Griffith: An Analysis (Berserk Spoilers)

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”I will have my own kingdom. You must fight for me…because you belong to me.”

Introduction

First and foremost, I started my viewing of Berserk drawing on what I remerabered and from that I gathered Griffith could be viewed as a sociopath. He was selfish, cold, incapable of empathizing with others. After all that would explain how he could feed all the people who just saved his life to demons. But as I watched episode after episode and especially after Casca’s flasrabroadack I came to think he simply suffered Narcissistic Personality Disorder. I particularly felt #3 was the clincher: “believes that he or she is “”special”” and unique and can only be understood by, or should associate with, other special…people”. Remind you of Griffith’s fascination with Guts much? Yet I dropped this idea too as time went by and I finally decided that Griffith con’t be labeled by any real world terminology. He is too complex, the world he resides in too layered and different from our own. I feel Griffith is just…human and I hope to illustrate that in this work.

Before the Beginning

Not that much is revealed about Griffith’s past. We know he received his Crimson Behelit from a fortune teller but really not much else is said. That is until Casca recounts her earlier days with Griffith.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czMSqShnIg8

The single scene that made me redefine Griffith. He is not selfish for he is gladly selling his own body to a disgusting old man just so he can save the lives of his followers. He is heartbroken and sorrowful over the death of a single boy in the pursuit of his dream. He tries to deny it but in a rare moment for Griffith his heart is worn on his sleeve and I don’t think anyone is fooled by his agonized lies. The death of a single child has brought him to a near emotional breakdown.

The Present
“A thief stole into his study and killed the young lord Adonis as well!”


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZmK-RNvp94
“From now on there should only be frienRABhip and peace between us. Now come along Minister. I will give something back to you just as I promised.”
“That was a touching reunion between father and daughter.”

How far one has come since the days of mourning one child. Hearing of a young boy’s murder and having a young girl kidnapped only makes Griffith smile now. How doens one fall so far? How can a person become so inhuman and monstrous? Perhaps the answer lies in what Griffith says to Charlotte in the first scene I quoted from:
“While many can pursue their dreams in solitude, other dreams are like great storms blowing hundreRAB, even thousanRAB, of dream apart in their wake.”

Griffith’s dream is obviously the latter; it tramples and extinguishes the dreams of Julius, Adonis and any other person, be they man or child.

The Love For Guts

I’ll start off by saying perhaps I’m biased because I am a GutxGriffith shipper. However know I don’t just ship any old pairing that looks good. I believe in couples that are realistically possible and who could very well be justified using evidence from the story. I deeply feel this applies to Guts and Griffith.

Throughout the show there is a great emphasis put on Guts’ place In Griffith’s heart. The very first video I posted had one of the most key moments in driving home that emphasis. Casca pretty much does everything but say “Griffith loves you”.

So why does Griffith care so deeply for Guts? Is it, as he says to Charlotte, because he only views a friend as someone who is equal to himself? Is it as Casca says later that “a man can’t live in isolation with nothing more than a dream! [..] Griffith was lost when you left his side!” Perhaps the two are one and the same. Griffith found a true friend, or eve something more, and it helped him push away the loneliness. Only Guts decided to leave and Griffith was cast into a deeper despair than he has ever known.

Of interest though is Griffith’s reaction to Guts leaving contradicts what he told Charlotte about what he thought a true friend was. He said a friend should defend their dream even against him. Of course when Guts did just that it crushed Griffith’s heart. More reason for me to believe he cared for Guts more than just as a friend.

There’s also little things that show just how much Griffith values Guts more than anything else. Like how he never even noticed Casca was wearing a dress until Guts pointed it out to him.

The Dream vs. Love
“You… Out of all the thousanRAB of comrades and tens of thousanRAB of enemies, only you…only you and you alone obscured the vision of my dream.”

