weakest Link”
Movie - The British Officer in “The Patriot” and Vince Vaugh’s character in “Psyco 2”.
That is Clint Eastwood’s character in three speggetti westerns A Fistfull of Dollars, A Few Dollars More, and The Good, The Bad and The Ugly
And I have to agree he was a great anti hero
“All right now, I’m comin’ out. Any man I see out there, I’m gonna shoot him. Any sumbitch takes a shot at me, I’m not only gonna kill him, but I’m gonna kill his wife. All his friends. Burn his damn house down.”
“I’ve killed women and children. I’ve killed everything that walks or crawls at one time or another. And I’m here to kill you, Little Bill, for what you done to Ned.”
3. Television or Cartoon: Spike (from Buffy the Vampire Slayer) One of my favourite lines is when he says he really doesn’t want to destroy the world because he likes it; it has soccer and all these people running around like Happy Meals on legs. “Just let me kill this guy before we save the world” sums up his attitude.
Literature: Thomas Covenant / Angus Thermopyle
Angus Thermopyle appears in Stephen Donaldson’s Gap series and is a truly despicable character from start to finish. Despite this, Donaldson makes one care deeply about what happens to this shitbag. The whole series is populated with anti-heroes, perhaps why this is why I enjoyed it so much.
My pick for all time would be Thomas Covenant and I would add that The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant The Unbeliever stand as one of the greatest works of literature of all time.
Thought of another good one… Zorro! As far as anti-heroine i’d probably have to go with… damn I forget her name… the team leader for the Gen13 cross comic dV8… damn… um… Sublime! What a hottie
Amp, were you being sarcastic? If so, props because I actually got a good laugh out of seeing the Tick on here.
Oh, and how could I forget Divine as Babs Johnson in “Pink Flamingos” and as Dawn Davenport in “Female Trouble?” An anti-hero and anti-heroine in one big, glamorous, overly-madeup package!
A hero is one who is endowed with great courage and strength, celebrated for his bold exploits, and oftentimes favored by the gods.
A hero is a person noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose, especially one who has risked or sacrificed his or her life.
Adding “anti” would indicate the opposite.
Thomas Covenant is a coward posessed of little physical or mental strength. He is consumed with fear and disbelief and feels that he has been cursed. In many cases he acts out of a sense of self preservation. He treats others callously as he believes they are a figment of his deranged imagination. Yet, he saves the world and in the process, becomes transformed.
The anti-hero does not have to be evil but rather, works from a different set of motives than your typical hero.
Have to agree with Scylla on Nicholai Hel, and Silvio for Elric (Michael Moorcock loves the anti-hero protagonist). In the same vein, Vlad Taltos from Steven Brust’s books started out as a good anti-hero (an assassin, climbing the organized crime ladder). Of course, Zelazny’s Amber series is also rife with nasty protagonists.
Cut n’ paste from Webster.com
Main Entry: an·ti·he·ro
Pronunciation: 'an-ti-“hE-(”)rO, 'an-"tI-, -“hir-(”)O
Function: noun
Date: 1714
: a protagonist or notable figure who is conspicuously lacking in heroic qualities
So, just to furthur clarify…
Batman, not anti-hero
Spawn, anti-hero
King Richard the Lion-hearted, not
Robin Hood, is
Wyatt Earp, nope (well, as far as we know)
John ‘Doc’ Holiday, is
“Good Cop”, not
“Bad Cop”, is
Luke Skywalker, nope
Han Solo, yep
G.I. Joe, not an anti-hero
Rambo, anti-hero
I could keep going, but i’ve proven my dorknitude.
Andrew Vachss’s Burke. He lives and works outside the law, using loopholes in the system, has the strangest set of comrades imaginable (only in NYC!), and specializes in the destruction of pedophiles. I absolutely love these books.
I don’t see how you can say Batman is not an anti-hero and Robin Hood is one.
OK Batman has many different tellings of the story and sometimes he is pure hero, sometimes anti and sometimes comic hero (Live action TV show)
The batman I enjoy is the anti-hero batman. He is a lawbreaker. He is a man possesed by inner demons. He has a lot in common with his foes. (Two face especially)
Robin Hood is actually supporting the true king and fighting against the usuper. (at least in the versions I know)
As far as Anti-Heros go though I like Bill Munny and the Man with no Name.
Or in the film named after him Ed Wood or the main character in American Movie.