xparrot: Chopper reading (lex's evil switch)
[personal profile] xparrot
Just finished watching 5th season SV. After spending most of the season totally WTFing at Lex, because it initially seems like he just wakes up in the premiere with his supervillain switch flicked on - it's pretty cool how that's all explained in the second to last ep. Only it's done in such a way that we didn't get it until [livejournal.com profile] gnine figured out the explanation that makes the most sense, and now we're wondering where the fics are...the trouble with getting into fandom late is that we miss all the meta! (That is to say, you've probably seen this all before, I'm writing it out for my own benefit. And possibly future ficcing.)

Also - I gotta say, kudos to SV's writers. I'm not sure this is what they were going for for the entire season, but it does explain quite a bit that made no sense whatsoever otherwise, and it's a darn nifty slow-realization reveal. Even if man, yow. Poor, poor Lex. I've gone on before about the Tragedy of Lex but this...he's no villain. He's trying his damndest to be the hero.

For four seasons Lex has toed the line, but in 5th season he becomes so much more tragic ('cuz, yeah, the one thing Lex needed was more tragedy.) He starts slipping to the dark side for real - but he does it in a way it's damn hard to fault him for, because rather than bearing a personal grudge over Clark's betrayal, or proving himself worthy of love and respect, or whatever other petty motivations Lex offers up throughout the course of the season, in truth Lex Luthor spends the year trying to save the world. Everything he does, from the day after he's attacked in the caves by Zod's minions and finds the black ship, is motivated by the desperate and entirely understandable fear that alien invasion is imminent. And okay, the ends don't always justify the means - but when you have good reason to think that the survival of your species is at stake, a lot of means are pretty darn justified.

"Mortal" is Lex's first seemingly evil act, sending those mutants after Clark. Lex saw Zod's minions superspeed in the cave, and he clearly recognized that trick. He's got good evidence to theorize that Clark might be one of them; it's imperative to make sure of that ASAP, by any method. And no wonder he's thrown when it seems to be disproved - because finally, finally Lex was understanding why Clark was lying to him all this time; Clark might be a sleeper agent for the invasion. It couldn't have made him happy, but at least it would make sense. And then he's thrown back to square one: Clark is lying to him, and Lex can't figure out what he's doing wrong, that he can't be trusted. Only he can't care about that now, because there's a lot bigger things at stake.

"Aqua" was the ep that totally confused us; it made no sense that Lex would not only go ruthlessly evil, but change LuthorCorp's direction to defense contracts. It's the first time that we can recall ever seeing Lex interested in any kind of military applications. And he was so stupidly un-PC about the poor corporate publicity of a marine-life-killing weapon, his blasé "there's plenty of fish in sea," and - yeah, fate of humanity at stake. The potential political suicide isn't nearly as important as ensuring, not national, but global, defense. "Cyborg" is the same story. Why else make super-strong cyborg soldiers, but to battle super-strong aliens?

Then there's Lex's political ambitions. He gives a lot of excuses for why he's running for office, mostly related to his personal ambitions. The one he never mentions to anyone is that he needs political clout, pronto; he has to make the connections and get into a position where he can convince people of the reality of the peril the world's facing. (And, yeah, best reason ever to get wasted after losing - "Cheers, Mr. Kent, you and your son are gonna take over the world now.")

Lex gives a lot of excuses for his actions all through fifth season, because he doesn't know who he can trust. He's been raised to be paranoid and that instinct is in overdrive when the world's in danger. And the two people he has the most faith in, who he might have considered teaming up with: Lionel - Lex knows his father has been compromised by the alien threat, he's never going to drop a hint to Lionel; and Clark - might well be one of the invaders he fears. At the end of the season it seems like he comes to the conclusion Clark isn't, after seeing him go up against Fine, and he makes a couple tentative efforts to restore their friendship, but it's too late. Clark, realizing what Lex has been doing but not why, isn't able to trust him anymore. It's a sacrifice Lex accepts. With the stakes this high, there's very few things he can't afford to accept.

Meanwhile, there's Lana, who he can be pretty sure is not a potential invader, but who he doesn't want to freak out with ravings about the end of the world. Tentatively, he brings her into what he knows, but he's trying to keep her safe. I also can't help but wonder if he has some idea of using her to control Clark, if Clark does prove to be a threat. At any rate, she's the only one he can dare be at all honest with; little wonder they bond.

The road to hell, they say, and Lex has the best of intentions. If he lets his morals slide, if he lets that darkness he so feared earlier creep into his heart, then he has good reason. In 4th season he was still terrified of his darkness; in 5th season he embraces it, as the only way to save the human race. He's a sacrifice, with the others he makes, and it will be worth it. The tragedy is that it's all unnecessary. Krypton is destroyed; Zod and Brainiac are only a remnant, and other heroes are already out to stop them. If Clark had been honest with Lex, he would know what he was facing. But Clark isn't, and Lex doesn't know, and therefore takes measures that appear absolutely necessary.

