Mad Ones
Bebe le Strange
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2009
- Messages
- 7,109
- Reaction score
- 1,051
- Points
- 103
It's a bit easy to say Marvel has a problem with villains when DC has Batman's rogues gallery and Magneto is a major pillar of the X-men movies. But Marvel has a combination of great, mediocre, and terrible villains. Probably because they've made so many movies already.
Loki is the best villain from a Marvel movie. He has a very personal connection with the protagonist, character focus and development, and just enough sympathy to make him complicated.
If we can call the Winter Soldier a villain than he was also excellently done, for the same reasons as Loki. However, Bucky is such a victim that he isn't exactly a villain. But maybe that's what works so well.
I don't even remember the names of the other villains in the Winter Soldier (like Robert Redford's character). All I know is that they worked for Hydra. I don't know why they work for Hydra, but they do. That's probably the weakest part of an otherwise fantastic movie.
I think I'm in the minority here, but the Mandarin is one of my favourite things that Marvel has done. I look back at the trailers and marketing for that movie and smirk, unlike boil in rage like I know some on here do. I thought from the first time we saw "the Mandarin" in the marketing for the movie that he was a joke that I couldn't take seriously. And the movie did exactly that. The enemy became the military industrial complex (true to Iron Man's form), and not a simple 2-dimensional pseudo-racist "terrorist." The fandom prides itself on knowing EVERYTHING about a comic book property and strives to know every plot twist and turn, and loves to connect the dots to the comics. But Iron Man 3 was bold enough to actual surprise the base. Unheard of and controversial.
Stane, Whiplash, and Hammer were consistent villains for Iron Man's development. Too bad Iron Man 2 was sloppy in its storytelling because almost everyone suffered for it. But the villains were "good enough." Personally, I found Hammer extremely annoying and Rourke's acting took me out of the movie.
The abomination was horrible as the Incredible Hulk devolved into a brainless wrestling match. The movie was good until the third act.
The Red Skull was evil for the sake of being evil. He didn't need development because "Nazi." He foiled Captain America in a cartoonish "one is good because he's an American and the other is bad because he's a Nazi" kind of way.
Thor: The Dark World will probably forever stand out as Marvel's biggest waste of potential. The source material has some pretty incredible ideas and villains. Thor's villains help in world building and mythology creation. Malekith didn't do that. He was 2-demensional. The "world building" came from lazy narration and boring explanation.
Ronan worked on some level because of his connection to Thanos. His racism against Xandar and his radicalization should have been developed more, though. He was underwhelming as a cosmic level threat, but I liked his character design.
Ultron was great during his creation scene, his conversation with the Vision, and the one time he showed resentment toward Iron Man. Ultron was more wasted potential, though. Why not play up his relationship with Iron Man with some Oedipus Rex themes like he has with Ant-Man in the comics? Ultron was created BY THE AVENGERS, so why did he feel so disconnected from them? What theme did Ultron contribute to? Was Iron Man vindicated or condemned by the end of the movie? Do the characters even care?
I'm maybe a little worried about Thanos. Great villains connect with the audience and actually make them feel something. If the mo-cap is as good as Caesar in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes then it won't feel like there's another barrier between the character and the audience. But I worry that Thanos won't look any better than he did in Guardians. His relationship with Death makes him interesting, but Marvel has shown us with Ultron that they don't mind downplaying what makes the villain interesting.
Sorry for the long post. I just felt like writing my thoughts.
Loki is the best villain from a Marvel movie. He has a very personal connection with the protagonist, character focus and development, and just enough sympathy to make him complicated.
If we can call the Winter Soldier a villain than he was also excellently done, for the same reasons as Loki. However, Bucky is such a victim that he isn't exactly a villain. But maybe that's what works so well.
I don't even remember the names of the other villains in the Winter Soldier (like Robert Redford's character). All I know is that they worked for Hydra. I don't know why they work for Hydra, but they do. That's probably the weakest part of an otherwise fantastic movie.
I think I'm in the minority here, but the Mandarin is one of my favourite things that Marvel has done. I look back at the trailers and marketing for that movie and smirk, unlike boil in rage like I know some on here do. I thought from the first time we saw "the Mandarin" in the marketing for the movie that he was a joke that I couldn't take seriously. And the movie did exactly that. The enemy became the military industrial complex (true to Iron Man's form), and not a simple 2-dimensional pseudo-racist "terrorist." The fandom prides itself on knowing EVERYTHING about a comic book property and strives to know every plot twist and turn, and loves to connect the dots to the comics. But Iron Man 3 was bold enough to actual surprise the base. Unheard of and controversial.
Stane, Whiplash, and Hammer were consistent villains for Iron Man's development. Too bad Iron Man 2 was sloppy in its storytelling because almost everyone suffered for it. But the villains were "good enough." Personally, I found Hammer extremely annoying and Rourke's acting took me out of the movie.
The abomination was horrible as the Incredible Hulk devolved into a brainless wrestling match. The movie was good until the third act.
The Red Skull was evil for the sake of being evil. He didn't need development because "Nazi." He foiled Captain America in a cartoonish "one is good because he's an American and the other is bad because he's a Nazi" kind of way.
Thor: The Dark World will probably forever stand out as Marvel's biggest waste of potential. The source material has some pretty incredible ideas and villains. Thor's villains help in world building and mythology creation. Malekith didn't do that. He was 2-demensional. The "world building" came from lazy narration and boring explanation.
Ronan worked on some level because of his connection to Thanos. His racism against Xandar and his radicalization should have been developed more, though. He was underwhelming as a cosmic level threat, but I liked his character design.
Ultron was great during his creation scene, his conversation with the Vision, and the one time he showed resentment toward Iron Man. Ultron was more wasted potential, though. Why not play up his relationship with Iron Man with some Oedipus Rex themes like he has with Ant-Man in the comics? Ultron was created BY THE AVENGERS, so why did he feel so disconnected from them? What theme did Ultron contribute to? Was Iron Man vindicated or condemned by the end of the movie? Do the characters even care?
I'm maybe a little worried about Thanos. Great villains connect with the audience and actually make them feel something. If the mo-cap is as good as Caesar in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes then it won't feel like there's another barrier between the character and the audience. But I worry that Thanos won't look any better than he did in Guardians. His relationship with Death makes him interesting, but Marvel has shown us with Ultron that they don't mind downplaying what makes the villain interesting.
Sorry for the long post. I just felt like writing my thoughts.
Last edited: