Inspired Comic Book Movie Villains

Inspired Comic Book Movie Villains

Supervillains are the catalyst for nearly every great superhero story and the hallmark of any great comic book movie is the casting and direction of the antagonist. Here's a look at some of the most inspired villains we've had the pleasure of watching.

Feature Opinion
By jerichomccune - Jun 10, 2012 08:06 PM EST
Filed Under: Other


6 List: Inspired Comic Book Movie Villains


In the 1995 film "Angus," the title character's grandfather teaches a universal truth when he says about Superman "He's smart, handsome, even decent. But he's not brave. No, listen to me. Superman is indestructible, and you can't be brave if you're indestructible." While completely accurate in his assessment of bravery, Angus' grandfather wasn't much of a comic book fan. If he were, he would know that Superman was brave, thanks to Supervillains.

Superman was indestructible under most normal situations, but when the likes of Lex Luthor or General Zod stepped on the scene even the Man of Steel was put in legitimate peril. Superheroes make stories spectacular, but it is the supervillain that makes them special. Our heroes are shaped more by the monsters they face than the environment that made them. Nicholson's Joker made us care about Keaton's Batman, because he was inspired and inspiring. Here's a look at some other inspired comic book movie villains, in no particular order.

Kevin (Elijah Wood) - Sin City
Elijah Wood might be most well-known to nerds because of his repeated turns as Frodo Baggins, but one of his crowning achievements is from the 2005 comic book movie, "Sin City." The macabre holy cannibal that fed on prostitutes and kept close council with some of the most twisted characters in comic book mythology was one of the most memorable things in a wholly unforgettable movie. The nice little guy with a high voice and furry feet transformed himself into a true thing of nightmares.

While Kevin really never stood much of a chance against a beast like Marv, his story embodies the soul of "The Hard Goodbye," and testament must be given to Elijah Wood for pulling off a character we found pleasure in watching die, without uttering a single sound. Even calmly sitting on the porch, reading a bible in the moonlight, he oozed evil.


General Zod (Terence Stamp) - Superman 2

More than Lex Luther, General Zod made Superman a hero. General Zod wasn't in it for riches or revenge, his single driving goal was to make absolutely everyone bend their knee in supplication. If that weren't enough, he was as indestructible as Superman. Had he gotten his way, Lex Luthor would have been killed alongside Superman, just because.

General Zod has been a Superman villain since the 60s, but when Terence Stamp put his stamp on the character (sorry, couldn't resist!) it was immortalized. Stamp played Zod with a flippant power that was irresistible. The audience genuinely thought he was a threat to Superman, and when Superman kneeled before Zod, many thought Supes was doomed.


Top Dollar (Michael Wincott) - The Crow
"The Crow" is a touchstone of the 90s, remembered as a great film that made a legend out of the son of a legend. It helped influence a generation and there are still plenty of people quoting Eric Draven, Funboy and T-Bird as they go about their everyday lives.

Michael Wincott's Top Dollar was the perfect leader to pit against the undead goth rock guitarist turned avenging angel. His incestuous immorality and quick temper proved he was a force worth dealing with. His only motivating force was power. Murder, whether to make a point or to acquire something he desired, was an every day event. His henchmen may have had the most memorable lines in the film, but they were just pawns anyway. Top Dollar was the top dog for a reason.


Bullseye (Colin Farrell) - Daredevil (Director's Cut)

This is the entry that most people will disagree with, because directing any amount of positivity towards "Daredevil" seems to invoke the ire of a vocal group of fanboys that hated the film. I don't care that Jennifer Garner was miscast as Elektra, I enjoyed the film, in no small part because of Colin Farrell's Bullseye.

Bullseye has always been one of my favorite assassins. In the wide world of super powers, he's not top tier. He's accurate, that's it. That's all he's ever needed.

Bullseye kills because murder is a tool. Often, it's a tool to just get someone to shut up already. Sometimes it's a tool to get huge piles of cash. It doesn't matter to Bullseye. Bullseye is the honey badger of assassins. Bullseye don't care.

Dr. Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina) - Spider-Man 2
I'll admit, I was a bit skeptical when I first learned of Alfred Molina getting cast as Doc Ock. Dr. Octopus wasn't really one of my favorite Spider-Man villains to begin with, and Alfred Molina didn't seem the supervillain sort.