The double tragedy is that the invasion happens anyway - and Lex is its instrument. He loses his gamble with Fine* and wakes up twenty-four hours later to find that he almost ended the world. "Guilt money," Chloe says, derisively, of his donating millions to Metropolis's reconstruction, and much as I love Chloe I could slap her for that line. Damn straight Lex has got guilt, and it's mostly unjustified; he would have done anything to stop Zod, had he been able. "I would have done the same thing," he tells Lana; but he couldn't, but he's not going to easily forgive himself for that. It's a wonder he doesn't have a complete mental breakdown. Or if he does, we don't get to see it, because we almost never see Lex alone with just his thoughts (grr again at the writers for dropping the "Lexmas" ball) and he's not going to scare Lana with that, and he doesn't dare tell Lionel, and Clark isn't talking to him anymore...

(* There's a bit of Brainiac mind control, or at least a tranquilizer, in the cocktail Fine shoots Lex up with; he may remember what happens after that, but he's acting entirely out of character from the moment he comes home to when Zod's ship summons him. Also this means that both times we see Lex asleep, he's under the influence of something. I am seriously starting to wonder if he actually has a bedroom, or sleeps at all.)

And the worst thing is, Lex, as far as we can tell, doesn't have any proof that the invasion is over. He still doesn't know that Krypton was destroyed; for all he knows, there's still a force on its way to Earth, and he's possibly the only thing standing in its way. Of course he's going to continue with 33.1 - mastering the mutants might be key to raising a defense. Whatever he's got going on with Lana might be equally important for that.

In fact, unless he finds more facts out later in 6th season eps we haven't seen, Lex is probably still operating under these assumptions. And might keep holding them until the day Kal-El publicly announces himself as the Last Son of Krypton, and wow, I will not blame Lex for having a total meltdown. After selling his soul to defend against a threat that doesn't actually exist - no wonder he decides to focus his efforts on the only alien threat still extant. It'll be the only way he has to stay sane.

Date: 2007-03-14 08:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ljs-lj.livejournal.com
Oh, wow. I love this reading of Lex - tragic, but highly believable in my opinion. Lex has confused me so much the last few seasons, but this larger issue of 'imminent alien invasion' and Lex trying to find a means of defending humanity really seems to fit. I don't know if we can trust the writers et.al. to have intended this, particularly from as early as season 3 or 4, but in retrospect it makes a ton of sense. And it certainly helps explain the whole 33.1 mess of recent - like with making Victor Stone a super-powerful cyborg to battle super-powered alien invaders, creating an army of super-powered meteor "freaks" (or creating yet more "freaks" in the secret labs) can be seen as an end-justifies-the-means attempt find a way to defend mankind. I've always loved that line where Lex suggests that Segeeth is actually the hero, not Naman, because he keeps Naman in check - I remember thinking that Lex really identified with that idea, even if he wasn't sure that Clark was Naman, and your theory certainly is in line with that whole storyline (which aside from the witches in Season 4 going to the caves, and the caves being a conduit to the Fortress in the Arctic, seems to have been somewhat dropped by the wayside).

I'll be recommending this on my journal!

Date: 2007-03-14 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dogwoodblossom.livejournal.com
The whole Segeeth keeping Naman in check thing is really emphasized in the comics. Lex repeatedly points out that Superman could easily conquer the world if he felt like it (Batman thinks the same thing, hence his own stockpile of kryptonite). Superman is so self-righteous and sees everything in black and white, and that's where the danger is. They go into it a whole lot in Superman: Red Son. If Superman gets impatient with humanity he can just impose his own ideals through force. With Lex constantly bugging him, he has a distraction.

The other less physical threat that Lex sees in Superman is that he will make humanity complacent. Human progress will stop because there are super powered beings solving all it's problems. Lex persists with his attempts at world domination to give Superman something to fight against, and remind the rest of humanity that they are capable of great things themselves. That Man can stand against Superman. No wonder everyone likes him better.

Date: 2007-03-15 07:04 am (UTC)
ext_3572: (lex - villain)
From: [identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com
Justice League Unlimited (I don't know the comics much, but I know the cartoons!) has quite a bit of exploration of the idea of Superman going dictator, and the very real danger superheroes could present should they drift from their strict moral path. Though I have to admit I'm more fascinated by the second threat, that humanity may stop bothering caring for themselves with superhero guardians, not needing to grow up under that parentage. Certainly the police of superhero-patrolled cities always seem hopelessly ineffectual (with the exception of Gotham, where Gordon & his posse do all they can, and even with Batman it's not enough...)

