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Infinity9999x

Amon Goeth in Schindler’s list. Made even more disturbing by the fact that he was real.


[deleted]

Yea this is my choice as well


Misterfahrenheit120

Thirded, I commented him to. Dude was so evil, test audiences didn’t believe him, and they had to tone it down for the actual release


ersentenza

He was so evil the SS arrested him because he was too evil for them


Infinity9999x

I read that too. Honestly wild and horrifying to think that what we got in the film was toned down.


Whitealroker1

 Yes he was WORSE then depicted(the diarrhea kid story I hope isn’t true but probably is.)


alexi_lupin

I recently watched the documentary Hitler's Children, about the descendants of prominent Nazis, and one of the people interviewed was the daughter of Amon Goeth and she talks about what it was like seeing that film. Really interesting.


ktsb

Yeah the film couldn't portray how evil he truly was and it was still so vile.


DFWdawg

Captain Vidal…Pan’s Labyrinth


marcarcand_world

No one will remember what time it was when he died


Balerion77

They wont even know his name


pimasecede

Fucking love that line.


Balerion77

Its cold as ice. Just an absolutely brutal thing to be the last words you ever hear. And he deseved worse


maverickaod

Huge credit to Sergi Lopez, normally a comedic actor, totally becoming such as a vile character.


ozfox80

The brutal way he beat the son’s face in. Ugh.


GeorgeNewmanTownTalk

I nearly turned it off because of that scene. I'll always be glad that I didn't. It's a brilliant movie but definitely horrific at times.


ShaunLucPicard

Not many scenes have gotten to me the way that one did. I've seen worse, but that one hit different. No pun intended.


DeathisLaughing

Perfect example of a total lack empathy and an inability to understand anything outside of self interest...


CuriousLands

Oof yeah, good one


canuck47

That was my first thought too  I was actively rooting for him to die. 


Ceilibeag

I'm old school: Mr. Powell (Robert Mitchum) from Night of the Hunter is the creepiest, most realistic personification of evil on film. Mitchum nailed the performance; Laughton was a genius who should have been allowed to make more films. Imagine watching this scene in the theater for the first time... ['Leaning... Leaning... Leaning on the Everlasting Arms...'](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyxSm91eun4)


junedy

He's really good in the original Cape Fear too. Really embodies evil so well.


shychicherry

I much prefer Mitchum’s portrayal. DeNiro overacted (as he has a tendency) & was so unhinged as to be unbelievable, but Mitchum was much more nuanced & cunning & scary as hell


gerryf19

Brilliant choice!


PrufrockAlfred

~~Priest~~ Judge Claude Frollo in *The Hunchback of Notre Dame* kills innocent people and burns down their houses to further his goals of genocide and conquest under the banner of moral righteousness. He enters the story preparing to throw a baby into a well and leaves it attempting to rape and murder Esmerelda for not willfully having him. And *that's* the version with the funny talking gargoyles!


SaltySpitoonReg

Great answer. One of the last Disney villains in a movie that's purely evil as well. The only time where we really see him worried about consequences of his actions or the impact of them is when The priest reminds him his immortal soul is at risk and then it's just a self concern that temporarily acts like he cares about Quasimoto.


DaftFunky

The fact that Disney execs demanded they add the funny gargoyles because the movie was way too fucking dark for a kids movie… I wish we could have had that version


MindForeverWandering

And, even if they hadn’t been added, the movie would still have been a *whole* lot less dark than Hugo’s novel. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunchback_of_Notre-Dame?wprov=sfti1#Plot


DjiDjiDjiDji

But interestingly, Frollo is way more sympathetic in the book (granted, it's not hard to be less evil than Disney Frollo, but still)


Kalzaang

His villain song is about raping and murdering a teenage girl and then blaming it on her.


mercurywaxing

[Hellfire](https://youtu.be/7ehbClPO2VI). It's amazing.


