Luke Castellan | |
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Percy Jackson & the Olympians character | |
First appearance | The Lightning Thief |
Last appearance | The Last Olympian |
Created by | Rick Riordan |
Portrayed by | Jake Abel Charlie Bushnell |
Information | |
Nickname(s) | Luu |
Species | Demigod |
Gender | Male |
Family | Hermes (father)
May Castellan (mother) Pan (half-brother) Zeus (grandfather) Maia (grandmother) Hera (step-grandmother) Kronos (great-grandfather) Athena and Artemis (half-aunts), Apollo, Ares and Hephaestus (half-uncles) |
Significant other(s) | Hemera Anston |
Nationality | American |
Luke Castellan is one of the main antagonists in Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson & The Olympians series. He is a demigod son of the Greek god Hermes.
Luke is played by Jake Abel in the movies Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief, the film adaption of the first book, The Lightning Thief and Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters, the film adaption of the second book The Sea of Monsters. Charlie Bushnell plays him in the new Percy Jackson and the Olympians tv show [Season 1 Disney+]
Luke is first introduced in The Lightning Thief as the 19-year-old counselor for the Hermes cabin. He was born the year 1986. While the rest of Percy's cabin mates complain about him because he is undetermined, Luke tries to make him feel at home, even stealing a toiletry bag for him. Luke first came to Camp Half-Blood when he was 14, alongside Thalia Grace, daughter of Zeus, and Annabeth Chase, daughter of Athena.[1] Luke has a scar on his face, a relic from his battle with the dragon Ladon, guardian of the Garden of Hesperides, while on a quest. In The Last Olympian, it is shown that his mother attempted to become the Oracle of Delphi and has succumbed to the curse of Hades. Her crazed prophetic ramblings affected Luke greatly, and forced him to run away when he was nine. In The Battle of the Labyrinth, Luke's body becomes the vessel that harbors Kronos' essence.[2]
Luke dies in The Last Olympian when he is given Annabeth's knife by Percy. He sacrifices himself to defeat Kronos by stabbing himself under his left arm where his mortality was still kept intact after his bath in the River Styx (known as his Achilles heel). As he dies, he asks Percy to make sure all the demigods are claimed to avoid this happening again which might mean that they had become friends again because he is forgiven by Percy. Although he is seen as a villain throughout the series, in the end he is treated like a hero and forgiven by everyone. He is also the hero mentioned by the prophecy of the Oracle in The Last Olympian.[2]