This threat seems very real in the SV universe, where everyone in the know seems totally content to rely on Clark to save them from the evil aliens and Zoners and whatnot, and even Lana doesn't seem think Lex can actually do a damn thing to fight them himself, despite all evidence to the contrary. Everyone - lead by Lionel - is out to get the dangerous weapons/energy sources out of Lex's hands, and it never seems to cross their minds that maybe some of those weapons might come in handy against monsters that even Clark is struggling against...

Date: 2007-03-15 08:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dogwoodblossom.livejournal.com
It's also worth pointing out that Clark has the same fears Lex does. He wants desperately to be human, but he knows that he's not. An episode of JLU leaps to mind, where he's trapped in a nightmare where he just keeps becoming more and more powerful and he can't control it. As long as Lex is the evil power-mad one, Clark can focus on being humble and unassuming. He's the strongest being on the planet (there was one Silver Age story where he used super-breath to blow out a star) and he spends his time getting coffee for Lois Lane and visiting his parents on the weekends.

That probably accounts for Clark being such a...well, an asshat, as we in the SV fandom frequently say. Especially with the serie's frankly weird interpretation of Jor El and Clark's supposed world conquering destiny. Krypton is often portrayed as a hostile, unearthly, and inhuman place, but Jor El has never been really evil before. There's no human tragedy in the SV Krypton being destroyed. Clark is rightly terrified of his alien heritage, but if Lex is an inhuman monster, then it's a simple matter for Clark to side vehemently against him and know, concretely, that he's on the side of the angels. It's how he proves his humanity.

Date: 2007-03-15 12:11 pm (UTC)
ext_3572: (lex - villain)
From: [identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com
In light of SV!Lex's motivations (watching s6, I'm becoming increasingly convinced that this really is what at least some of the writers are intending) this is massively ironic. Clark is obsessed with holding onto his humanity, for the sake of the world; while Lex is sacrificing his own humanity, for the exact same reasons...

(I have to take back a lot of what I said about Lexmas, with this interpretation. Lex know that the world he sees will make him happy; he just doesn't believe he can afford the possible price...)

Date: 2007-03-15 06:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dogwoodblossom.livejournal.com
Aren't super heroes fun? And I have friend who claim not to like Superman (they lie) because he's "too powerful" and not a "complex character." Batman in interesting because of the psychological drama (aka angst) but Superman isn't because he just uses his rainbow of powers (once he actually did have rainbow powers) to solve problems. But Superman has angst too. He's actually (supposedly) a pacifist. Which is why he goes out of his way to save everybody, even the bad guys and why he sits down and has little heart to heart talks with evildoers instead of just dangling them off a roof like Batman does.

Date: 2007-03-16 04:57 am (UTC)
ext_3572: (clex - so your place?)
From: [identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com
I can totally understand your friend, because I thought the same myself about Superman for a while. I rather appreciate SV for making me consider him in a more complex light...(...even if it has ruined beyond all hope when it comes to Clark & Lex's relationship. I tragically cannot see a single damn thing with them without reading the subtext...)

Much <3 for superheroes!

Date: 2007-03-15 06:50 am (UTC)
ext_3572: (lex - villain)
From: [identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com
I must admit, Lex's take on Naman/Segeeth makes me wonder if at least some of the writers weren't planning this all along. Though others I don't think are writing it even now - "Lexmas" for instance doesn't fit into this reading at all. SV's writing is very disconnected; all the chars suffer crippling cases of screenwriter schizophrenia. But I'm fairly sure at least some of TPTB are in favor of this reading of Lex, especially as we're now going through 6th season and there's a lot more evidence for it.

I think the seeds are planted in 3rd-4th season, with Lex's obsession not only with Clark but with the caves and aliens and everything else (Clark always makes it more personal to him than it really is. Lex is thinking broader than one man. Admittedly the giant photos of Clark in his chamber of secrets doesn't really help his case...) But Lex doesn't decide aliens are a serious threat until he sees Zod's minions in action in the 5th season premiere (and his father gets put in a coma by an alien artifact). Which, I think, makes Lex's position so much more understandable - if he'd just decided to start fighting aliens with no evidence that they're dangerous, that would seem a little nuts (even if later he was proved right). But he's got fairly definite proof that there is extraterrestrial life, that it is powerful, and that it is not friendly.

What cinches it for me is that it's right after he sees the Kryptonians that his behavior totally changes. Suddenly, after 4 seasons, Lex starts building weapons, starts lying openly & obviously to Clark; after 4 years of trying to be accepted in Smallville, he suddenly seems to stop caring what people think of him, even as he desperately strives to win political office. It's bizarre and contradictary - the actions of a man who has seen too much and is terrified for what it means for his planet.

(& thanks for the rec! ^^)

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