Vinland Saga – 22

I’ve been dancing around it for most of the series, but it’s time to acknowledge the elephant in the room and just admit it – Askeladd is the main character in Vinland Saga.  Not only that, but he’s the most interesting character, and it’s a pretty high bar with this cast.  Now all that may change in the material the anime hasn’t reached, but the anime is what it is, and the manga is what it is.  If we get a second season (I’m actually coming around to believing there’s a chance) I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it.

What a complicated vipers’ nest of a man Askeladd is.  He really is a true magnificent bastard in the true literary sense.  I certainly don’t like him per se, but I feel as though I understand him.  As well as anyone can, anyway.  And what’s more I pity him, no less so than I do Thorfinn albeit for very different reasons.  I’ve never felt that the smartest people were particularly the happiest as a rule – if anything the opposite tends to be true – and Askeladd is living proof of that.

It was clear from the final moments of last week’s episode (uncharacteristically recycled in the cold open here) that Askeladd was approaching this duel with Thorfinn in a much different manner than his usual.  I feel as if there are times when something happens to remind Askeladd how miserable he truly is and this sets him into a funk, and the death of Bjorn at his hand is certainly one such event.  While I don’t doubt that there was a part of him that mourned Bjorn and even considered him almost a friend, I think what was really bothering Askeladd here that Bjorn – a member of the race of brutes he so contemptuously looks down on – was capable of such powerful feelings for him, and he was unable to reciprocate.  The episode title was “Lone Wolf”, and it could hardly fit Askeladd any better.

With someone as complicated as Askeladd, their actions are always going to be a matter of interpretation.  But I truly believe he was trying to help Thorfinn here (and generally has been since the beginning) – to set him free by pushing him away once and for all.  Letting off steam too – I’m sure battering the kid senseless felt good for Askeladd in that trying moment.  Throwing away his sword, goading Thorfinn on, then effortlessly subduing him with his bare hands.  Does anyone truly believe it would have mattered if Thorfinn had two good arms?  Askleadd has his number and always has.

As for the story Askeladd told the boys (and Thorkell), it was fascinating in its own right but there were multiple layers of subtext to his telling it.  How many people has Askeladd shared this with over the years, I wonder?  I wouldn’t be stunned if this were the first time – there’s no indication that he’s ever loved anyone or even can love anyone apart from his mother, or that he’s had a real friend.  We now know the source of the name, a little more about the nature of the Artorius myth his mother kept repeating like a mantra.  But if one were to envision a backstory for a man like Askeladd, I imagine this would have hit very close the mark for most of us.

Let us never forget, Askeladd is half-Viking himself.  Olaf’s blood courses through his veins just as his mother’s does.  He learned a hard lesson at just 11 years old – legends don’t save people, and neither do Gods.  The only thing that can save a person is another person, and he decided to be that person.  And let’s not forget that in telling this story, Askeladd is giving Thorfinn the template for how to kill him (should he have the will).  Askeladd is no warrior – he makes no bones about it.  Killing Olaf in his sleep and framing his brother?  If it serves the goal, do it.  Askeladd is not only no man of honor – he holds honor in contempt, and the only God he serves is the God of practicality.

Of course Thor’s existence is a wild card in all this.  I think that was the one time in all of Askeladd’s lonely, blood-stained journey that he doubted his own despairing view of the world.  But then he killed Thors, which he’d been paid a lot of money to do, and that was that.  Name-dropping Thors to Thorfinn here was undeniably cold as ice, but as with everything this man does it was thoroughly calculated.  As with the pummelling I’m sure it felt good, but Askeladd wants to make sure Thorfinn understands he’s been wasting his life and there’s no way out on the path he’s chosen.  It’s not what Thors would have wanted, and whether he kills Askeladd or not it will have accomplished nothing except destroying his soul.

So what does Askeladd want now?  Does he want Thorfinn to abandon him for good, or to kill him in his sleep?  His acknowledgment to Canute that the prince is better-suited to rule is more or less an admission that his own life has been a waste as much as Thorfinn’s, but he’s fully aware of that fact and has been almost from the beginning.  Askeladd never liked himself and now more than ever he’s become that which he reviled.  The most fascinating – and poignant – moment of Askeladd’s tale was when he bemoaned “people without beauty” popping up everywhere, because it was a reminder that he’s a man who has aspirations and fully understands the degree to which his life has been an abomination.  He’s no saint to be sure, but that’s not a fate I would wish on anybody.

 

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10 comments

  1. Ande ye shall receive?

  2. D

    he is too competent to be unaware of morality (or lack of it) and the consequences

  3. I can now bring up how your reading of Askeladd back in episode 8 was spot-on: “Askeladd is a sad fellow, really. He’s too smart to be fooled into thinking the world is anything but what it is – hard, cruel, filthy and violent.” And this episode has now made it even clearer just how aware of the filthy nature of the world he is, and even more tragically, how aware he is of the fact that he’s allowed himself to be thoroughly tainted by said ugliness.

    But I personally wouldn’t go as far as to say he holds honor in contempt. I think he’s coming more from a place of “The world is such a bad place, so why bother trying to be good? Everyone is so ugly, so why bother trying to do things beautifully?” Which, of course, is what Thors was doing: being the change the wanted to see in the world. I think that’s why Askeladd was so mesmerized by Thors’ existence; Thors was doing that which Askeladd should have done when he realized how worthless the Viking way of life is but didn’t have the courage to do.

  4. I think this is mostly a matter of semantics, because to me that’s basically contempt.

  5. Y

    I can finally talk about my favorite V.S. character in-depth. He’s truly a paradoxical man. He’s proud of his Welsh lineage, but at the same time, Askeladd sees himself tainted by the blood of his Viking father. All through his life, he’s survived on the military prowess he believes he’s inherited and his cunningness, both attributes he somewhat takes pride in and somewhat despises himself for.
    I’ve always felt that when he said it’s thanks to Thors that Thorfinn was such an easily manipulated idiot, Askeladd was also, in a backhanded way, telling Thorfinn that the two of them are different due to their fathers.

  6. D

    If I was to be critical of the anime (which has largely been excellent) is that they haven’t quite got the nuance of Thorfinn down quite right. He is more petulant and sneering in the anime than he is in the manga. It’s hard to put a finger on what exactly is off, but the feel of the man is not quite the same as when you read the manga. In part I think it’s the voice actor who has him screaming and raging a little too much, in the manga it always felt more focussed and intelligent. In particular his fighting style was more fluid, more lethal and less ‘windmilling’, which seems to be how he gets portrayed in the anime. It seems he is more ‘brash’ than ‘driven’.

  7. T

    Man this show is so anti-Catholicism. There are the obvious points Canute rejecting God for humanism, but even more so, in my opinion, is how it seems that the author actually believes the world is a terrible place. Catholicism teaches that people are inherintly good, and honestly, the only reason anyone thinks the world is bad is because the average pessimist is vocal about it, which affects others’ views.

  8. E

    I remember few episodes back when the catholic priest was explaining Canute what love and true love is. I am no expert but I am sure christianity definitely dont teach that.

  9. O

    This episodes dialog between Cante, Thornfinn, and Einar is epic and explains today’s relationship between The Kings of Europe and how they colonized and treated Africa and its people. For the longest Africa has welcomed Europe into their country saying to Europeans we have no enemies and we welcome you, but have grown tired of the abuse, wars, robbing, killing, raping, and destruction (colonization) of it’s people and like Einar; have had enough of Europe’s shit and are fight back for their future, ancestors, and children.

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