What did you think of the Rape threats in the novel?
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Re: What did you think of the Rape threats in the novel?
- Karen Crumley
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pixiequeer wrote: ↑05 Aug 2018, 14:44 The repetition of it, from my perspective, is to get the creepy obnoxious feeling from Scordato. He is supposed to be portrayed as a creepy sociopathic killer obsessed with rape and domination of women. If the author only said he wanted to have his way with her only once, it would not have had the same effect. It wouldn't show his obsession. It would just seem like a passing thing he wanted to do, but no longer an obsession.
I respectfully disagree. A villain doesn't have to be a rapist to be scary or evil. Take for example the character Negan from The Walking Dead. We know that he is a murder and an extortionist, and a nasty bully. Yet, never once does he threaten to rape any women. As a matter of fact, he has no tolerance for it.
However, we get that he's a killer, even though he doesn't go around killing people on every page of the graphic novel and/or every scene of the series. We remember what he did to Glenn.
Scordato trying to rape Angela in the office established who he was as a villain. He doesn't have to go around saying "rape, rape, rape." We get that impression from the onset.
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Yes, exactly. I found the villains to be very cliche'.jessinikkip wrote: ↑22 Aug 2018, 17:03 I actually included this in my review of the book. I even took off a star from the book because of it. I felt like it was over used in the book and it could have easily told the same story with the same (or better) villains in it without the rape jokes and fantasies. I found it turned me off from the book and turned it into something I didn't really enjoy at all. It made the bad guys seem more like a joke than actual people to be feared.
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I think you slightly misunderstood what I was saying, but that may have been because of my wording.Kcrum12 wrote: ↑19 Aug 2018, 19:38pixiequeer wrote: ↑05 Aug 2018, 14:44 The repetition of it, from my perspective, is to get the creepy obnoxious feeling from Scordato. He is supposed to be portrayed as a creepy sociopathic killer obsessed with rape and domination of women. If the author only said he wanted to have his way with her only once, it would not have had the same effect. It wouldn't show his obsession. It would just seem like a passing thing he wanted to do, but no longer an obsession.
I respectfully disagree. A villain doesn't have to be a rapist to be scary or evil. Take for example the character Negan from The Walking Dead. We know that he is a murder and an extortionist, and a nasty bully. Yet, never once does he threaten to rape any women. As a matter of fact, he has no tolerance for it.
However, we get that he's a killer, even though he doesn't go around killing people on every page of the graphic novel and/or every scene of the series. We remember what he did to Glenn.
Scordato trying to rape Angela in the office established who he was as a villain. He doesn't have to go around saying "rape, rape, rape." We get that impression from the onset.
It's not JUST portrayed to make him a creepy obnoxious killer, but ALSO to make him seem obsessed with rape and domination of women; that is a part of his character.
Without it being repeated that he wants to have his way, it would also remove the sexual advances towards Angela in a way that isn't just about her.
He kills and rapes his victims; that's what he does and that's how the author wanted his character to be. She didn't want him to just be a killer.
That would also take away the fact that he has made other advances towards other employees, as well as why he keeps Angela on board. That was part of the reason why he hired her.
If you remove his obsession with rape and domination, I feel as if key parts of the story are also removed, as well as key character elements.