mark_asphodel: Sage King Leaf (Default)
[personal profile] mark_asphodel
 Taking a break from the "Bad Fanfiction" series... which has generated all kinds of fantastic discussion (y'all are awesome).

So, [livejournal.com profile] sacae  posted "If you had to write an "epic" (200k-500k) fanfiction about a group/groups of characters (any fandom, any characters), who would you choose to write about and why?

A prequel to The Alienist about the adventures of Kreizler, Moore, and Roosevelt during their university days.  

Uh... 

Oh yes.  I write for Fire Emblem.

Ideally, I'd do exactly what I mentioned doing on Manna's journal: "a serious take on the War of Heroes as enacted by adults without the anime shenanigans," wherein the politics and religion all made some kind of meaningful sense.

I do believe that the core story of said War of Heroes (FE3 Book II / FE12) is one of the best storylines in Fire Emblem (yes, Seisen is the end-all be-all of everything, and I've seen a strong case made for the storyline of Radiant Dawn), in part because it starts as a purely political story.  It's not another case of "OMG we've been attacked"-- your team of "good guys" starts out doing some pretty dodgy work in another country at the request of the person who turns out to be the Big Bad.  It's a taste of some of the complexities of Seisen; Hardin is banking on his knowledge of Marth, pushing Marth into one uncomfortable situation after another, upping the ante until Marth bucks his orders... which gives Hardin the pretext to invade Altea and declare Marth as Public Enemy Number One.  At the core of it is, allegedly, a friendship and working relationship gone horribly, horribly wrong.

Unfortunately, the feel for that end of the storyline gets lost once the supernatural component kicks in.  Not that the supernatural component is unwelcome, as the "dragon angle" turns out to be what makes the Archanea universe so very compelling.  I tend to think that the actual point of the whole Archanea dog-and-pony show is actually the preservation of Tiki, not the question of who's married to whom, or who rules the continent.  That's all Gotoh cares about, in any event, and he's as close to Voice of God as this universe gets.  

So we have a very good supernatural/religious plotline, and a very good political story, and while they don't mesh seamlessly the combination makes the War of Heroes both extremely compelling and an excellent place to deploy fan-theories, suppositions, and crack.  Now, what binds these two storylines together is the Gharnef/Medeus package deal, which IMO is the weak point of the story.  Incredibly significant, and the source of some really memorable material, but... well, hell, didn't we just kill these guys a couple of years ago?  FE12 apparently lends some depth to Gharnef beyond "butthurt and seeking revenge," but I frankly liked him better during the War of Darkness, wherein it was apparent he was planning to leave Medeus hanging and rule the continent all by his little twisted self.  And Medeus gets an awesome backstory but nothing to really do except pop up from his hole, make threats, and die.  Again.


But yeah, if I had infinite time to bang away at Fire Emblem and an audience that would give a damn, I'd want to give the War of Heroes a full-on serious treatment.  Doing so, though, runs right into some serious problems.  For one, if the key is to write a consistent, plausible take on the characters and their motivations, that means picking one characterization out of the possible options and sticking with it for 200K-500K words.  Think that's easy?  Not if you want the whole shebang to make any sense.

Take Our Hero.  Marth's characterization over the years has been anything but consistent.  He's saddled with the dual roles of being a inspirational/spiritual figure AND a political/military leader... well, let's just say later games didn't make that mistake.  Imagine Eirika and L'Arachel melded into one character.  Better yet, don't.  So for a prose treatment of the game, you have at least three clear options:

1) Messiah!Marth.  A naive, childlike (or childish) redemptive figure, come to lead Archanea out of the darkness that generations of wicked adults brought upon it.  Pure-heared, trusting, loving, forgiving... and quite possibly immune to the corruption of the world, barring a BSOD breakdown.  Pros of taking this route include a) why Gotoh trusts Marth and b) why Marth's father Cornelius was apparently not Good Enough to win the favor of the "gods."  [Archanea canon makes clear that higher powers are orchestrating this whole fiasco.  This CANNOT be ignored in interpreting canon.]  Cons of this would include that Marth is not going to be able to lace his damned boots, much less lead an army, without major, major props from the supporting cast.  

2) Hero!Marth.  A politically-clued in adult figure, whose ideals and behavior are at least marginally better than the prevailing standard but who is not so special as to be incorruptible.  Pros of this would include showing Marth as being capable of dealing with the massive political burden he's shouldering by the end of the war.  Cons of this would be that, well, if he's not So Incredibly Special, why is there insistence on making him, er, Special?

3) Hypocrite!Marth.  As in, someone whose "grand ideals" simply do not jive with the things he's actually doing.  Pros of this include reconciling #1 and #2 above, to some extent.  Cons of this are... well, we could hit darkfic territory in a hurry going that route.

And you can do interesting things with these that make something more than a regurgitation of the script in prose form.  Messiah!Marth might be aided by a MyUnit figure-- instead of a cardboard MyUnit, how about a savvy operator, a spy or assassin, someone who really is pulling strings from the "shadows" to help the cause?  Hero!Marth might have acquired his reputation for holiness after the fact; rather than winning because he was Special, he's remembered as Special because he won and his followers wrote the history books.  Hypocrite!Marth (and I got this idea from FE12!Gharnef, fwiw) could be utilized in any number of ways-- he might be a well-intentioned person with a blind spot, he might be as self-righteous and ambitious as Hardin's propaganda paints him, or he might be flat-out delusional. 