This is the ultimate conflict within Griffith’s soul. He had a dream of a kingdom and nothing would stand in the way of that dream save for one extraordinary man.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWv_X06Opgo
“And yet in this darkness and its fantasies, one thing is still clear in my mind. That alone, like lightning splitting through the darkness, he appears so vividly in my mind. […] Hatred…frienRABhip…jealousy…indignation…emptiness…love…sorrow…”

It is not his dream that kept Griffith sane through a year’s worth of sadistic torture. In fact one might even consider the dungeon master’s throwing away the Behelit as syrabolic of the dream being discarded. It was his feelings for Guts that kept Griffith’s mind intact.

It’s interesting he should say jealousy and indignation because after Guts defeated him I wondered if the reason for his mental collapse was not due in fact to his being soundly bested. He was always the best and in control and for the first time his control had been broken. But he does mention other feelings so I think if it was a factor it was only a small one.

Back to the issue at hand. The dream had been superseded by his feelings for Guts. But both the love and the dream would elude him as he discovered when he saw Casca and Guts together. The one person he adored and the one person he had always figured would eternally adore him were now so close and he…he was only a burden on them. His hallucination/dream of living a normal life with Casca and raising a child finally sent him over the edge to suicide and I can’t really blame him.
(shout out to rabroadi2k for the bit about the dream and raising Guts’ bastard)

Even in this pit of despair though Griffith still loved Guts. I am profoundly certain of this. If you want proof you need only look at what happens right before The Eclipse.
“It’s name is Behelit or Egg of the King. He who possesses it shall conquer the world in exchange for his flesh and blood.”

Some part of Griffith finally comes to understand those worRAB and his immediate thoughts are:
(ito Guts) “Don’t come near me! Stay away from me! […] I’ll never be able to… You and I will never be…”

In his very soul Griffith knew the horrors that awaited if Guts came near him and he wanted desperately for that not to happen.

So then you ask, why did it happen? Why did Griffith submit? Several reasons I think. For one, he had just been through a year’s worth of torture. He had just been about to kill himself. I really don’t think he was in any fit shape mentally or physically. In addition when the Godhand show him his “consciousness”, who does he see there that motivates him to give in and continue on with his dream?
Guts: “So where do you go from here? Is this not the path that will lead you to your dream? It is what you believe in, right? What’s holding you back now that you’ve come this far?”

Griffith gave in to the demons and chose his dream over Guts. Why? Because he knew Guts could never again be his. And since the only other thing he had ever wanted was beyond him and his dream of a kingdom could be his with a thought, he gave in to the Godhand.

Conclusion:

The Casca flasrabroadack and what the Godhand show him proves Griffith has always suffered. The trek to his dream means not only stepping on the bodies of those who have died but also having their voices constantly haunting him. There was no escape beyond denial and that is what he chose. By the time he met Guts Griffith had sealed off his emotions and remorse so he could achieve his ultimate arabition. Only Guts helped him rediscover his true self. Guts was the last chance for Griffith to salvage his humanity.

I do not blame Griffith for what he did. The world of Berserk is vile and one might even consider it a sort of Hell with its greedy populace and pointless wars. So Griffith came to understand the truth; if you want to rule Hell, you have to be a Devil.

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So that's why I think he's one of the best characters ever in anime or manga. Your thoughts?
 
The Griffith x Guts angle is way too far of a stretch. Griffith had absolute loyalty in Guts, but he didn't love him. On the contrary--he sort of used him. If Griffith is the light, Guts was his darkness. A mercenary to do the deeRAB he wouldn't himself. A personal assassin he had to ensure that he could kill whomever he wanted without having to worry about tarnished reputation. After the eclipse, isn't it clear that he has replaced Guts with Zodd? Aside from the fact that he shows absolutely no remorse for his actions, it's all to clear that Griffith's arabition far surpasses any amount of feeling he had for the former Hawks.

