Poor Travis, Sam, and Marisha were not prepared. They're sitting there going, "Man, and we thought Matt was bad with his whole wanting to strangle Vax thing..."
@@skyphy Its a LA by Night Episode where he plays a vampire hunter priest and he monologues so hard at Erica Ishii he makes their character and themselves question their entire philosophical outlook on life, I will look for it for you
There was a compilation edit of Brennan as that priest. It was chilling to watch him played that character... Cold, unnerving and unwavering conviction personified.
Brennan is as evil as evil can be. And I love him for that alone. Trust me folks, he's just playing nice in front of the cameras, and these monologues is just his opportunities to show the inner workings of his mind, to us all. A tiny peek, a little glimpse of the purest unsullied vitriol that mankind has ever witnessed. All those times he's acting goofy, it's just his cover act. You lot might not know it but I've seen those inner machinations of Brennan. I've been to these universes where he has trampled over people, I've seen the bloodbaths that ensued. Once he turned a toddler into a skiprope for the toddler's sister. Not in some magical fashion, no, in the most heinous and twisted fashions. As an observer who cannot intervene in any mortal affairs, Brennan Lee Mulligan, as you all know him, is a force to be reckoned with, the times he've looked into our observers' eyes, with a grin, and taking a bow as if it was nothing but a cute performance... In a sense, he is the purest soul to ever be, a trickster of the finest sort. You lot should be happy he went to your plane of existence, a truly magic void place, where this grand wizard can't use his powers.
I love how during Asmodeus' monologue everyone is all freaking out like "this is crazy" while Lou just sits there like "yep, this is all par for the course"
I think that's just what Lou looks like when he's really uncomfortable. He also goes pretty nonplussed during the Calroy monologue, when he goes off in Ravening War and the recent Sophomore Year PvP.
I think, its one thing to see Brennan 'unfurl' on screen, and another to be in the room when it happens, And Lou and Abreya's reactions are nearly opposite, but, you can tell they have the experience. Abreya, shes seeing her favorite come up to bat, maybe, taking a note? Theres excitement for a performance yet to happen, Lou, .. Its reminiscent of a friend going 'dude, I love you to death, but when you get like this,.. I worry." And with the Critrole crew, I think they get to see something new, I cant say Ive seen all that Matt lays down, But I feel theres different arrangements,.. for different BBEG, Theres Dark, Ambivalent, Personal, Evil, And this is Brennan being very comfortable with mixing Personal/ Evil. This isnt wild undirected rage, Its not cold uncaring, collateral damage, This is Personal, Directed, Hatred. Not something you see often at the table, because its needed top tier collaboration, you need to know your players can take it and play in it.
@@rayzabel8789 Travis is the sleeper hero of that entire series. His character is subtly (or not subtly) looked down on by the other characters, he full-on bails before the final fight, but he was super keyed in to what was happening and ended up somehow making the ending way less dark than it probably should have been.
The Lord of the Hells is a masterfully evil performance, but theirs something so personal about Calroy's betrayal. He was the trusted NPC, everyone's favorite. Right hand man up until the moment he put a blade in Amathar's back.
The difference between “you know what I’ve always hated about mortals?” and “you know what I’ve always hated about you, Amethar?” I mean, sure, Asmodeus drives his points home, but Calroy’s speech sounds like something someone we know and love could say to us. Maybe it’s something that someone else HAS said to us. That’s why it hits so much harder.
I once played in a Mutants and Masterminds (superhero TTRPG) in which the BBEG actually was all the villains, minus the one or two we turned to our side or defeated early, because he was one of those shapeshifting/absorbing types. It ended up being super cool.
I have never felt chills and such a profound sense of dread quite like watching the Asmodeus monologue for the first time, Brennan is truly in a League of his own
Truly. He undestands philosophically what evil is, and can act it out without it being detached from reality, even in fantasy settings. Like, Aabria does an intimidating person extremely well, I can really feel it. But evil - that's much deeper than mean, and Brennan manifests it like no one else
@@skyphyi think he understands that evil and good exist because of perspective and projection. I think Brennan's version of Amodeus doesn't even think himself "good." He sees himself as wronged and will do anything and everything in his power to see that wrong paid for. It's like, you do great once you can do the bad guy with a point of view that isnt inherently wrong but has manifested in a totally evil way. And then you can dig one step deeper and find the bad guy that doesn't hate everyone but cares only about themselves and their ends that the problem of opposition is just math. And that's kind of Calroy, kind of Robert Moses. And then there's that final layer down, the Asmodeus layer, where it's just pain. It's just pain and rage, and anything to inflict that pain back out into the world is justified. Not right, not good, but Just. Such a hard perspective to achieve. But I've always loved that Brennan's performance of Asmodeus here and in this series makes me occasionally wonder "but what if he *was* right? What if worship corrupted the Celestial beings that became the gods of Exandria?"
@@SeanBoyce-gp villains whose perspective you can kind of understand or possibly empathize with are the best villains. And the writing! omg the dialogue is soooooo good
The part that really fuckin gets me with Calroy is HE MADE A BIT OMINOUS! They spent the season joking about war buddies watching each other shit and then BLeeM pulls that fucking line, UGH!
