View Full Version : The Most Inspiring Villain of All Time?
Doctor Doom
01-16-2009, 08:55 PM
Dracula maybe. Doom Maybe. Satan doesn't count. I'd like to hear more ideas from you; the viewers.
The Nazis...they've inspired more films than I can count.
Yurka
01-16-2009, 09:04 PM
By inspiring do you mean a) manipulative? or do you mean b)villain with the largest following/fan-base?
if a)I would say Hannibal or the Joker, b) would be Vader
Doctor Doom
01-16-2009, 09:10 PM
I meant characters that have a base, reference, and/or idea that is related to the original villain.
Perhaps Doctor Jekell and Mr. Hyde? Seeing as how many scientists that turn into freaks of nature all the time. DOc Ock, Green Goblin, Vader, Joker (in Killing Joke), Invisible Man, The Hulk. Not to mention Two-Face.
Again...Nazis.
Final Solutions, Mass Genocide, Armies of Darkness, Axis of Evil.
The Third Reich is a cesspool of inspiration for Evil in all forms of media.
Yurka
01-16-2009, 09:13 PM
Ah, I misunderstood, I would definitely agree with Jekell/Hyde. There are too many villains to count with the basic Jekell/Hyde dilemma
Doctor Doom
01-16-2009, 09:18 PM
Again...Nazis.
Final Solutions, Mass Genocide, Armies of Darkness, Axis of Evil.
The Third Reich is a cesspool of inspiration for Evil in all forms of media.
They also appear in a highly anticipated movie, for me, Captain America.
One of the many reasons I would love to see the Captain America movie, to see those jerks beat down with bare fists.
DChero
01-18-2009, 01:44 AM
I really have to agree with the comments about the Nazis. Though they (in theory) could have been inspired by Constantine and Alexander. So it's hard to say which started it all.
Though I think we all know that Emperor Palpatine did it first since Star Wars did happen a long time ago...
bullets
01-24-2009, 05:37 PM
i would want to be scarface
fu manchu
01-24-2009, 06:05 PM
Fu Manchu would have to be one of most inspiring villain, if not the most.
Per Wikipedia:
The character of Fu Manchu became a stereotype often associated with the Yellow Peril. Fu Manchu has inspired numerous other characters, and is the model for most villains in later "Yellow Peril" thrillers.[4] Examples include Pao Tcheou, Dr. Azimn, Ancient Wu from True Crime: Streets of LA, Ming the Merciless from Flash Gordon, Li Chang Yen from The Big Four, James Bond adversary Dr. No, Dr Benton Quest's archenemy Doctor Zin from the Jonny Quest television series, Dr. Yen-Lo from The Manchurian Candidate, Lo-Pan from Big Trouble in Little China, Marvel comics foes the Mandarin and the Yellow Claw,DC Comics' Rā's al Ghūl, and Wo Fat from the CBS tv series Hawaii Five-O.
While not of Chinese descent, "Egyptian" arch-villain "Kathulos" (then revealed to be a survived Atlantean) of Robert E. Howard's Skull-Face novella is blatantly inspired by Fu-Manchu.
"Comrade Li" in Peter George's "Commander-1" (1965) is essentially the same type of villain - despite his name having only a thin veneer of Communism or Marxism, being rather a suave philosopher steeped in ancient Chinese learning whose cold-blooded machinations bring about a nuclear holocaust in which nearly all humanity perishes (including China, which he sought to make great) and who eventually meets a suitable gruesome and ignominious end.
Fu Manchu is also one of the earliest known examples of a supervillain, with Professor Moriarty being among the few other precedents.
:word:
Doctor Doom
01-25-2009, 12:07 AM
Didn't know that. Certainly glad I do now.
:up:
Adrian89
01-25-2009, 09:25 AM
Dracula I guess. He was used in many movies, often with very different stories!
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