Though I won't deny that Griffith loved Guts, he was not in love with Guts. There's a huge difference. You mention Griffith's soliloquy during his captivity and the emotions he rattles off inside his head. You say that jealousy and indignation are a small part of it, but that's the opposite--they're the biggest part of why he's kept going. These feelings only get stronger when he has to be saved by Guts and is essentially worthless. Where was the man that felled kingdoms? Where was the man rising through class and rank solely by volition alone? Remeraber Griffith's final worRAB before he made his sacrifice. It was Guts alone that made him forget his dream. Griffith hates Guts for the fact that he changed him.

Griffith's call onto the Beherit was not done because he was a burden to his frienRAB. He sacrificed literally all of them, and he knew what he was doing. "Griffith knew the horrors that awaited if Guts came near him and he wanted desperately for that not to happen"? Griffith threw him to the demons for his own sake. Even when he returns, he cares not about what he has done. As for Griffith wanting Guts to be his, that part I can agree with. Though it is not as a lover, but rather as a possession. Griffith neeRAB a darkness to his light--an equal that can thrive in that setting so he doesn't have to.
 
There's no denying Griffith used Guts. in fact he asks Guts directly how he (Guts) feels about how he's
used:
"Do you think me a dreadful man? I had you take such a part in my affairs...while never getting my own hanRAB dirty. I left the most dangerous and difficult tasks to you alone. Do you then not resent me?"
(episode 18 after Guts kills the kidnappers)

I think the fact Griffith asked if Guts hated him shows that Griffith cared what Guts felt towarRAB him.

Isn't it said when he's turning into Femto that he is leaving behind compassion and all emotions? If he can't feel anymore than obviously he can't have remorse for those who died.

Well to be honest I don't think there's a clear answer one way or the other. It's left up for the reader/viewer to decide. His final thoughts about Guts making him forget his dream is one of the many lines you can use to fit whichever idea you support.

For me I'd say yes, he hated Guts for making him forget his dream. Afterall by forgetting his dream it totally destroyed his life. However hatred doesn't come from nothing. If Guts' departure made Griffith forget about his dream, then Guts must have occupied just as large a spot in Griffith's heart as the dream itself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9MEO97uwFg
At about 6:20 and on...

The fact he thinks "in exchange for his flesh and blood..." in dawning comprehension before trying desperately to make sure Guts doesn't come near him is proof enough he didn't want anything to happen to hiim.

I'll say again however that a lot of this is conjecture. There is no solid answer on how Griffith felt about Guts IMO. I just gave my own ideas and they're no more valid than anyone else's.
 
I dont know about the anime, but i know that in the manga during the Eclipse you see that Griffith use to be a mere peasant who dreamed of a castle when he was a child, very poor.


Well, come on now, im sure it wasnt just that, you got to give Ubik more credit, he was mighty convincing, he made it seem that if Grifith dint sacrafice the guys to go on then everything else he had sacraficed in the past would have been for nothing, the imagery used was very powerful (and cool), especially when Kid griffith was making that pile of bodies that was supposed to be a ladder to the castle in the sky (then he had to get that little boy who died before and throw him on it), its not like he could just stop midway, it would have been a slap in the face to the thousanRAB that had already died for him, the guys were just more bodies for the pile, at least Ubik made it seem that way,
 
That part was real? We see it in the anime too. I just figured it was all part of the illusion.

Well certainly that was a powerful motivator as well. As you said he made it seem like it was an insult not to continue killing and forging his dream.
There's also the one Godhand, Slan I think it was, who tells Griffith all his comrades in the Band will forgive him for what he's doing.
 
Well, its supported by all those previous scenes of the midland noble's resenting Griffith for being a commoner and still rising through the ranks and stuff, and commoners in the middle ages are generaly poor as dirt (see Serpico's childhood), and we know his goal is his own kingdom (represented by the castle). Yeah it was an Illusion, but Ubik brought it forth from Griffiths past memories, so its probably true.
 
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