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Just A Skink
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Good topic. Obviously, my picks are probably less about the "best" villain and ones that I like based on the movies I like. There are lots of great villains in movies that I haven't seen, or have seen but I just don't gravitate to as much as adventure/sci-fi/fantasy/action
MOVIES
Darth Vader (ESB) - THE Iconic image of the villain to me. Although Vader is imposing in Star Wars, he is probably at his most intimidating in Empire. That dude delivers so many ultimatums and force-chokes so many Imperials to get to the Rebels. And that was just so he could draw Luke to Cloud City in an attempt to turn him to the Dark Side.
Classic Disney Villains - A bit of cheat, like always. Disney is (was?) a staple for great villains. Maybe I'm just a sucker for classic story-book villains, but my favorites are Maleficent, Jafar, Scar, Ursula, Cruella DeVille, Hades, and the Evil Queen from Snow White.
The Joker (The Dark Knight) - I know this role might seem over-hyped, but there's a reason. Heather Ledger's performance was excellent (dare I say captivating) as the twisted and maniacal "agent of Chaos" Joker. He helped make this arguably THE best Batman movie, in my opinion.
Loki (Avengers) - Loki is the classic scheming, overconfident and petulant villain "burdened with glorious purpose." Hiddleston hams it up wonderfully and chews the scenery from Thor all the way through Avengers and after. I kind of hate Marvel turned him into a good-guy.
Thanos (Infinity War) - I can't believe I'm picking 2 Marvel villains for this list, but I like them both. Thanos is the true over-arching villain of Avengers. By contrast to Loki, he is intimidating, powerful, calculating and driven by his goal. His intentions are understandable enough to make him sympathetic, but his methods are horrible. A very well-done villain. I like the story/performance better in Infinity War as opposed to End Game.
Hannibal Lecter (Silence of the Lambs) - Creepy and manipulative. Anthony Hopkins absolutely kills it in this role (pun intended).
Agent Smith (The Matrix) - A great villain; deadpan, dark-suited, manipulative, overconfident, powerful and determined.
The Terminator/T-800 (The Terminator) - The T-1000 could/should easily be in my list instead. But I have a soft spot for the original Terminator. Arnold as the menacing and unstoppable Terminator is classic to me. Plus, seeing this robot skeleton keep chasing the heroes after getting blown up (twice) just adds to the menace.
Emperor Palpatine (Return of the Jedi) - I CAN believe I'm picking 2 Star Wars villains. Arguably Emperor Palpatine is the real villain of Star Wars. The Emperor is the classic powerful, old, overconfident, manipulator who think he's in total control of the machinations he's put in motion. That is until the heroes take action. The Emperor's comeuppance, at the hands of a redeemed Vader, is *chef's kiss*. Love it!
Xenomorph (Alien)/The Predator (Predator)/The Shark (Jaws) - I'm cheating again. I lump these three together because they are all connected as the classic "jump scare" monster villain. These villains are mindless killing machines that are out to get you, and there's nothing you can do about it. To me this is their wheelhouse, and each is a great classic memorable monster villain; although later movies have changed the lore of the Predator a bit. "Mr. Vaughn, what we are dealing with here is a perfect engine, an eating machine. It's really a miracle of evolution. All this machine does is swim and eat and make little sharks, and that's all."
(Very) Honorable movie mentions:
T-1000 (Terminator 2) - Seriously, the sly and shifting T-1000 is such a great counterpoint to Arnold's unstoppable T-800 tank. A fun movie and great shape-shifting villain.
Voldemort (Order of the Phoenix/Deathly Hallows 1&2) - He's sort of Harry Potter's Emperor Palpatine in that's he's put all of the wheels in motion to be the ultimate power in the world. Ralph Fiennes plays him up with terrific whispering malice from Goblet of Fire to the end. My favorite scene with Voldemort is probably his battle with Dumbledore in Order of the Phoenix. But, he gets more screen time in the last 2 movies and doesn't disappoint.
Anton Chigurh (No Country for Old Men) - A cold and calculating killer. Period. Apparently, lack of emotion is a big requirement for my villain picks.