Thankfully, my fears were not to come to light. Molina captured a dry, dark, sardonic Dr. Octopus that I hadn't given much attention two in the four-color forum. He tended to be clumped with other villains in the comics (the Sinister Six), but on the big screen he easily handled his own business. Molina brought a charisma to Doc Ock that I didn't think was possible, as well as some serious acting chops. Now, it's hard to think of anyone else in the role.


Ra's al Ghul (Liam Neeson) - Batman Begins

Liam Neeson, as Ra's al Ghul, did something that many didn't think was possible - he made people care about Batman again. Sure, Christopher Nolan deserves most of the credit and Bale's Dark Knight rivals Michael Keaton's in the realm of "Oh my God, how did he pull that off," but Liam Neeson's earnest Ducard and diabolical Ghul bookended the Batman origin story in a way that made us forget it wasn't the first time we saw it.

Burton had done the origin before, and with it had made Joker synonymous with Batman. His rewriting of the death of Wayne's parents made the casual Batman fan see Batman's birth inexplicably tied to the green-faced clown.

Liam Neeson gave us a new start, and gave Batman a new light. Pitting Batman against the Joker made the Caped Crusader's tale a revenge story. Ra's al Ghul made it about justice and duty. He was a villain we wanted to pay attention to, and the anarchy he created to get what he wanted was disturbingly beautiful.






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Cheeze187
Cheeze187 - 6/10/2012, 11:31 PM
Fun post about baddies.
Joker11
Joker11 - 6/10/2012, 11:34 PM
Very nice list although Ive never seen the crow.
Triptheorist
Triptheorist - 6/10/2012, 11:36 PM
You're missing out on some of the greats. Collin Ferrel and Elijah Wood, but no Nicholson, Ledger or Hiddleston?
Triptheorist
Triptheorist - 6/10/2012, 11:38 PM
Good call on Top Dollar though. Michael Wincott always brings the evil to the mix. Totally underrated villain.
loki668
loki668 - 6/10/2012, 11:46 PM
@Joker11

You absolutely have to watch The Crow. It's a great film with some awesome imagery, great acting, and fun lines.

Lord Loki has spoken
Tainted87
Tainted87 - 6/10/2012, 11:48 PM
I sometimes think I'm the only person who couldn't stand watching the Crow. I tried to like it, my ex loved it, but damn I could NOT understand the appeal. Oh well.

I very much prefer Willem Dafoe's Osborn over Alfred Molina's Octavius - the latter just didn't seem like the comics one bit.
Oxbow
Oxbow - 6/10/2012, 11:56 PM
Ian McKellan or Fassbender's Magneto's were each inspired in their own ways. they are a reflection of Charles Xavier's dream, seen through a dark mirror.
JillValenfield
JillValenfield - 6/10/2012, 11:56 PM
Bullseye was really great performed by Collin Farrell. Daredevil was'nt that great but they did a very good kingpin and bullseye!

Great list!
Joker11
Joker11 - 6/10/2012, 11:57 PM
@loki

I believe I own it... I also haven't seen Sin City.
CPBuff22
CPBuff22 - 6/11/2012, 12:13 AM
I watch The Crow EVERY Halloween. Its one of my favorite movies of ALL TIME!
Ceejay
Ceejay - 6/11/2012, 12:29 AM
1: Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight
2: Timothy Dalton in The Rocketeer
3: Ian McKellern - X-Men 2
4: Tom Hiddleston in The Avengers
5: Max Von Sydow in Flash Gordon
6: Matthew Goode in Watchmen
7: John Lone in The Shadow
8: Liam Neesom in Batman Begins
9: Willem Defoe in Spider-man
10: Terrence Stamp in Superman 2

Heath Ledgers performance was truly an inspired delivery. Timothy Dalton in the Rocketeer was Errol Flynn/Clark Gable gone bad with total panache! Ian McKellern's escape from prison stole the show and he was a true constant quality in the trilogy. Tom Hiddelston simply magnificent as Loki especially his scene with Black Widow. Max Von Sydow gave a classic sneering villains performance in a very corny Flash Gordon movie. Mathew Goode shone like a diamond of genius in Watchmen as Ozymandias, his fight scenes unrivaled! John Lone truly excelled in his evil role for The Shadow, shame he left the business so early. Liam Neesom was solid in his performance as the devious Ra's Al Guhl in Batman Begins. Willem Defoe gave us a taste of what his Joker could have been in Spider-man playing a maniacal Green Goblin. And Terrence Stamp gave some much needed steel in his eternal fan favorite's performance as General Zod against the man of cheese in Superman 2.