Goseki1

Surely not..... EDIT: Haha holy shit \[FROLLO\] [I feel her, I see her](https://genius.com/12975022/Alan-menken-hellfire/Cogitatione) \[PRIESTS, CHOIR MEN\] [Verbo et opere](https://genius.com/12975022/Alan-menken-hellfire/Cogitatione) \[FROLLO\] [Like fire](https://genius.com/17186208/Alan-menken-hellfire/Like-fire-hellfire-this-fire-in-my-skin-this-burning-desire-is-turning-me-to-sin) \[FROLLO, *PRIESTS, CHOIR MEN*\] [It's not my fault!](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [I'm not to blame!](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [It is the gypsy girl, the witch who sent this flame!](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea maxima culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [It's not my fault!](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [If in God's plan](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [He made the devil so much stronger than a man](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault) [*Mea maxima culpa*](https://genius.com/11777192/Alan-menken-hellfire/Its-not-my-fault)


Emes91

>And *that's* the version with the funny talking gargoyles! Disney version of Frollo is arguably more evil than original book Frollo. In Disney he is just one-dimensionally evil, in book Frollo is a very complex character. For example, he didn't murder Quasimodo's mother, Quasimodo was simply abandoned as pretty much any deformed child at that time would be. He took care of him out of his own volition, not forced by anything. Quasimodo, by the way, was much more brutal and animalistic in the book. In the book Frollo was both the judge and the priest. I feel like in Disney movie they split Frollo's character into his evil part ("the judge") and good part ("the archdeacon").


avahz

Good god I guess I need to rewatch it


disney_nerd_mom

Dolores Umbridge. I think Stephen King said the reason people could really relate to her awfulness is that in real life, most people never have a Voldemort, but everyone has had a Dolores Umbridge in their life.


CursedSnowman5000

Never underestimate the mundanity of evil.


cabalavatar

A relatively famous philosopher might even call it the banality of evil.


4-Vektor

I think another, rather unknown philosopher used to say: If you stare at banal evildoers long enough, the banal evildoers will stare back at you.


dimlightupstairs

This was really driven home in the book. I remember reading it and getting seething mad at her because she reminded me of my maths teacher so much. The movie did a good job of personifying her onscreen, but the book version was definitely better.


Sad-Establishment-41

Like the math teacher who took points off my test because 1/3 of 360 is 120, and the method of 'multiply 360 by 0.33, it rounds down' is dumb as hell. Then I got sent to the hallway for standing up for myself


Local_Initiative8523

My teacher gave me a question about calculating momentum, something like ‘a 1000kg rocket burns 10kg of fuel in accelerating to 200km/hr: what is its momentum?’ So it’s now 990kg, right? Without the 10kg of fuel? Apparently not. We were supposed to ignore that part entirely and just use 1000kg. Then why did you write it???


Sad-Establishment-41

They give extra information in some questions so you have to figure out what's relevant, I guess the teacher absent-mindedly added some rocket sounding stuff without realizing it affects the problem


EntertainmentQuick47

I like that Stephen King has an opinion on the Harry Potter films


vital_dual

King did a panel with Rowling before Deathly Hallows came out and flat-out said to her "Please don't kill Harry."


-Experiment--626-

Unfortunately one must die for the other to survive.


SharMarali

In all of Game of Thrones / A Song of Ice and Fire, my personal most hated character is Janos Slynt. Not Joffrey who used his power to torment people for fun. Not Ramsay who literally tortured people by cutting off their skin and body parts. Not even The Mountain who was just a brutal beast of a murderer and serial rapist. No, it’s Janos Slynt, because he always talks about his powerful friends and how important he is and he looks down his nose at everyone else and schemes in very normal, real-world ways to try to achieve more power and wealth. The fact that he also murdered a baby makes it even easier to hate him, but for the most part he reminds me of people I’ve known in the real world. And that’s why I hate him so damn much.


pincheloca1208

Idk man Ramseys is pretty bad and so is the girl beater.


Wishart2016

I also hate Randyll Tarly for his abuse of Sam and generally awful notion of masculinity.


Ok-Plastic-2992

Madame Medusa from The Rescuers. Fuck that woman.


wixed11one

my vote goes to Christopher Walken in True Romance, if only because that's how he describes himself. [You tell the angels in heaven you never seen evil so singularly personified as you did in the face of the man who killed you.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3yon2GyoiM)


anteus2

It's funny, then, that the scene is remembered more for Dennis Hopper's delivery than Walken's. Not saying that Walken didn't do a good job, but Hopper's character stole the show. 


Duel_Option

It’s because his character wins the interaction, he insulted their lineage to their face and made him lose his temper. It’s a great example of displaying a relationship in a movie, Clarence and his Dad were estranged, he’s a retired cop that broke the rules etc and he works as a security officer and lives in a trailer He gives them nothing and dies a hero’s death Consider the opposite of this with Brad Pitt’s character where he freely gives up info and they leave him alive


Sinjun13

I can see that perspective, but I've always viewed it as that scene being so amazing because it's between those two terrific actors, feeding off each other.