John Doe (Se7en) - Just a disturbing serial-killer villain. I know Kevin Spacey is persona non grata these days, but his performance is subtle and creepy.
Hans Gruber - Die Hard is a great action movie and Alan Rickman just steals the movie as the bad guy. Some great dialogue and Rickman delivers it in his classic tone of dripping, witty sarcasm.
Khan (Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan) - A well done early Trek movie. It was a great idea to pull a character from the original series. Ricardo Montalban hams it up as Khan, and I love it. A pretty serious Trek movie, with dramatic outcomes (which would later be undone).
Jabba the Hutt (RotJ) - Jabba is a big, fat mob boss who's selfish, overconfident and cruel. He's only a minor villain in the scope of the individual movie, but a memorable one for the SW fanbase.
Michael Myers (Halloween) - My favorite "faceless/emotionless" horror villain.
Freddy Kruger (Nightmare on Elm Street) - My favorite over-the-top/charismatic horror villain.
TV
The Joker (Batman the Animated Series) - It's well established that the Joker is one of the greatest villains. Batman the Animated Series is probably my favorite version of Batman, despite how much I enjoy the movies. Mark Hamill is an instant classic as the voice of the Joker, as much as Kevin Conroy is forever the voice of Batman. Like many voice actors with the right character, Hamill plays this role to the hilt.
Zuko/Azula (Avatar: The Last Airbender) - Zuko is the reluctant villain through much of the series, but has such a great redemption arc. Azula is more the sociopathic villain of the show and she is a terrific intimidating and merciless bad girl. We eventually see her fall apart at the very end and her comeuppance is a mix of satisfaction and pity.
Aku, the Shape-shifting Master of Evil (Samurai Jack) - Genndy Tartakovsky had a knack for unique cartoons back in the day and Samurai Jack might be his masterpiece. Aku is bold, overconfident, blatantly bad, and manipulative. As a shape-shifter, Aku might show up anywhere to harass Jack... and often did. Aku, played perfectly by Mako, is an awesome cartoon villain!
Skeletor (MotU) - Okay, I watch too many cartoons. I know the 80s He-Man cartoon might have been cheesy, but I loved it. Skeletor is such an iconic bad guy with his hooded skull head and high-pitched cackle. He is a great cartoon villain similar to Loki; scheming, overconfident and petulant. "Curse you, He-Man!
Joffery Baratheon/Cersei Lannister/Tywin Lannister (GoT) - All of the Lannisters are jerks, seemingly, but these three are just the worst. I've used the word "petulant" before, but Joffery embodies that idea. He is a spoiled and sadistic son of you-know-what. He gets it honest. Cersei is an overconfident and conniving character, who only looks out for her family. She's pretty cold and petty in her own way, especially as the story goes on. Tywin is probably the most charismatic, clever and manipulative, but also the most cold and ruthless. They're all villains you love to hate.
Gus Fring (Breaking Bad) - A very good show. Few, in any, of the characters in Breaking Bad are clean, but I think Fring is the best "bad guy" in the series. @Killer Angel described Fring well; smart, ruthlessness and impeccably elegant.
Black Jack Randall (Outlander) - Sort of a guilty pleasure show that my sister-in-law got us into watching. The first two seasons are the strongest, in my opinion, and Black Jack Randall is big part of that. He's a cruel, sadistic and closeted British officer with a fixation for one of the main characters, Jamie. He often turns up like the proverbial "bad penny." Randall eventually captures, tortures and rapes Jamie in some pretty rough scenes. He uses that to torment Jamie later on as well.
Boyd Crowder (Justified) - A show my wife enjoyed, because she likes Timothy Olyphant, that I watched occasionally. Crowder, played by Walton Goggins, is sort of "the Joker" to Olyphant's "Batman" Marshall Givens. Boyd Crowder is a former Kentucky coalminer and revival preacher, turned southern gangster, drug-dealer, and killer. Goggins plays him with a great southern charm.
