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#Char-isma if you will
gremoria411 · 4 months
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Zeon Remnants: Why so many?
*Spoilers for most of the Universal Century Below*
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So a common criticism of Universal Century I see is that it’s essentially all Zeon Remnants, all the time. That it every antagonist to the Earth Federation is either a Zeon remnant or related to such and it makes the universal century feel smaller.
That is 100% a valid criticism.
However, it’s not something I particularly notice as a problem, so I figured I’d make a post delving into my reasons why. I’ll be talking about each of the “main” Zeon groups (The Principality of Zeon, The Delaz Fleet, Axis Zeon, Char’s Neo Zeon and The Sleeves) and I’ll talk about why Zeon are so frequently the antagonist. Alright, enough preamble, let’s get on with it.
Why don’t I have a problem with Zeon always showing up, all the time?
Because I usually consider each Zeon group its own thing. Like, yeah the aesthetics and some mobile suits tend to match up but they typically have…. If not different goals, then different cultures. It’s not just the same thing all the time.
I’ll be dividing them by roughly four factors:
Motivations - *Why* are they fighting, how unified are they?
Size - big force or little force, since it affects how they fight.
Newtypes - Oh hey, it’s just possibly one of their more important contributions to the setting in general. Kinda important. Focusing more on how they’re used and how they’re seen.
Mechanics - Mobile suits and overall tech level for the time.
The Principality of Zeon
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First up, the good ol’ Principality of Zeon. The P of Z, if you will. Founded by Degwin Sodo Zabi in the aftermath of Zeon Zum Deikun’s death in U.C. 0068. Rapid Militarisation of Side 3 (Munzo), the colonies composing Zeon followed, with what would become the One Year War being declared in UC 0079. It’s sometimes known as “The Duchy of Zion” in older translations.
It’s a little unclear *why* war was declared, but the official line and the view of the average citizen would be that it was a war of Independence from the Earth Federation. Zeon Zum Deikun (who Zeon was named after) was the father of Contolism, a philosophy that combines two major elements:
Elseim - The Earth is Sacred, and must be protected (The Earth is Humanity’s Cradle, but man cannot live in the cradle forever-type stuff, with a big focus on environmentalism).
Sideism - All Space Colonies should be independent from the Earth Federation (This is where all the “Those whose souls are still bound by gravity”-type stuff comes from).
And nestled riiight in the middle of those two is the Newtype Theory, which postulates that ascending into space is the next stage of mankind’s evolution, giving rise to a “new type” of individual, with the ability to communicate over great distances and divides.
Due to Class divides and economic disparity between the Earth Federation “elite” and the Space Colonists (particularly those in Side 3), Contolism was massively popular, with Zeon Zum Deikun being raised to leader of Side 3. However, he died suddenly and (apparently) appointed Degwin Zabi as his successor. Degwin would instigate a purge of Zeon’s most loyal followers, and place his children in high ranking political positions, ruling the Principality of Zeon as absolute dictator. It’s unclear if Degwin declared war as the logical conclusion of the Contolism Philosophy to wrest Earth from the Federation, if he viewed it as a way to secure greater power or if he genuinely wanted to rule the entire earth sphere.
What I’m getting at here is that your average Zeon soldier believes he is fighting for the Independence of the Space Colonies and the safeguarding of Earth against the Federation Elites who seek to exploit it. The higher command however, is incredibly fractious, since each one is operating under a different member of the Zabi Family, and so there tends to be a lot of friction. Even if Zeon had won the OYW, it’s likely it would’ve had to deal with a Civil War at some point or another (dependant on which members of the Zabi family survived).
Zeon is also notable in that it’s the single largest organisation here, and since mobile suit combat was relatively new, it fought with a lot more variety than any of its successors, such as tanks and mobile armours. It also had the advantage of, with the notable exception of the RX-78 and its derivatives, being far better off than the Earth Federation technologically, possessing advanced mobile suits and actual Newtype research (important note; With one singular exception, it is never suggested that Zeon’s Newtype laboratories are anything less than above-board. Are they under immense pressure to succeed? Absolutely. But crucially, they aren’t inhuman). It had a large variety of mobile suits - usually a few good “workhorse” units (Zaku’s and Dom’s) with a bunch of oddities on the side (like Gyan’s and Zakarello’s).