Hardin, Our Antagonist, offers similar problems-- is he a good (or great) man, a genuine friend whose real sin is not envy or wrath but acedia, which leaves him prey to the Darksphere's influence?  Or a man and leader who really is corroded from within by resentment of a much younger rival?  Is he aware of the influence of the Darksphere and fighting against it (canon indicates yes, IMO)?  If so, how much is he willing or able to fight?

Obviously, the tone of the "epic fic" would change dramatically depending on which "Marth" and which "Hardin" are used.  If Marth is squeaky-clean and Hardin hates his guts, it's going to be a different story from one where Marth's a suspect individual with a shiny reputation and Hardin hates his guts.  And whatever the author (okay, I) chose from the outset of the story, it would have to be sustained for the full length of the epic... regardless of the pitfalls.

That's a shit-ton of work for a story maybe two people would read, and we haven't even touched the dragon plotline yet!

PS- I just realized I don't have a "Marth" tag for this journal.  Basically, if it's about Fire Emblem, it's about Marth in some way, shape, or form.

Date: 2011-02-03 10:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sailorvfan10.livejournal.com
*waves hand* I WOULD READ IT.

Having written a novelisation (that I never finished, mind) that's ~79k words? Yes. It is hard. It is very hard. VERY HARD. Especially with characterisations. In FE6's case, I turned to the game script and support conversations to A) see how Roy was at the beginning of the game and B) see how he progressed. Naturally I also used stuff from headcanon because FE6 needed a lot of fleshing out especially with off-camera moments and whatever. It was not easy. I never finished because my brain exploded.

SO THEN I WENT TO AKANEIA FANDOM, where Our Hero has 854935834 different CANON INTERPRETATIONS. Oh holy crap. I tried to write a novelisation on this too. I'd be able to do it on FE11 because I love FE11!Marth to pieces. He is flawed and most important of all, human. He wakes up one morning to find his castle being invaded, his father is fighting in a war and (later confirmed) is dead because DAMN YOU GRA AND YOUR BACKSTABBING WAYS and he has no idea where his mother is because she and Elice got separated and now they're wisking Marth away to Talis because HIS FATHER IS DEAD AND MARTH IS THEIR ONLY HOPE TO SAVE THE WORLD and btw he's fourteen, his kingdom just got taken over and pretty much burned to the ground, his sister is kidnapped and might be dead, his mother is missing, and his father was murdered.

What a lovely morning.

He wants REVENGE but he's not strong enough so A'TRAINING I GO SO I CAN KILL THOSE BASTARDS (or would he say 'sea-fowl'? Eurgh). But oh yeah, saving the world. He makes Hard Decisions despite not wanting to because he MUST and oh god I love Marth in this game and his pragmatism and just. Human. Also how he can sometimes be sarcastic. Love. WHY WEREN'T YOU COOL LIKE THIS IN THE ANIME, MARTH?

But then FE12 killed it all *sobs*

ANYWAY.

To do something for the War of Heroes, Marth would be difficult. Do you want FE3 characterisation with some FE12 stuff thrown in? Or complete FE12 characterisation? Or some middle ground? Or headcanon? Can you stick with it? THESE QUESTIONS WOULD EXPLODE MY BRAIN. When I was writing "Call to Arms" I didn't have stupid FE12 to worry about so I could've just used the events in FE3 and made them fit Marth's new characterisation.

For me, if I were writing it, I'd probably do a mix of #2 and #3, leaning more towards the second one. I could always say he was considered special because, oh, he's the descendent of Anri the Hero and that MUST COUNT FOR SOMETHING YES

Though I must admit I really do like this: Hero!Marth might have acquired his reputation for holiness after the fact; rather than winning because he was Special, he's remembered as Special because he won and his followers wrote the history books. It makes sense to me, and that's kind of what my headcanon points to, along with "well-intentioned with a blind spot".

But if you were gonna do #3, which yes, would be quite dark, and very, very quickly too, I'd suggest "he might be a well-intentioned person with a blind spot". I don't buy the whole 'flat out delusional' because really, basing everything off of FE11, I...don't see him going down that route unless even more shit happened, like Sheeda died and they didn't get all the star fragments and then not only do you get the bad ending but the FAIL ending as well. Then Marth would probably lose all sense of reality because then he would just utterly mentally break from everything.

I really need to find a translation of FE12's game script, if there is one. Trying to remember (and mentally translate!) FE12 is not a good thing because god only knows if there's headcanon in there tainting it XD

(Then also I can remember what Hardin's propaganda was too.)

I don't see Marth as naive at all. Not in FE11. Not in FE12. FE12 did awful things to him anyway. Eurgh.

I COULD GO ON FOREVER but comments have limits and yeah.

Profile

mark_asphodel: Sage King Leaf (Default)
mark_asphodel

February 2019

S M T W T F S
      12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 27th, 2026 09:06 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios