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"Have you ever seen 'Pacific Rim?'" a friend of mine asked. "Yeah," I answered. "Good movie, but it would have been better if the hero died in the end." I'm given a strange look, and am left wandering if I sprouted an extra head.
(This post may contain spoilers for Pacific Rim, Spiderman 2, Cowboys and Aliens, and Suckerpunch)
In the climax of Pacific Rim, our hero pilots a disabled self-destructing mech into a portal to another dimension in the bottom of the ocean. He sent his unconscious co-pilot girlfriend back to the surface in an escape pod, and we are led to believe that he is about to go down with his ship. At this point in the movie, I actually started to believe that our hero might not live through the story, and that's something that rarely happens. So, when he takes a second escape pod to the surface in the ta-da nick of time, I was pretty disappointed. If he had died, it would have been a beautiful self sacrificing moment. Dying to save not only the love of his life, but the world as we know it. And as the hero had lost so much over the course of the story, for example the twin brother with whom he shared a telepathic link, loosing his life felt like a satisfactory end to his story arc.
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So, heroic sacrifice doesn't HAVE to be a character's life, but it CAN be.
In the criminally underrated movie 'Cowboys and Aliens' our heroine, Ella, is an alien who's race have been pretty much been wiped out by the same marauding aliens invading Earth. To ensure that no other planets will be ravaged like her own had been, she makes her way to the heart of the Mothership and blows it, the invading aliens, and herself sky high.
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They, and a handful of other inmates, attempt escape the asylum, and to do so have to fight through several visually spectacular dream sequences. Several of the girls are killed along the way, including Rocket, who dies to save her big sister Sweet Pea. In the end only Sweet Pea and Babydoll remain. Babydoll realizes that the only way either of them can escape is if one of them distracts the guards and is recaptured. She doesn't even hesitate.
In the beginning of the story Babydoll's abusive stepfather bribes an orderly at the asylum to forge an order to have Babydoll lobotomized so she couldn't testify against him. In the end of the movie Babydoll allows herself to be lobotomized. Afterwards the doctors discover that there was a mistake, and root out the cause of the injustice. The villains of the story fall into their own trap, all because of Babydoll's sacrifice, ending the story on a beautiful bittersweet note.
I think if you want to make your hero stand out, a little selflessness goes a long way. A heroic sacrifice of some kind might be the way to go.
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