Lastly, the One Year War itself. This is a point I’ll be coming back to frequently throughout this, but; The Federation possessed a major population and material advantage over the Principality of Zeon for the entire war, and was able to deploy a staggering amount of enlisted soldiers into the war. Zeon possessed the advantage of mobile suits early on, but they were also forced to mobilise a great many soldiers. Both Sides of the One Year War lost half of their respective populations in the early stages of the war (The One Week Battle) and Side 4 Moore was utterly devastated. What I’m getting at is that there would be an awful lot of individuals with millitary training and/or technological know-how running around after the war, as occurred in the real-world World War II and Cold War (strictly speaking I’m looking at them being an easy source of millitary experience in genre fiction, but you get the idea). So you have a lot of Ex-Soldiers and remaining military equipment hanging around, and a lot of people with “legitimate grievances” to hate the other side (Warcrimes on both sides, The Earth Federation essentially doesn’t change, Zeon Remnants remain an active problem with several becoming pirates and there’s a lot of Federation “mop-up” teams going around, the precursors to the Titans).
So, The Principality of Zeon in a nutshell; Principled reasoning (i.e. Contolism), massive force, Newtypes rare and incredibly valued (since they’re essentially a living reminder of why they’re fighting and a massive force multiplier), mobile suits essentially brand new and largely experimental.
The Delaz Fleet (and Zeon Remnants in general)
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The Delaz Fleet was formally created in U.C. 0081, being primarily composed of former Gihren Zabi Loyalists from the Principality of Zeon, led by Aigulle Delaz (above, left). They were most famous for Operation Stardust in U.C. 0083. I’m also going to be discussing Zeon Remnant groups in general here, since the Delaz Fleet is essentially just a very large and successful Zeon remnant group. Delaz’ goal is relatively simple - vengeance. Delaz wishes to deal a hefty blow to the federation, largely to avenge the Principality’s loss at a Baoa Qu, with much of his forces feeling similarly (note: it’s possible that, had their been less withdrawals of Gihren Faction Loyalists like Delaz, A Baoa Qu may have gone differently). The forces under his command is relatively small, to the point where he is forced to seek aid from both the Axis Advance Fleet (though this is largely in materials and recovery) and the Cima Fleet, which costs him dearly.
Delaz specifically embellishes the “cause” of Zeon, focusing less on the Principality’s totally necessary warcrimes and more on Zeon’s fight for Independence against the Earth Federation. This is relevant because Delaz reaches a wide audience, espousing his own Zeonic ideals, largely divorced from the original Contolism basis. He also blames the weakened political leadership of the time (read: that nasty Kycilia murdering his precious Gihren Zabi). Delaz is specifically the most successful of the Zeon remnants in his era, directly to the space colonies detriment, since his actions directly lead to the founding of the Titans, who brutally crack down on the Colonies.
Equipment-wise, Zeon remnant groups are a varied bunch, but typically fight using older or ad-hoc equipment - The Delaz Fleet primarily utilises upgraded machines from the One Year War - Zaku FII’s, Rick Dom’s and, most notably, Dra-C’s - mobile suits cobbled together from spare Zaku and Gattle fighter-bomber parts. Any other materials they use are either stolen from the Earth Federation or are acquired through other means.
Newtypes are kinda weird here, since there just aren’t any in 0083, and the general theme with Newtypes in other remnant groups around this time is typically that they’re either propaganda or just not very good. It’s possible that the Newtype philosophy was largely dormant for a while immediately following Zeon’s defeat - either viewed as propaganda or directly suppressed by the Earth Federation themselves (like Amuro). The Newtype philosophy likely experienced as resurgence with the emergence of the Titans, since it would have been a rallying cry for spacenoid independence once more. As such, Newtypes just aren’t a big thing in Zeon remnant groups around this era, at least as near as I can tell (Delaz is the only animated force we see, and I try not to rely too much on manga, at least for Universal Century).
