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*Rourke plays a similar role to [[Clayton]] from Tarzan as they both first appear to be fine expedition leaders, but later turn out to be evil serial killers out to steal the foreign land's most precious resource.
 
*Rourke plays a similar role to [[Clayton]] from Tarzan as they both first appear to be fine expedition leaders, but later turn out to be evil serial killers out to steal the foreign land's most precious resource.
 
*Rourke also shares a few of the same similarities with [[Ratigan]] from ''The Great Mouse Detective''. They both throw their own sidekicks off an aircraft to die. Rourke throws [[Helga Sinclair]] off his zeppelin, While Ratigan throws [[Fidget]] off his blimp. They also both go completely insane near the films' ends as they both try to kill their hero enemies.
 
*Rourke also shares a few of the same similarities with [[Ratigan]] from ''The Great Mouse Detective''. They both throw their own sidekicks off an aircraft to die. Rourke throws [[Helga Sinclair]] off his zeppelin, While Ratigan throws [[Fidget]] off his blimp. They also both go completely insane near the films' ends as they both try to kill their hero enemies.
  +
*Rourke is similar to a non-disney villain Colonel Miles Quarich from the movie "Avatar" They both wear green tank-tops or soldier uniforms. They both have military forces. They both want something so they can sell it. Rouke wanted the Crystal and Quarich wanted the mineral from the Avatar Tree. Their dark nature is not revealed until they choose to reveal it. They use the protagonist to help them with their plans. They become to arrogant during the climax which leads to their death.
 
[[Category:Classics]]
 
[[Category:Classics]]
 
[[Category:Completely mad]]
 
[[Category:Completely mad]]

Revision as of 22:55, 9 April 2011


Lyle Tiberius Rourke is the main antagonist in Atlantis: The Lost Empire. He is one of the very few Disney villains who does not initially appear to be evil, but gradually shows his villainy over the course of the film. This, however, is also true for Gaston and Clayton. He initially appears as a respectable, practical and composed expedition commander and leader, but as the movie progresses, he turns out to be a ruthless and evil mercenary out to capture the Heart of Atlantis and make money off of it. He kidnaps Princess Kida after she is consumed by the crystal to steal it, nearly killing all of the Atlanteans. His fate is that he gets crystallized and shatters into a million pieces.

Film Role

Atlantis rourke

In 1914, thousands of years after Atlanits supposedly sank beneath the ocean's surface, Milo James Thatch, an aspiring young linguist working in the boiler room at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., believes that a manuscript known as the Shepherd's Journal will lead to the location of Atlantis. When his request to lead an expedition is denied by the Institution's board, he angrily resigns but then finds himself contacted by millionaire Preston B. Whitmore, a friend of Milo's grandfather, Thadeus Thatch. The elder Thadeus Thatch had already located the Journal, and asked Whitmore to give it to Milo when he was ready.

Whitmore asks Milo to become part of a team to search for Atlantis on a high-tech submarine. Milo joins Commander Rourke, his second-in-command Helga Sinclair, demolitions expert Vincenzo "Vinny" Santorini, geologist Gaetan "Mole" Molière, medical officer Dr. Joshua Sweet, tomboy mechanic Audrey Ramirez, cook Jebidiah Allerdyce "Cookie" Farnsworth, and cynical communications expert Wilhelmina Packard.

The sub is sunk by an underwater Leviathan, but the team escapes. After fateful misadventures, they are able to find the underwater entrance to Atlantis. To their amazement, the city still survives in a bubble beneath the earth. They are met by Kida, daughter of the Atlantean King who initially refuses to let them stay, but eventually allows them to stay one night. Kida discovers that Milo can read the Atlantean language, long forgotten by her own people. They dive to read ancient underwater murals, and learn about the Heart of Atlantis, which is the source of the power that saved Atlantis from the tidal wave and of the strange blue gems that each Atlanean wears. As they leave the ruins, they are caught by Rourke and the rest of the team, who now reveal who they truly are and that they are out to steal the Heart Of Atlantis. They find the crystal in a chamber below the King's quarters. Kida is drawn to the crystal and consumed by it, turning her into a crystalized human.