To get super nerdy, I think one of the reasons it really works is because, on a metatextual level, one of the ways storytellers signal that you can trust a character and that they're a true friend is by having them participate in the humor and be in on the bits. There's a sense that you only joke around and laugh with someone who you're truly bonded to. So when Calroy betrays Amethar, it's like... goddammit, man, I trusted you! It's kind of a two-pronged betrayal, both Calroy betraying Amethar and Brennan "betraying" us. So then when he brings back the bit and uses it as a threat this time, it kind of loops back around and suggests that, every time we heard this bit before and they were all laughing about it together, Calroy was silently thinking about how much he resents and hates Amethar, and he was putting on the humor as an act. So finally in this moment, when he really wants to twist the knife, he's like... "You thought we were friends because we laughed about this disgusting bit together? Go fuck yourself. I had the upper hand the whole time, and the only thing I feel about the bit is blinding rage that I had to pretend I didn't hate it and you." Like, the bit is still silly, but Calroy's boiling disgust and resentment about it only hits harder because it feels so incongruous with the dumb bit that's been hiding it the whole time.
"My greatest heartbreak is that when i have collected every last mortal soul, and my siblings, into my pit, I will only have eternity to punish them." is the hardest line ever spoken by anyone in the history of EVER
I still think the villain in A Crown of Candy has one of the best portrayals. Calls Amethar "lucky" for losing all of his siblings, some he killed himself, and getting a crown he never wanted. His view of the crown and what Amethar deals with is so completely different of what Amethar is actually going through. But you can still understand why he does what he does with his plans laid bare. He is a piece of... cake but he fully leans into it.
Of course the cherry on that cake? Brennan was actively trying to kill Amethar the entire time for a narrative device, and almost managed it with the fall.
I've always said this, he goes on a whole diatribe about Amethar's "good luck" in getting the crown, while also describing how the "luck" was largely his doing. Really, he put off the last step, overthrowing the king, for so long, he almost could've stopped there and just enjoyed being the right hand. In another world, Calroy could've been the obsessed best friend who would do anything to see Amethar succeed and ride with him. Just wild.
@@SweetCarolineBAMBAMBAM You're right that is another fun play on words. I was referencing the reaction to Calroy's betrayal, where Emily (I think? Maybe Siobhan?) calls him a "piece of.... cake", clearly implying that she calls him a POS xD
He's got a webcomic, Strong Female Protagonist! It's illustrated by Molly Knox Ostertag, creator of The Witch Boy, who has also worked in various roles on The Owl House and Star vs. The Forces of Evil-and incidentally, as long as we're talking DnD, wrote for Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft, too! Tragically, it's coming up on the six year anniversary of its going on indefinite hiatus, right at the start of its final arc, since Brennan and Molly are so busy with their other work. But it's still 100% worth the read!
His baddies are so compelling, because usually, they're not evil for evil's sake. They have human traits that exist in all of us. They're envious, they're arrogant, they're ambitious, they're petty, they're mocking and gloating, they're spiteful, they're vengeful, they're stubborn, they're proud, they're selfish. Having all that motivation keeps them grounded and believable, even the comedic baddies like Kalvaxus.
the growl at "redemption" here (6:30) is probably the best delivery in the series, and one of the top 5 deliveries in Critical Role, if not the best. I could listen to him say this line for an hour and not get bored. gives me chills.
A god's whim does not care for the laws of mortality or reality. That's why they're called gods in the first place. Your soul proceeds to the afterlife if and when they deem it permissible. The audacity of some people, trying to die off cue during a monologue...
I love A Crown of Candy (and Ravening War), but holy shit is Calamity's big reveal there just STUNNING. Like from the start we all know it's going to end with certain things happening, but that shift was masterful. The entire last episode was just insanity.
There’s basically some alternate universe where Brennan is full blown supervillain. Basically we’re all lucky that he took a liking to DnD, otherwise he’d have a box of teeth at home rather than dice.
3:42 it should be shit instead of "shoot" and "shed". it's been a while since i watched acoc and "the last thing a man does before he dies is shoot himself" is a very VERY confusing statement. idk if u wrote them but please don't censor captions, especially by replacing curses with real words that then change the meaning of the sentence.
Calroy's speech hits different after finding out the backup character if Ruby died was going to be a revenant Rococoa. But then we wouldn't have gotten all that great Ruby/Saccharina interaction later on.
What is the middle clip from? I've watched all the intrepid hero campaigns and i don't recognize the set Edit: nvm It's from the first season of unsleeping City
he understands it on a deep level thanks to his philosophy skills, and is able to act it out very well because he's a good actor. that doesn't mean he wants to be it. Also, many people who achieved a level of understanding that deep want to be the opposite of that thing (usually the depth comes from personal trauma).
That's who Calroy is. Dude was waiting for DECADES to say all this shit to his "best friend" and he was that dramatic. Amethar was paralyzed for the whole speech and Calroy was reveling in it.
@@_Moe i don’t think OP realized that amethar was legit paralyzed by calroy in the moments before, so it was the only time calroy would get to air out all his grievances without any possible pushback, verbal or physical. amethar was forced into an immovable state while a man he considered his best friend confessed to have been orchestrating the murders (and attempted murders) of his sisters, children, friends, allies, and himself, as well as actively plotted against him for decades while amethar had obliviously allowed him to stay right by his side. calroy in any other circumstance would not have been able to take amethar, but in that moment when all his plans had finally come to fruition, he had all the time in the world to revel in his own success and let amethar know just how much of an imbecile he thought he was. i think the fact that he kept it to about 3 minutes shows calroy’s restraint as well as how long he probably practiced the exact words he wanted to say to amethar when he finally succeeded. imo calroy is the best D20 villain, and one of the best villains period.