So, Delaz Fleet (and immediate postwar Zeon remnants) in a nutshell; Varied Motivations (though typically vengeance or survival), Small Guerilla Force, Newtypes near non-existent, mobile suits either OYW cast-offs or stolen.
Axis Zeon
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Which I admit I’m using because it’s more easily distinguished than Neo Zeon, Neo Zeon and Neo Zeon. Anyway, Axis Zeon is made up of the various Zeon remnants that fled to the Asteroid Axis after the One Year War, this includes several pilots, scientists and engineers, which ensures that Axis enjoys a massive technological edge for most of its existence. Axis, in contrast to Zeons prior, is primarily concerned with “The Restoration of the Zabi Family” since one of the people that ended up there is Mineva Zabi, daughter of Dozle and the Zabi family’s only living heir. Except Glemy maybe.
Since Mineva was of the Zabi family lineage, of course she’d want to resume their conquest of the Earth Sphere, and so Axis was reconstructed into a fortress for her to rule when she came of age, with a regent being appointed to rule in her stead, which eventually fell to Haman Karn. Haman was essentially able to use Mineva as a figurehead in order to mount an invasion of Earth, and struck at the end of the Gryps War, when both the Titans and AEUG were reeling from that conflict. It’s also notable that a lot of the Axis members we see are very young, so were raised on “The Glories of Zeon” without actually seeing the realities of the One Year War with their own eyes.
Neo Zeon also was able to develop and field newtype weaponry, with newtypes being a potent threat against the AEUG. However, they still weren’t common, and so Cyber Newtypes were fielded. In contrast to “true newtypes” who have naturally awakened to their powers, cyber-newtypes are those with Newtype potential who have been forcibly conditioned with drugs and implants in order to function for combat. Though deadly threats, they are very unstable. You may notice that this seems anathema to the Contolism Philosophy espoused by Zeon Zum Deikun, and is incredibly dehumanising to boot, signifying that Axis is barely even paying lip service to its ideals of spacenoid independence. Axis Zeon is also notable for utilising clones to supplement its Newtype forces, which…. I don’t think is strictly counter to Contolism? But it feels like it’s against it in spirit, if not in letter.
It’s especially notable that a great many members of Axis Zeon espouse things like “For the Glory of Neo Zeon” and “For the Restoration of the Zabi Family” without really understanding what they mean. It’s also notable that, barring links with surviving Zeon Remnant groups, Axis isn’t noted as being very popular with the colonial population, likely because they don’t really understand what the “Ideals of Zeon” mean, and the civilians recognise them as merely parroting Zabi rhetoric.
Axis Zeon would eventually be undone by a Civil War within the organisation led by Glemy Toto, coupled with the AEUG’s offensives. Unlike the political manoeuvring of the One Year War, the Glemy Faction coup occurs very suddenly and results in massive casualties in the organisation due to his command of the Newtype corps.
Technologically, Axis is absolutely cutting-edge. They really don’t cheap out on mobile suit development and are able to design and field a variety of units comparable to the Principality in its heyday. Axis forces are essentially the best-armed Zeon will ever be, helped massively by the sheer amount of Newtype weaponry they can deploy (they have three mainline mobile suits in the Neo Zeon War, all three seeing good amounts of production at various stages and they’re typically first pick for Zeon Remnant Groups in the U.C. 0090’s). They also have the facilities for Newtype cloning, as mentioned above.
Axis Zeon in a nutshell; Hollow Motivations (Restoration of the Zabi Family and Conquest of the Earth Sphere), large force, newtypes and cyber-newtypes prevalent, mobile suits many, varied and cutting-edge.
(I haven’t quite finished all of ZZ, so forgive me if this one’s a bit rough)
Char’s Neo Zeon/Newborn Neo Zeon
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Sometimes also known as Char’s Rebellion. It was basically founded in order to accelerate space migration….. by plunging the Earth into nuclear winter and making it near-uninhabitable. Founded by our good buddy Char Aznable in U.C. 0093, there’s less to go on for this particular iteration of Zeon, basically just a movie and supplemental information. It is composed of various Zeon remnants and political factions under Char Aznable with the express purpose of instigating the Axis Drop in order to make the earth uninhabitable and stop humanity from damaging it. Which is a terrible plan, barely paying lip service to the Contolist ideals Zeon was founded upon.
That’s because it’s a lie.
Char is in fact mounting a suicide run on the entire Earth. Creating a threat so massive that Amuro will be forced to kill him to stop it. Which is rather informative. Char is essentially using his influence to hold the entire operation together, and it’s notable that a good chunk of his own forces actively move to counter his goal when the option presents itself. Consequently, there isn’t much in the way of ideals on display here - Char is famous both for being the son of Zeon Zum Deikun and for his Dakar Address when he was a member of the AEUG. It kinda seems like a lot of his support is coming from people who know him from that, as opposed to what he’s actually doing. Newborn Neo Zeon is basically headlined and held together by Char, and has the vibe of a desperate last gasp for Zeon. It’s also notable that the only time we see Char actually lead Zeon is when he’s using its name for his own ends.
Newborn Neo Zeon also has a great more political pull than many of the other groups - Char Succeeds in a lot of his goals because he’s essentially able to play the Earth Federation like a fiddle, while remnant groups happily provide him aid. Technologically he has the backing of both Anaheim and Newtype Labs. Char’s mobile suits are, while not cutting-edge as such, very well rounded. The Geara Doga and Jagd Doga both share components and a general body structure, and the only reason the Sazabi is unique is because they couldn’t make the frame suit Char’s abilities (there’s a bunch of prototype units that pave the way to the Sazabi). Newborn Neo Zeon also retains a number of Axis Zeon Remnants, which bring their mobile suits and technical skill as well. Newtypes, while not exactly common, are considerably more stable than their Axis predecessors, and are given Jagd Doga’s, which are probably the closest a Newtype machine has ever come to reliability and ease of use. There’s also the Alpha Azieru…. which is also there (I don’t really have a lot to say on it honestly, it’s just kind of another “big newtype weapon”). Unfortunately, I really don’t have much to go on here regarding how the force views its newtypes - they’re essentially just treated as a special branch of the forces, no contolist ethics here, which is genuinely pretty sad. Because it illustrates just how far Char’s fallen from the ideals he espoused at the end of Zeta, especially considering he’s the son of Zeon Zum Deikun.
Char’s Neo Zeon in a nutshell: Motivations lean Char-centric, middling force with a lot of soft power, Newtypes present and mostly stable, small mobile suit variety but what’s there is very good.
(The Geara Doga’s one of my favourite grunt suits, so I’m probably quite biased here)
The Sleeves
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Last of the “main” Neo Zeon Organisations. The Sleeves is a melting pot of every Zeon remnant group going. Founded around U.C. 0096, they were led by the man called Full Frontal, known as the “ghost of char”. Due to their disparate status, they aren’t recognised as a legitimate organisation by the Federstion, instead being branded a terrorist group - which they essentially are, being an aggregation of a bunch of other informal Zeon remnant groups. This mixed nature leads to a similar diversity in views and equipment - you have die-hard contolists, Glemy faction remnants, newborn Neo Zeon cast-offs and everything in-between.
They are essentially a return to form for Zeon Remnant groups, but are able effectively leverage their limited assets to fight quite effectively, though again, they’re heavily reliant on soft power, such as their relationship with Anaheim and political connections. They don’t have the forces to steamroll through the Earth Federation, so they’re forced to adopt an almost cell-based approach (at least that’s my read on Full Frontal and Suberoa Zinnerman’s relationship). It’s an odd mix of the realities of a Guerilla war against the federation and hearkening back to Neo-Zeon groups past (who were themselves hearkening back to the days of the old Principality). I should also note that The Sleeves maintain links with several other Zeon Remnant groups, such as some of the forces that attack Torrington in Unicorn. This is interesting not just because it shows a greater deal of collaboration between these groups than seen prior (Delaz and Cima were not exactly trusting of each other), it also shows a different mechanical composition to pre-U.C. 0090 remnant groups.
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They’re kind of all over the place. Which I love because it’s 1:1 with their philosophical composition - they’re remnants from a bunch of different forces and groups, so of course it makes sense that their mobile suits would reflect that. The Sleeves do possess the…. Not-quite-cutting-edge-but-at-least-new Geara Zulus and the absolutely fabulous Sinanju (s), Kyshatriya and Rebawoo, but that’s kind of all they’re at. Everything else is from at least Char’s Rebellion or earlier - there’s one-of-a-kind custom units, old axis castoffs, even some stuff from the One Year War and immediate postwar period (like that poor regelgu). A varied armament for a varied force.
However, it is notable that The Sleeves don’t really have much of an identity of their own, largely due to their patchwork composition. They’re the scattered remnants of previous causes, and this is both called out and used against them in-universe. It feels like an examination of Char’s actions during CCA - Full Frontal certainly has Char’s charisma, but he doesn’t have his drive as evidenced by his eventual goal, which isn’t necessarily a *bad* aim, it’s just not Char.
Following on from this they share Newborn Neo Zeon’s just general…. disinterest in newtypes. They’re like any other pilot, they can just use different equipment. All the Sleeves Newtypes we see are very well-equipped though, so how they precisely look at them is unclear. This could be viewed as another extension of Char’s attitudes in CCA.
The Sleeves in a nutshell: Motivations are kind of all over the place, middling-to-low-sized force, newtypes uncommon but mostly-stable (one exception) and very effective, massive mobile suit variety but quality’s also all over the place.
Conclusion
So yeah, I find each revival of Zeon different enough that I can consider them separately to each other - yeah, there’s crossover, but their attitudes change each time - the only thing that stays the same is the aesthetic and who they’re fighting against.
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But why are Zeon so often the antagonist?
Out-of-universe, because they sell. But you already knew that so let’s talk about possible In-universe reasons:
Old Equipment - The Principality was *huge*. Masses of equipment, enlisted men and yes, mobile suits. We see several individuals that are able to survive on the Scrap alone - Kelly Layzner, Judau Ashta, even the AEUG utilize a Gelgoog at one point. There’s a lot of material out there, and its a hot commodity post war and the Earth Federation will be in a hurry to rebuild - they don’t have the resources to track down every case of assault rifles or damaged-but-not-irreparable mobile suit. The South Seas alliance in Gundam Thunderbolt is one such organisation, but there will be a lot of Zeon Remnants who are still functional.
Loss of Leadership, not force - Aguille Delaz personally blames the “weak political leadership” (IE Kycillia) for the loss in the One Year War, but we can extrapolate that further. The Battle for A Baoa Qu saw pretty much all the remaining Zabi High Command due within hours of each other - Gihren kills Degwin, Kycillia kills Gihren, Char kills Kycillia. These are three massive losses to the war effort in very short spaces of time. Gihren’s betrayal of Degwin would’ve been very costly for him even if Kycillia hadn’t taken revenge there and then. He deprived himself of both the Solar Ray and the Fleet that Degwin was part of. The fact he took out Revil as well merely would’ve made it an even loss - if it wasn’t for the Solar Ray being rendered unusable into the bargain. Kycilia’s revenge killing of Gihren deprives A Baoa Qu of forces as the commanders loyal to Gihren flee the scene - Delaz among them - weakening the defence overall. Finally, Kycilia is killed as she is attempting to flee to Granada, where she planned to continue the war. This leaves a great many well-armed forces at large, since their strength wasn’t spent at A Baoa Qu - forces that Axis Zeon will draw on. All it really takes to galvanise these remnants is a charismatic individual, something which isn’t exactly in sort supply in the Universal Century.
Corollary to the above - Unclear loss - A Baoa Qu was absolute chaos, so the precise mechanics of “why Zeon lost” might be difficult for the average soldier to grasp - particularly one lacking in reliable non-federation communication sources. It would be easy to look at the mess of A Baoa Qu, then look at the equipment beside you and think “Yeah, we could’ve won. Yeah, we might still win”.
Unchanged Status Quo - Zeon launched the One Year War, at least officially, in the name of Independence. The Earth Federation was governing the colonies poorly, and class inequality was high. This does not change, if anything, it gets worse, as groups like the Titans see the OYW and Operation Stardust as Carte Blanche to utterly suppress the space colonies, and carry out War Crimes at least equal to Zeon’s. A failed war might at least spark some change to prevent another one, but if anything conditions for spacenoids only get worse, so resistance groups would see an upturn in numbers.
Corollary to the Above - Spacenoid Independence doesn’t stop with the war - The Independence of the Space Colonies is still a hot-button issue which the Federation has reason to suppress. So any ex-Zeon soldiers that folded back into civilian life may get involved with Colonial Independence movements. Or, any colonial independence movement that finds the Federation isn’t listening to them might seek a way to *make* them listen - and might find Zeon Remnant Groups sympathetic to their cause.
Little oversight - Before the formation of the Titans, the Earth Federation government believed Zeon to be removed as a threat - small pirate groups, but nothing major. Operation Stardust changed all this, yes, but before that Zeon remnant groups could operate largely unopposed, especially in areas with lower federation presence.
Total Societal Upheavel - Half of the population of the Universal Century died in the One Week Battle. Side 4 Moore was completely destroyed. There’s going to be some serious societal reconstruction after that no matter how you look at it. (Sidebar - Polygamy is mentioned as being a lot more common in Gundam Thunderbolt after the OYW, due to the massive gender disparity - you could also read this as Universal Century also being supportive of Lesbians). It’s not necessarily a driving force behind Zeon Remnant groups, but it’s worth remembering.
Military Experience - The big one, in my opinion. You have a lot of individuals with military experience after the war, including Guerilla warfare. This includes all the forces that had to adapt to new environments, like fighting in space, in colonies or on earth. There’s also a massive postwar economic depression. That’s not going to breed contentment towards a weak government, especially one that wasn’t doing a good job before the war.
In a nutshell, Zeon has the experience, materials and drive necessary to continue being a problem after the One Year War, and the Earth Federation Government doesn’t have the institutional will to stop them until Operation Stardust, which leads to the creation of the Titans, which really don’t help the situation.
Feel free to mention anything I’ve missed!
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whiteclericmaris · 6 years
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Okay so some people in the chat of duel links were going over favorite series. I usually try to stay out of it but they mentioned how they like Vr//ain's intro episodes better than 5//d's and I had to disagree.
Like in 5//d's we are thrown in the middle of Yu//sei and Ja//ck's rivalry but they start the introduction with the D-Wheels in early clips of the episodes. Soon in later episodes they even go over D-Wheels and the Momentum energy they produce to even the setting and why the setting is the way it is divided between N//eo Dom//ino City and Sat//ellite.
Vra//ins intro.... is not as good. It's already at 90 episodes and compared to the amount of info we were given from 5//d's in about the first 50 episodes it doesn't even go over it. We are thrown in a fight between Play//maker and a random Kn//ight of Ha//noi and it is apparent that Play//maker has something against the Kn//ights of Ha//noi (and they do go over it in later episodes) other stuff remains unexplained throughout the series (unless in post 90 episodes they decide to go over it). One of the most important aspects of the show Li//nk Vrai//ns hasn't been gone over yet it's where a lot of the episodes are set in. Unlike 5d's where they went over D-Wheels and even how they help N//eo Dom//ino Ci//ty be maintained with the Momentum energy, Li//nk Vra//ins does not even go over why it is important to the users or even how it came to be. For all we know it's just a place where a few duelist can duel (probably more as a luxury). You can create an alternate self when going and maybe even chose the accessories prior to entering (Or in Ak//ira's case stay the same as irl). But like... how is this even important?
Another early aspect they do/have not gone over is char//isma duel//ist noticeably G//o and Bl//ue An//gel. Assuming from the title they are duelist that duel and give back to the community in some way like how G//o fought early on to help support an orphanage. What does a Char//isma Due//list title even mean? It's seen as important and looks like a celebrity title as Bl//ue An//gel shows.
