Hey idioticidioms, I assume you were responding to me.
First of all, I want to say that you and I actually agree! Second, I hope to clarify a few things:
You left out the fact that He has an almost photographic memory.
This may be your personal canon, but do you have any evidence for it? Could you elucidate? Of course he remembers the events of the past; what I was referring to is the fact he knew as Janus that somebody he met for the first time in his life was going to die, and his general talk about the black wind. (Of course, said person *didn't* die, but I don't think prophesy is that straightforward in CT!)
I would not have put it past Magus to have concluded, through what he had let slip and through knowing of Team Crono's goals, that they would be right behind him, at most, by a couple of days.
Of course; Frog thought the same thing in 65 mil. There was one big gate, and it's natural to assume they may end up in the same place.
I do think you're dead on with his cunning against Lavos and his feelings for Schala, but I don't think that his feelings for Schala held too much of an impact on his decision to spare Team Crono.
Ahh, OK. Well, my point was basically about his feelings for Schala, and yours seems to be more about how he learns to cooperate with the group. At any rate, I certainly agree with his mischevious/cruel side, which he shows during the fight with Cyrus and at Ozzie's Fort; but that's is not how it played out dramatically in this instance. For me, this is a big Magus Character Development Moment which illustrates what I've been saying. Magus is imho clearly quite ready to kill them; he says, "You'll have to simply... disappear!" Schala then pleads with him, and his former self says "Stop!", which is what keeps him from doing it. I don't think mischief had anything to do with his decision to spare them. Defeating Lavos is WAY too important to Magus to risk Crono's meddling. The characters even remark that the Prophet could have killed them and didn't when they are sent back through the gate; they are baffled by it; they wonder about it. To me, that is a strong indicator that killing them was his first inclination.
This scene could actually be interpreted to support what some have said: that Magus experiences his change from a revenge-focused mindset at this point. I do think that he recognizes that he has gone too far; Janus telling him to stop is certainly a poignant moment that suggests at that. But none of this indicates that Schala was a secondary concern before his arrival at Zeal, or that she had strayed from his thoughts. There is, contrariwise, evidence that she HAS been important to him the whole time.
Though, with his logic, he should have known that it was due to them that he was even able to see Schala again, but I don't think he truly realizes this until Lavos defeats him before obliterating the Crono clone.
I'm not sure I see the evidence for this. It is technically due to them he can see her, but it's due to unintentional bumbling on their part, and I'm sure he attributes it to such. Magus is not one to give fools credit.
But regardless, that's not important, and this is: I COMPLETELY AGREE that Magus goes through a change of character. I didn't mean to suggest he didn't. My contention was that I don't think it's due to rediscovering his feelings for Schala, as some people were suggesting. I think they had those in mind all the time, even if he got to such a twisted place that he was willing to do things that would have upset her in order to achieve his goal. It's not just revenge. Janus hates Lavos -- "hate" is an unbelievable understatement -- but his hate for Lavos and desire to see Schala free are one and the same.
Take into consideration the DS ending, where his concern is not to kill the remnant of Lavos but to get Schala to wake up. Again, revenge is undeniably important to him, but Schala is moreso; he's just less inclined to talk about the person he lost than his hatred because he is so withdrawn. He carries the amulet she gave him with her; EVERY TIME he is around her when she is suffering he responds. There are thematic reasons I think Schala is wrapped up in the revenge obsession, too, but I'll get to them in a minute.
So, his change of character is not that he got back in touch with his softie side and love for Schala, but rather, is exactly what you describe here:
After his defeat to Lavos in the Ocean Palace, he had to consider his goal as impossible to reach on his own. As a person who has prided himself on overcoming every single boundary in his way to his goals, I think he contemplated giving up, which is where you find him after losing Crono. Standing on a ledge, overlooking the Ocean, realizing that all of his plans had been for naught.
Absolutely. Very well put. I agree with the paragraphs after, as well. Wonderful analysis. He learns the value of companionship. Magus, as capable and ridiculously badass as he is, CANNOT do it alone, just as Crono couldn't, and this is one of the strongest and most reinforced themes of CD. So yeah, we agree!
The thematic reason I alluded to is the whole Magus/Frog story arc in light of Crono's death. Loss and the place of revenge is THE theme of that arc, IMHO. In my personal little universe, Glenn realizes a few things at the North Cape: 1) that Magus is not entirely evil, and does, in fact, know what it's like to lose somebody as important to him as Cyrus was to Glenn; and 2) that to kill Magus would perpetuate a meaningless cycle of revenge. Magus was transformed by what happened to him and callous to all else, leading partially to the death of Cyrus, which, if Frog were to fight him, could lead to Magus' own death. At that moment, Frog has lost both of his best friends, but (if you chose not to fight Magus) is able to transcend that cycle. Ironically, Magus killed one of those friends but reveals how to resurrect the other, which works out especially well if Magus is spared. Goddamn does CT have an awesome story.