No Jack Nicholson because his performance was just the same old run-of-the-mill delivery he'd done in so many films, plus his make-up was horrendous and he was way too fat! He was little different to what we got with Adam West! None of the pre-Nolan Batman films managed to get any of the villains or heroes right for that matter.

No Colin Farrell as Bullseye because he was way too over the top and nothing like his comic counterpart. Little attempt to even give him a decent costume either.
mob7medina
mob7medina - 6/11/2012, 12:40 AM
The Crow is still one of my all time favorites,Wincott was great in it.and I thought Colin Farrell was good as Bullseye however the costume He had sucked
SCURVYDOG619
SCURVYDOG619 - 6/11/2012, 12:56 AM
Still waiting for a proper movie version of Victor von Doom-who Fassbinder was BORN to play,IMHO...

No love for Hugo Weaving as the Red Skull?
Coachella
Coachella - 6/11/2012, 1:12 AM
My only complaint with William as The Green Goblin was his costume. His acting was really good.
TheDarkKnightWing
TheDarkKnightWing - 6/11/2012, 1:20 AM
@Ceejay

Actually Nolans Batmans are nothing like the source material. Fans make that clear countless times.
Ceejay
Ceejay - 6/11/2012, 3:34 AM
@RamonSuarez - I aint smoking cheese from my childhood that's for sure. Terence Stamps General Zod didn't even throw a punch (wow, just like the comic), those movies are only held in high regard by fanboys who grew up watching them with the same child-eyes. Watch them now and you see how cheesy they really are and Zod is just another muted villain in the cheese-fest who doesn't kill anyone, just makes idle threats and throws his one line "Kneel before Zod" for the kids and old-fanboys to laugh at a few times.

On the contrary Mathew Goode played a proper comic villain as Ozymandias, not a pantomime one! He killed, he manipulated, he framed, he double-crossed, he fought, he devised diabolical ideals, executed them and he bloody won!

@TheDarkKnightWing - Actually they are a lot like the source material and in many ways better because they devise ways to make the concepts work in a real world scenario. His version of the Joker is based on the very performance that inspired Bob Kane to invent the character (Conrad Veidt in The Man Who Laughs (1928)) Other directors who made Batman films never got the basic elements of Batman's character correct, the two sides of Bruce Wayne, Billionaire Playboy and sullen detective. None of them got the major characteristics of the Batman correct, the Jim Gordon alliance on the rooftops, the disappearing act as he's speaking, the martial arts techniques, the detective work, the stealth in the shadows, the hanging upside down, the interrogating villains over the edge of rooftops, the use of bats in the cave as allies, the use of bat-shuriken, even the basic watch over the city on the side of a building.

All the previous directors were concerned with were costumes and cars, not character. They took most of their characteristics from old Batman concepts like a Batarang.. meh! So called fans who make statements about Nolan not getting anything right don't actually do their homework and are barely scratching the surface of what Nolan's achieved in the enormous success delivering the character to the screen for modern audiences worldwide.
RunDTC
RunDTC - 6/11/2012, 6:02 AM
anyone else getting sent to an article on another website talking about leaked nude pics of Snooki? ew.
Rush
Rush - 6/11/2012, 6:04 AM
Good list but Ledger and Hiddleston should be up there. Btw i just made my account even though i've been visiting this site for a long time so hello everyone!
breakUbatman
breakUbatman - 6/11/2012, 6:19 AM
I'd put Bridges Obadiah Stane up there, the guy just had charisma. Simply screwing Stark over with a smile, I loved it.

