Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 1, Winter 2010 | Page 84

80 Popular Culture Review situation, Merlin really is a fatherless child since no male appears to be involved at all, only Mab and a human mother. It also makes the same masculine to feminine creativity switch from the movie Excalibur which early in the movie has Merlin “create” Arthur through magic in bringing Uther and Igrayne together. While Merlin does the same in this film, the initial creative energy is feminine in Merlin because of Mab while it is masculine in Excalibur. This establishes a potential for positive female energy in the movie that is lost almost immediately when Mab lets Merlin’s mother die. In the medieval text, a choice is presented to Merlin between his demonic and his human self, or essentially between evil and good. A similar choice is presented in the film, although it bears no other resemblance to the literature. In the movie the essence of his non-human side is ambiguous, and he is not shown as being the son of a demon, but Merlin must choose whether to use magic and align himself with Mab or to resist the magic and fight against Mab (this is not necessarily portrayed as clearly good and evil). Upon the death of his foster mother, Merlin vows that he will use magic only to oppose Mab. When he does use magic, it is non-aggressive and non-violent. For example, when he saves Nimue from the dragon, he does it by trapping the dragon in mud and vines. The movie puts a high value on non-violence as when it shows Arthur winning over Lot, who was the last lord who opposed him, not through the war that was on the verge of beginning, but by putting himself in Lot’s power, by handing him Excalibur, and telling Lot to kill him if he really believes he deserves to be king instead of Arthur. The bold gesture wins the day, and the war is averted. The only questionable act of magic that Merlin commits is to change Uther into Cornwall’s likeness to allow him to be with Igraine. Although the scene in this movie is not quite as violent as in Excalibur, it is still clear that Igraine is a loving and loyal wife to Cornwall, and Cornwall is killed during this time. Merlin comments in the narration that this is always something that he regrets. Significantly, it is the only time he says he uses magic because he believes the “end justifies the means,” which is a rationale that Mab had used not long before this scene. Therefore, this rationale has linked this use of Merlin’s magic to Mab’s kind of magic more than at any other time, and it is the time he regrets the most. Besides Mab the old ways are also represented by the mysterious Lady of the Lake, who is positive, yet she has much less effect on the action and plot of the story. She appears several times as a mysterious presence in the lake who speaks to and guides Merlin, but does not actively take part in any action in the plot. Significantly, she is all white while Mab mostly wears black, has black