A hero looks even better matched with a worthy villain. Would Sherlock Holmes have near the enduring popularity if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle hadn’t invented Professor Moriarity to combat him? A couple of my favorites are:
Supreme Chancellor Palpatine from Star Wars: Attack of the Clones and Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith: The Chancellor is a wonderful villain before he becomes the evil Emperor. I wish the writers had given him more scenes because actor Ian McDiarmid does such a marvelous job of conveying the character’s insidious campaign of seducing Anakin Skywalker to the Dark Side. His scene with Anakin in a theater lets you figure out just how evil the Chancellor is.
Harry Lime from The Third Man: In this film noir, American Holly Martins comes to Vienna right after WWII to meet his friend Harry Lime only to learn that his friend has died in a car accident. Martins suspects murder and conducts his own investigation. The character of Harry Lime is discussed throughout the investigation, and the audience gets to know him from the various descriptions from different characters. It all builds to a intriguing picture of a charming rogue, who, at some point, abandoned the charm, and is now a murderous rogue. I don’t want to spoil the movie, but Harry Lime is one of the all time great villains of movie history.
Who are your favorite movie villains?
Darth Vader, hands down. 🙂 Maleficent from the animated Sleeping Beauty is also fabulously creepy.
Maleficient is the scariest Disney villain, without question. The battle at the end between her and Prince Phillip is unusually serious and scary for a Disney movie.
It is, but it’s one of the reasons I always loved that one- such a straight up “good vs. evil”