J.R. Ewing (Dallas) - My first intro to "soap opera" villains as a kid. My family loved this show. JR was one of those characters you loved to hate. Larry Hagman played him so well as a smooth and slick oil baron. Who shot JR? Who wouldn't?
MOVIES
Darth Vader (ESB) - THE Iconic image of the villain to me. Although Vader is imposing in Star Wars, he is probably at his most intimidating in Empire. That dude delivers so many ultimatums and force-chokes so many Imperials to get to the Rebels. And that was just so he could draw Luke to Cloud City in an attempt to turn him to the Dark Side.
Classic Disney Villains - A bit of cheat, like always. Disney is (was?) a staple for great villains. Maybe I'm just a sucker for classic story-book villains, but my favorites are Maleficent, Jafar, Scar, Ursula, Cruella DeVille, Hades, and the Evil Queen from Snow White.
The Joker (The Dark Knight) - I know this role might seem over-hyped, but there's a reason. Heather Ledger's performance was excellent (dare I say captivating) as the twisted and maniacal "agent of Chaos" Joker. He helped make this arguably THE best Batman movie, in my opinion.
Loki (Avengers) - Loki is the classic scheming, overconfident and petulant villain "burdened with glorious purpose." Hiddleston hams it up wonderfully and chews the scenery from Thor all the way through Avengers and after. I kind of hate Marvel turned him into a good-guy.
Thanos (Infinity War) - I can't believe I'm picking 2 Marvel villains for this list, but I like them both. Thanos is the true over-arching villain of Avengers. By contrast to Loki, he is intimidating, powerful, calculating and driven by his goal. His intentions are understandable enough to make him sympathetic, but his methods are horrible. A very well-done villain. I like the story/performance better in Infinity War as opposed to End Game.
Hannibal Lecter (Silence of the Lambs) - Creepy and manipulative. Anthony Hopkins absolutely kills it in this role (pun intended).
Agent Smith (The Matrix) - A great villain; deadpan, dark-suited, manipulative, overconfident, powerful and determined.
The Terminator/T-800 (The Terminator) - The T-1000 could/should easily be in my list instead. But I have a soft spot for the original Terminator. Arnold as the menacing and unstoppable Terminator is classic to me. Plus, seeing this robot skeleton keep chasing the heroes after getting blown up (twice) just adds to the menace.
Emperor Palpatine (Return of the Jedi) - I CAN believe I'm picking 2 Star Wars villains. Arguably Emperor Palpatine is the real villain of Star Wars. The Emperor is the classic powerful, old, overconfident, manipulator who think he's in total control of the machinations he's put in motion. That is until the heroes take action. The Emperor's comeuppance, at the hands of a redeemed Vader, is *chef's kiss*. Love it!
Xenomorph (Alien)/The Predator (Predator)/The Shark (Jaws) - I'm cheating again. I lump these three together because they are all connected as the classic "jump scare" monster villain. These villains are mindless killing machines that are out to get you, and there's nothing you can do about it. To me this is their wheelhouse, and each is a great classic memorable monster villain; although later movies have changed the lore of the Predator a bit. "Mr. Vaughn, what we are dealing with here is a perfect engine, an eating machine. It's really a miracle of evolution. All this machine does is swim and eat and make little sharks, and that's all."
(Very) Honorable movie mentions:
T-1000 (Terminator 2) - Seriously, the sly and shifting T-1000 is such a great counterpoint to Arnold's unstoppable T-800 tank. A fun movie and great shape-shifting villain.
Voldemort (Order of the Phoenix/Deathly Hallows 1&2) - He's sort of Harry Potter's Emperor Palpatine in that's he's put all of the wheels in motion to be the ultimate power in the world. Ralph Fiennes plays him up with terrific whispering malice from Goblet of Fire to the end. My favorite scene with Voldemort is probably his battle with Dumbledore in Order of the Phoenix. But, he gets more screen time in the last 2 movies and doesn't disappoint.
Anton Chigurh (No Country for Old Men) - A cold and calculating killer. Period. Apparently, lack of emotion is a big requirement for my villain picks.
John Doe (Se7en) - Just a disturbing serial-killer villain. I know Kevin Spacey is persona non grata these days, but his performance is subtle and creepy.
