There are two types of conflicts between characters in fiction - real and artificial. Real ones are based on characters' different worldviews. Artificial ones are based on misunderstandings. It strikes me that even General Voll's attitude stems from the latter - not Mr Twilight's himself though. I hope he'll prove an interesting villain, because the story desperately needs it.
ETA: Compared to them this watered down resolution is a shameful cop-out that highlights the very nature of comic-vs-TVshow dichotomy. Well the tragedy is that it doesn't *have* to be that way. Comics can perfectly well carry a deep and dark story with impossible choices - just like fics and any other medium. (And I sincerely hope and pray that AtF won't shy away from difficult situations.)
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There are two types of conflicts between characters in fiction - real and artificial. Real ones are based on characters' different worldviews. Artificial ones are based on misunderstandings.
It strikes me that even General Voll's attitude stems from the latter - not Mr Twilight's himself though. I hope he'll prove an interesting villain, because the story desperately needs it.
ETA: Compared to them this watered down resolution is a shameful cop-out that highlights the very nature of comic-vs-TVshow dichotomy.
Well the tragedy is that it doesn't *have* to be that way. Comics can perfectly well carry a deep and dark story with impossible choices - just like fics and any other medium. (And I sincerely hope and pray that AtF won't shy away from difficult situations.)