✧ HAWKS VS TWICE | BNHA 6
the first real meta-analysis of this season, one that is highly deserved and one i've been anticipating for the better half of a year. hawks vs twice and the dichotomy of good and evil in respect to hero and villain and arguably one of the most important scenes in the entire animanga.
the first, and most important thing to understand is the frame in which this fight is set up. currently, the heroes are invading the paranormal liberation teams villa. this information has been acquired through hawks - who's been playing a double agent in the league for a long time.
the second most important thing to understand is who is inhabiting the roles of good and evil. of light and darkness, and why hawks is the evil.
as hawks points his feather towards twice, we witness twice relive the overhaul arc and begin to cry. he blames himself, going as far as to say it was his carelessness that's brought this upon him. this is the second time twice was experiencing betrayal and believes that the losses suffered to his comrades were his fault.
it speaks a lot to twices character. ultimately a vulnerable but kind, well-meaning person who puts the lives of his comrades above all.
but it also speaks to hawks, an agent of war and a weapon of the state. in fact, the viewpoint of this entire fight is noticeably reversed. reversed from the overhaul arc in which the league laid over the amputated body of kai chisaki, is hawks over the head of twice.
i want you to take notice of the lighting from the first episode in the second screenshot and i want you to notice the contrast between whats happening and what the story tells us.
the first screenshot has a light surrounding hawks with twice in the dark, surrounded by feathers. in the second, there's a thick wall seperating them with people surrounding hawks and no one to save twice.
what this fight has always been about was an explicit performance demonstrating the misconstruction of good and evil in heroes and villains.
there is a shadow cast on hawks face through every minute of this fight. the warm, friendly and cheerful hero is faded to nothing. cold, emotional, unreactive. he's done what he's always done - remained unfeeling in the face of all actions to accomplish what he needs. to survive. this is a crux of hawks character, it's crucial to his behavior at every point we see him.
✧ "You were just unlucky."
its something i want to highlight as its more information on hawks. ive mentioned before in a previous analysis that hawks sort of has the complex of a good victim. his inability to forgive his mother is birthed from this disposition. the "pulling yourself up by the weight of your bootstrap," mentality and his natural inclination to compartmentalize his emotions.
unlucky is a fascinating way to describe such scenario as premeditated as this one. it's cruel. it's frightening.
it's deeply, deeply unheroic.
but it's not that hawks is unfeeling. hawks tells twice here to atone. there's time to start over and that he's a good person. it's one of the only times in the entire scene we can see his whole face.
and he looks... mournful. he looks sad. he no longer looks unaffected.
hawks tells twice to shut up and we're no longer able to see his eyes. it's because hawks can't answer this question, and it's clear that he doesn't want to do this. he says it not even moments later. he even calls twice by his name when he exclaims that he has no interest in fighting him and i do believe that sentiment to be true
twice begins to accept hawks betrayal, creating a plethora of clones to try and stop his feathers but ultimately being unable to keep up. they exchance dialogue back and forth in which twice goes on to talk about not giving up.
the battle is tenacious but twice is unable to keep up with the sheer speed at which hawks is sending his feathers through his clones. the magnitude of hawks is speed is something twice mentions, to which hawks replies this
his reason for killing fast being that there's nothing worse for heroes' than a villain who can't give up. in this way, it becomes clear that hawks truly and sincerely idolizes the hero class. going so far as to put them above someone he genuinely considered a friend.
hawks eventually pins twice to the ground, feather to his neck. he calls hawks a traitor, making a comment about how everyone is the same. they all abandon the down an out (a truth that hawks knows firsthand) and he says something that's always struck me and did just as much in the manga.
✧ "You don't know do you? How Toga wraps me up in gently in her handkerchief?
it's such a devastating line. it's just so heavy, weighted with the connection of two people doomed by society. It's something Hawks has never been able to attain in his entire career, completely isolated by his line of work.
the fight doesn't end so cleanly, as only minutes in - dabi appears in a rush of fire. he burns hawks wings almost completely, stepping on his foot and breaking his glasses. Here they have an encounter where each party faces themselves the most honestly they ever had.
we get this iconic line, where dabi reveals he knew hawks would betray them from the beginning. indeed, dabi once again releases his flames - breaking the wall apart in which hawks escapes through and circles back.
when hawks is gone, dabi provides words of encouragement to twice. saying that only one of him could take down any number of heroes. something he seems to say sincerely and follows up with a high five. neither party is able to predict hawks coming in through the front.
it's here hawks lands the final blow on twice.
despite it all, twice is able to send one of his clones and protect toga and mr. compress from being captured. in his last moments, he apologizes to toga for making her sad before gently returning to back her handkerchief
as twice succumbs to his inevitable death, he reflects quietly on his life. lamenting about his circumstances.
"...I was blessed with friends I could put above myself,"
in his final moments, toga reaches out to hug his melting form and expresses her thanks while calling him first name. here we bear witness to his final thoughts before passing. saying he couldn't have asked for a better life, all while cursing Hawks and rebuttaling against his words.
✧ "Who are you to say I was unlucky?"
✧ "I was happy to be here,"
there is no scene in the entire series that summarizes the woes of it so succinctly as this one. not only does it highlight the concepts of good and evil as relative perfectly, but it provides immense insight on the human condition like no other. what hawks the hero could never manage is something twice cherished until his last breath
the importance of companionship. this scene was worth the wait by every means.
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