Hans Gruber - Die Hard is a great action movie and Alan Rickman just steals the movie as the bad guy. Some great dialogue and Rickman delivers it in his classic tone of dripping, witty sarcasm.
Khan (Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan) - A well done early Trek movie. It was a great idea to pull a character from the original series. Ricardo Montalban hams it up as Khan, and I love it. A pretty serious Trek movie, with dramatic outcomes (which would later be undone).
Jabba the Hutt (RotJ) - Jabba is a big, fat mob boss who's selfish, overconfident and cruel. He's only a minor villain in the scope of the individual movie, but a memorable one for the SW fanbase.
Michael Myers (Halloween) - My favorite "faceless/emotionless" horror villain.
Freddy Kruger (Nightmare on Elm Street) - My favorite over-the-top/charismatic horror villain.
TV
The Joker (Batman the Animated Series) - It's well established that the Joker is one of the greatest villains. Batman the Animated Series is probably my favorite version of Batman, despite how much I enjoy the movies. Mark Hamill is an instant classic as the voice of the Joker, as much as Kevin Conroy is forever the voice of Batman. Like many voice actors with the right character, Hamill plays this role to the hilt.
Zuko/Azula (Avatar: The Last Airbender) - Zuko is the reluctant villain through much of the series, but has such a great redemption arc. Azula is more the sociopathic villain of the show and she is a terrific intimidating and merciless bad girl. We eventually see her fall apart at the very end and her comeuppance is a mix of satisfaction and pity.
Aku, the Shape-shifting Master of Evil (Samurai Jack) - Genndy Tartakovsky had a knack for unique cartoons back in the day and Samurai Jack might be his masterpiece. Aku is bold, overconfident, blatantly bad, and manipulative. As a shape-shifter, Aku might show up anywhere to harass Jack... and often did. Aku, played perfectly by Mako, is an awesome cartoon villain!
Skeletor (MotU) - Okay, I watch too many cartoons. I know the 80s He-Man cartoon might have been cheesy, but I loved it. Skeletor is such an iconic bad guy with his hooded skull head and high-pitched cackle. He is a great cartoon villain similar to Loki; scheming, overconfident and petulant. "Curse you, He-Man!
Joffery Baratheon/Cersei Lannister/Tywin Lannister (GoT) - All of the Lannisters are jerks, seemingly, but these three are just the worst. I've used the word "petulant" before, but Joffery embodies that idea. He is a spoiled and sadistic son of you-know-what. He gets it honest. Cersei is an overconfident and conniving character, who only looks out for her family. She's pretty cold and petty in her own way, especially as the story goes on. Tywin is probably the most charismatic, clever and manipulative, but also the most cold and ruthless. They're all villains you love to hate.
Gus Fring (Breaking Bad) - A very good show. Few, in any, of the characters in Breaking Bad are clean, but I think Fring is the best "bad guy" in the series. @Killer Angel described Fring well; smart, ruthlessness and impeccably elegant.
Black Jack Randall (Outlander) - Sort of a guilty pleasure show that my sister-in-law got us into watching. The first two seasons are the strongest, in my opinion, and Black Jack Randall is big part of that. He's a cruel, sadistic and closeted British officer with a fixation for one of the main characters, Jamie. He often turns up like the proverbial "bad penny." Randall eventually captures, tortures and rapes Jamie in some pretty rough scenes. He uses that to torment Jamie later on as well.
Boyd Crowder (Justified) - A show my wife enjoyed, because she likes Timothy Olyphant, that I watched occasionally. Crowder, played by Walton Goggins, is sort of "the Joker" to Olyphant's "Batman" Marshall Givens. Boyd Crowder is a former Kentucky coalminer and revival preacher, turned southern gangster, drug-dealer, and killer. Goggins plays him with a great southern charm.
J.R. Ewing (Dallas) - My first intro to "soap opera" villains as a kid. My family loved this show. JR was one of those characters you loved to hate. Larry Hagman played him so well as a smooth and slick oil baron. Who shot JR? Who wouldn't?
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