Rourke puts Kida in a box and plans to take the crystalized princess to the surface. But without the Heart, all the Atlanteans will die. When Milo tells the team this, Rourke takes it as an insult and punches Milo in the face. The other team members, hating how Rourke assaulted Milo, abandon their plan to steal the Heart to stand alongside Milo, and Rourke leaves them all behind with Helga. The King, mortally wounded by Rourke when he punched him in the stomach, gives Milo his crystal and begs him to rescue his daughter and save Atlantis before dying. Milo and the Atlanteans discover how to use the crystals to activate ancient flying machines and they give chase as an air force. During the fight that follows, Rourke betrays Helga and throws her overboard to lighten the load on his balloon (similar to what Ratigan did to Fidget in The Great Mouse Detective). He then tries to escape through an ancient volcano, but Milo slashes him with a piece of glass from the box holding the crystalized Kida, and Rourke is turned to a crystalized human before getting shattered into a million pieces by his own balloon's propeller.

Milo VS
Atlantis the lost empire 003

Milo is having a handshake with Rourke in the control room.


Personality

Like Clayton from Tarzan, Rourke is one of the Disney villains whose dark nature is not evident to any character, even the viewer, until he reveals it. Whereas viewers almost immediately notice the villainous natures of characters, such as Shan Yu and Sa'luk, especially after the first viewing, Rourke merely appears as a disciplined, practical and composed military figure and semi-assistant to Preston Whitmore, and no one, except for the king of Atlantis (who distrusts all outsiders), distrusts him or notices his villainous nature until he chooses to reveal it. He is Sadistic, egotistical, vicious, meglomaniacal, sarcasstic, corrupt, immoral, devious, calculating, abusive, dishonest and sneaky.

History

Lyle Tiberius Rourke was born in 1860 in Texas to parents Rourke Sr. and Racheal Lee Rourke and learned the ways of military life at an early age when his father, Rourke Sr., a cavalry officer in the Southern US Army, was killed in battle in 1864 during the Civil War. After repeated expulsions from boarding school for fighting, Rourke resolved to follow in his father's footsteps and joined the military in 1875 at age fifteen by lying to his induction officer about his age. There, he exhibited a remarkable talent for leadership, owing to his analytical mind, charisma, and refusal to acknowledge the white flag surrender. He married in June of 1887, but his wife left him after only four months. In 1901, he retired from the military.

He held numerous expeditions during his career, most notably leading the Whitmore Expedition to Atlantis in 1914.

Trivia

  • Rourke is one of the strong, muscular villains like McLeach, Gaston, Sa'luk, Sykes, Clayton, Razoul, Captain Gantu, and Shan Yu, like the animal villains such as Shere Khan, Hopper and Ratigan.
  • Rourke plays a similar role to Clayton from Tarzan as they both first appear to be fine expedition leaders, but later turn out to be evil serial killers out to steal the foreign land's most precious resource.
  • Rourke also shares a few of the same similarities with Ratigan from The Great Mouse Detective. They both throw their own sidekicks off an aircraft to die. Rourke throws Helga Sinclair off his zeppelin, While Ratigan throws Fidget off his blimp. They also both go completely insane near the films' ends as they both try to kill their hero enemies.
  • Rourke is similar to a non-disney villain Colonel Miles Quarich from the movie "Avatar" They both wear green tank-tops or soldier uniforms. They both have military forces. They both want something so they can sell it. Rouke wanted the Crystal and Quarich wanted the mineral from the Avatar Tree. Their dark nature is not revealed until they choose to reveal it. They use the protagonist to help them with their plans. They become to arrogant during the climax which leads to their death.