Q&A

Which villain made the most sense?

Which villain made the most sense?

That said, here are 20 of our favorite villains, who made a lot of sense:

  1. 1 MAGNETO (X-MEN)
  2. 2 SCREENSLAVER (INCREDIBLES 2)
  3. 3 PAGAN MIN (FAR CRY 4)
  4. 4 THE MACHINES (THE MATRIX)
  5. 5 THE ILLUMINATI (CIVIL WAR/PLANET HULK)
  6. 6 ENCHANTRESS (SUICIDE SQUAD)
  7. 7 MAGOG (KINGDOM COME)
  8. 8 KOBA (DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES)

What villain has good intentions?

Here are a few who actually did have good intentions, despite their ‘unconventional’ ways.

  • Erik Killmonger. – Black Panther.
  • Thanos. – Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame.
  • Ra’s Al Ghul. Advertisement.
  • Ozymandias. – Watchmen.
  • Magneto. – X-Men saga.
  • Ocean Master. – Aquaman.
  • Darth Vader. – Star Wars saga.
  • Ultron.

Are villains actually evil?

READ ALSO:   How do you respond when a dog poops inside?

Many fans believe that supervillains have been evil since their inception, but that’s just not true. While there are actually some villains that are born with inherent evil within them (we are looking at you Ultron), most supervillains were actually forces of good before succumbing to a life of crime.

Which movie villains had the right idea?

Here are 13 movie villains who actually had the right idea. 1. Captain Hook from Peter Pan The older you get, the more you just have to ask “what is wrong with Peter?” We get that he never grows up, but he must know it’s not okay to whisk three kids out of their beds in the middle of the night for some crazy adventure.

Who are the 13 villains who were right all along?

13 Movie “Villains” Who Were Right All Along 1. Captain Hook from Peter Pan 2. Sid from Toy Story 3. Mr. Hector from Home Alone 2 4. Gaston from Beauty and the Beast 5. The government agents from E.T. 6. Dean Rooney from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off 7. The Wicked Witch of the West from The Wizard of Oz 8. Edgar from The Aristocats

READ ALSO:   How many Mormons convert each year?

Are villains always the bad guys?

Just because the villains are the “bad guys” doesn’t mean they always have bad ideas. When Milton wrote “Better to reign in Hell, than to serve in Heaven,” it wasn’t because he’d suddenly become a Satanist, or that he was trying to denounce what people believed in. Opinions are opinions, and beliefs are beliefs, and this was just his opinion.

Why were we supposed to be rooting for the villain?

Our “villain” overthrew the current regime after not demonstrating superhuman abilities and being cast off into the lowest rung of an oppressive, bigoted caste system, and sought to create a society of social and economic equality in its place. That’s the guy we were supposed to be rooting against.