They do however go over A//I and the Ig//nis and why they are important but compared to 5d//'s where there is at least a grasp on how their world works and why some people are the way they are Vrai//ns just feels a bit more superficial with how their world works. [Again this is from just 90 episodes in not complete 100+ episodes for the entire series]
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mcarfield · 6 years
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I sold my soul and signed up for the Glasgow Times for this article and I regret nothing, lol.
Highlights:
* James is a “left-handed only child”
* “A huge Star Wars fan, McArdle lobbied hard to get into” The Force Awakens
* James saying he read James 1 and “opened the window fully” oh my god I cannot
* James supporting #Indyref, you beautiful socialist <3 
* “McArdle is single-minded, singular — but not unpleasantly so.” OH REALLY.
On a short break from the National Theatre’s Platonov, in which he plays the title role, James McArdle toys with a copper ring on his finger. “That’s my wedding ring,” he nods. Hold on, you’re married? “No, it’s Platonov’s!” says the 27-year-old, appalled. “God, no, no. No, no. But look how green it’s left me,” he says in a Glaswegian burr, observing the residue on his hand. “Cheap.”
Common sense should have told me this was Platonov’s ring: McArdle is still in costume for this early Chekhov piece, written when the good doctor was about 20. He also wears a linen smock, linen trousers and stomping knee-high boots; his hair is vigorously decoiffed and, théâtre oblige, he has on a size­able amount of eyeliner. It’s a suitable guise for one of Chekhov’s roughest and readiest creations. Originally, he was the hero of a billowing seven-hour piece, never performed in the writer’s lifetime, but now, here, he’s the star of a streamlined version by David Hare. Along with Hare’s tinkerings with Ivanov and The Seagull, it is part of a Young Chekhov trilogy that won raves in Chichester last autumn and has now been imported, wholesale, to the South Bank.
It’s Platonov who wears a wedding ring, then, but only nominally, as the action revolves around this dissolute, disillusioned schoolteacher and his antics with various women on the estate next door. It requires an actor of particular power to spin all these plates, to seduce and appal us nonstop, and that man is McArdle, whose rather everyday features belie a char­isma most pretty-boy actors can only dream of. (His performance won him the Sunday Times/National Theatre Charleson award last month.)
It is a breakout role, or, rather, a further one after he impressed in the West End hit Chariots of Fire and as James I of Scotland in Rona Munro’s James Plays. Platonov, this “young man’s play”, as he calls it, taps into something deep. “I read it, and I just related to him very much,” he says with an awkward smile. “I felt very close to the part... I say that as though it’s something to be proud of!”
Yes, I say, recalling the four women he snogs in the show, how do you relate to him? He snickers. “Various character­istics.” Any in particular? “Ah, you know...” He laughs, then regroups. “Any young man gets to a certain age in his life when he looks around and thinks, have I done what I set out to do?”
Platonov is 27, like McArdle. That’s apt. “Yes, but people think I’m older.” Why is that? “I don’t know. My maturity or my ­haggard face. One or the other. Jonathan Kent [his director] says I’m the oldest person he’s ever met.” Are you a mature person, then? “I don’t think so. If you mean boring, no.” How about a wise head on young shoulders? He nods his head sagely. “Aye, too wise, too wise. It’s exhausting, you know.”
In Ivanov, McArdle plays the moralising doctor, Lvov. (The three shows are played in rep by a fine company.) It’s a very different role from Platonov, and testament to his range. There is a bit of Lvov in him too, he insists — “I can get on my high horse and be priggish” — but Platonov is the star role. You could almost sell it, following in the line of the Young Vic’s Three Sisters and the Almeida’s Vanya, as part of a general debunking of genteel Chekhov, of that kind of production where people sit around primly and moan in RP. Indeed, the icing on the cake is McArdle’s Glaswegian accent.
“A girl in the cast’s posh friend said, ‘Oh goodness, and is that to show the class difference?’” he recalls. “And I was, like, well, I’m actually doing a posher Glaswegian as Platonov, but I know you wouldn’t really understand what a posher Glaswegian accent is versus a normal Glaswegian accent. I was also, like, you’re aware they’re Russian, aren’t you?”
You may have gathered by now that McArdle is single-minded, singular — but not unpleasantly so. Rather, he is, as he sums it up, “a left-handed only child”, and this somehow explains a great deal. When he was nine, producers came into his school looking to cast actors for a children’s TV production, Stacey Stone. “I think they were just looking for the most obnoxious wee boy they could find,” he laughs.
After that, he only ever wanted to act — apart from wanting to be a vet, or a pilot, or prime minister. (It would be First Minister now.) Actually, it’s quite clear they never stood a chance. He had no background in the arts at all, but his parents were always supportive. “My dad said, ‘Carol, we are going to see everything he is in — even if it is shite.’”
His mates from back home are equally encouraging, though one gig really stood out — McArdle’s appearance in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, where he played Niv Lek, a Resistance fighter.
You had one line of dialogue? “I had three, goddammit!” A huge Star Wars fan, McArdle lobbied hard to get into the movie, not caring about being a glorified extra. His friends shared his enthusiasm, going to see it five times. McArdle says he was “mortified”, but not as mortified as when they all came to Edinburgh to see him play James I.
In this vicious slab of medieval history, McArdle’s king has an awkward sex scene. “I could hear my mate — he’s got this really squawkish, high-pitched laugh, and as soon as I took my trousers down, I could just hear it. But you know, it’s so nice.”
James I was, he says, a defining role for him. He cancelled a recall for a role in the film Suffragrette to prepare for the audition, he wanted it so badly. “I will never forget, when I read it, I opened the window fully, I had the doors open and I just lay there, because I was, like, I have to get this part, I have to get it.” Why? It’s just a great play, but also, he says he had never heard “our voice, our Scottish voice, captured in a nonpatronising, universal way before”.
The National Theatre of Scotland performed the play during and after the Scottish referendum, and it was “like doing different plays”. When I ask if he would welcome a second referendum, he winces, but says quietly that he would, and that he would vote to leave the Union. But it would only be to have the majority of Scottish views upheld, he insists, as opposed to any kind of nationalism.
“I find patriotism a little foolish, to be honest. I never say I’m proud to be Scottish. I say I’m lucky to be Scottish, because I think it’s quite foolish to be proud of something that is chance.”
Not that he doesn’t love being Scottish; he’s just not quite sure what it entails. “I always get” — he puts on a posh accent — “‘Oh, you’re sooo Scottish!’ I don’t know what it means.” Never­theless, he also knows that national traits are potent, not least when tackling Chekhov. “Being Glaswegian feels more Russian than being English.”
He stands out in theatreland, though, and he knows it. There is much angst now about acting being a posh kids’ profession: has he felt like a fish out of water? He shrugs, saying it’s all “fashion”; and, although he insists we shouldn’t care, and says it’s “boring”, he then roils around the topic for about 10 minutes. What bothers him is people attending to trends and celebrity and fame, when the only real thing is to do good work.
“Yes, I do think they’ve been favoured,” he says of all those nice young Etonians, “but, actually, I think they’ve been favoured throughout all of time, and will be favoured throughout all of time. And I think, well, I have to carve my own path around that — and I am up for that fight. You know, I’ll come back and back into the room!
I don’t care, I’m not gonna let posh boys stop me!” As though it even needed saying.
The Young Chekhov trilogy is in rep at the National Theatre, London SE1, until Oct 8
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siouxempirepodcast · 7 years
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Coming Soon: The Urban Indianz Podcast
I am super excited to announce a new podcast arriving on June 12 on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  TheSiouxEmpire.com’s second in-house produced Podcast series; The Urban Indianz Podcast and will by hosted by three-time Native American Music Award Winner 2010 & 2014 ISMA Best Hip Hop Winner VIBE Magazine TOP 50 Unsigned Artist Gabriel Night Shield, Levi Hansen of the band Black Mask Armada, Char Green, and Kat Stands. From Robert Mehling, producer of The Sioux Empire Podcast.  The Urban Indianz Podcast will look at the issues and culture of Urban Native life.  Every episode will end with a Native Hip Hop Artist Spotlight.  More details are coming soon.  Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Check Out TheSiouxEmpire.com for the most up do date news about the show.
Urban Indianz Podcast
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