"You ripped out my targeting system... Hold still, you little prick!"
MrsTonyStark0507
MrsTonyStark0507 - 6/11/2012, 6:47 AM
I agree that Hiddleston, Ledger and Fassbender NEED to be top 3 on that list! As much as I loved Ledger as the Joker, whenever Loki did that evil smile, all I saw was what the Joker should have been! It gave me chills! Awesome sauce!
MrsTonyStark0507
MrsTonyStark0507 - 6/11/2012, 6:49 AM
Mickey Rourke's Whiplash was pretty damn evil too. That scene in the jail when he is just snapping necks without even breaking stride - that is a badass villian.
spidey23435
spidey23435 - 6/11/2012, 9:40 AM
@Ceejay First I will say the Batman movies have been great but you proved the point that TheDarkKnightWing was making, the joker in Dark knight returns (as great as the character was)was not really the joker from the comic books. You even said it yourself that he was based on the character Joker was based on not the Joker himself. I agree it was a great "real world" approach as people put it but guess what Comics are not real life, that's what makes them great. Aside from that in the 2 Batman movies so far I am yet to see Batman do any detective work other than the ballistics test in TDR and even that just showed his tech not his actual detective work. The rooftop interrogation was done in the original Batman, not quite an interrogation but he holds the criminal over the edge and threatens him. The current batman movies are amazing movies but are poor representations of the source material. Nolan simply used what he likes and made his OWN Batman based on a world he created for said batman. End product is great and in spirit is Batman but still not much for source material.
MrsTonyStark0507
MrsTonyStark0507 - 6/11/2012, 10:50 AM
Preacherfanatic7 - I realize we are going really off topic here, but I totally agree!! I LOVE all the costumes in the Avengers - especially Cap and Loki!! I saw someone on another post say that if people were going to take Wonder Woman seriously, then they needed to get rid of her skimpy costume because woman wouldn't watch, or something like that. Well, I'm sorry, but the women in comic books are all dressed that way and that is just the way it is. You can't re-write the comics to sell tickets and you can't leave all the women out of the movies because you are afraid of offending women. Not all super hero females are as clothed Black Widow. I am a woman and an avid comic book reader and I think the women in comics are super hot! It's time to start including them, ridiculous costumes and all.

foxfan
foxfan - 6/11/2012, 11:07 AM
Gotta get some of these on a list like this:

---Heat Ledger!!!
---Jack Nicholson
---Ian McKellen
---Tom Hiddleston
---Willem DeFoe
---Hugo Weaving (I think Red Skull was underwritten overall, yet Weaving still made the character pop when given the chance)


I personally think Bullseye sucked in Daredevil, both the writing and the portrayal. But I like the rest of the portrayals in the OP
GreyChaos13Zero
GreyChaos13Zero - 6/11/2012, 11:15 AM
my top five villains

1-Joker, The Dark Knight

2-Prince Nuada, Hellboy 2

3-Nomak, Blade 2

4-Loki, The Avengers

5-Riddler, Batman Forever
Whiteharted
Whiteharted - 6/11/2012, 11:15 AM
Molina Doc Ock was AWESOME he PERFECTLY played him!! He captured his arrogance PERFECTLY! and looked just like him! Also the only changing a villian's story WORKED! I much prefer Molina Ock to the comics
Whiteharted
Whiteharted - 6/11/2012, 11:16 AM
Oh and Weaving's Red Skull deserves a mention too as he was PERFECT!! NOTHING wrong!
2gold
2gold - 6/11/2012, 11:17 AM
Folks, Fassbenders Magneto was the bad guy for 5 minutes. He was a great Magneto, but he wasn't the bad guy until the end. The villain was Kevin Bacon.
LeoAtrox
LeoAtrox - 6/11/2012, 11:34 AM
"Daredevil (Director's Cut)": YES!
"Daredevil": NOOOOOO!

Amazing what a difference two words in a title make. (If you haven't seen the director's cut of Daredevil, shame shame on you!)
ComicBookGoth
ComicBookGoth - 6/11/2012, 12:48 PM
the director's cut wasn't that bad

saymekian
saymekian - 6/11/2012, 1:54 PM
I actually enjoyed DD.

@GreyChaos - TOTALLY agree with Prince Nuada. Tragic villain indeed. Also the same actor who played Nomak ;)

OverCross
OverCross - 6/11/2012, 2:39 PM
BFGLOOM
BFGLOOM - 6/11/2012, 3:13 PM
Micheal Wincott as Top Dollar is A GREAT PICK! Very underrated and alot better onscreen then the novel.
usclerkguy
usclerkguy - 6/12/2012, 6:08 PM
Where's Julian McMahon as Dr.Doom??? Lol...just kidding...ha ha...Dr. Doom needs redemption on the big screen!!! Screw the FF, just give him his own film!
usclerkguy
usclerkguy - 6/12/2012, 6:19 PM
Aside from the great performances everyone has listed, i believe Tim Roth had a nice turn as Emil Blonsky as did Kevin Bacon as Sebastian Shaw.
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