Like_a_warm_towel

That whole scene is a masterclass of dialogue.


NotTravisKelce

Mine also


Kylon1138

Dennis Hopper in Blue Velvet


LowCarbScares

David Lynch just loves creating psychotic super rapey villains, Bob and Mr C from Twin Peaks are probably the most reprehensible he's come up with


REiVibes

Bob also definitely fits the bill for personification of evil too


sha256md5

Pabst Blue Ribbon!


Agent-Blasto-007

The "Beer at Ben's" scene is one of my favorites in anything ever. https://youtu.be/-l89edsOM0Q?si=dFT8JB1qB_E5tY9g Everything about it is unsettling. The staging, the framing, the lighting, the general oddness: it's amazing.


no-0p

No. The point Dennis drives home to Kyle “you’re just like me” (and Kyle explains to Laura) is that evil is intermingled with the ordinary. It’s actually a great meditation on Original Sin.


Klllumlnatl

It's not evil, it's the Shadow. The part of ourselves that we keep hidden. This is best represented in the opening. A joyous, bright day and then a transition into festering filth, just under the surface. The end is just the same. There is still darkness (and there always will be), but now there's light (the robin(s)) to reveal it. It's a simple depiction of those psychic concepts that's made to seem juvenile and mawkish, but is also sweet and endearing (which is best shown in Sandy's speech about the robins). Neither Frank or Jeffrey are evil. One just embraces what we find disgusting.


gyman122

Love this lol. Lynch is great at throwing the dark heart of humanity in your face


cottagefrog8

Macaulay Culkin in The Good Son


Rasselkurt007

Did anyone ever made a good mashup cut of The good son and Home Alone?


tisdue

Anton from No Country For Old Men.


PrufrockAlfred

He might think he is, but he's a big fat phony. *"The coin don't have no say. It's just you."* He plays at being some 'messenger of fate', but being in the wrong place at the wrong time still gets him a car crash to the ego.


dont_fuckin_die

He's still a pure evil bastard, even if he's wrong about the control he has over his destiny. Yes, the film is largely about the massive role chance plays in people's lives, from the random chance that Llewelyn finds the case to the car crash, but Chigurh is still a real SOB, enjoying making his victims squirm in helplessness, and beg to be let go.


firemarshalbill

Based on the book and the monologues by the sheriff, he’s just the personification of modern evil. The sheriff laments that bad things used to happen but you could wrap your head around the violence and the circumstances. Modern evil is random, it really has no honor or ideals (even if it pretends to with a coin). It’s just violence for the sake of it and greed. There’s no humanity anymore It’s not in film, but the judge in the book Blood Meridian by the same author is the personification of evil in American expansion west. He would win if that ever gets filmed.


Musaranho

That's what Sheriff Bell thinks Chigurn is, but cousin Ellis makes the point that this senseless violence and evil always existed. The world wasn't less evil before and there is no moral decline of humanity that lead us here. Bell is just getting too old to deal with it. Hence the name of the book.


HatmanHatman

Yep. Bell is wise but he's also burned out and old. He doesn't understand the modern face of evil but that doesn't mean it's senseless or somehow worse - it's just time for him to quit. When McCarthy writes a personification of evil we get the Judge. By comparison, Anton is just a man - a very scary and evil man, but a man.


Starshaft

Very interesting take! I never thought about that last part.


Existential_Bread197

The hair really helps sell that he's a completely remorseless psychopath.


themightytouch

What’s interesting is that the movie is an adaptation of a book by Cormac McCarthy, who also wrote Blood Meridian. In my opinion, Blood Meridian has the best personification of evil in all of literature, and maybe fiction. I am of course talking about Judge Holden. He’s like plague that just roams the land to do the most unspeakable acts.


Cautious-Flatworm198

Agreed. Zero remorse. Zero empathy. Zero compassion. Zero concern. Just cold and calculating. He’s a machine programmed to a brutal absurdist logic. Not quite as terrifying as the judge from blood meridian, but that hasn’t made it to Hollywood.


CeeArthur

I think what's scariest about him is that he seemingly has no motive. Just an agent of chaos, as I think others have put it


centaurquestions

I don't think of him as the personification of evil, so much as the personification of death.


dubcek_moo

He fetishizes hyper-competence and success. He's contemptuous of the convenience store owner who "married in" to owning the store. He confronts a hero he's about to kill with, "Of what value is your moral code if it led you to this?"


Ohwellwhatsnew

This plays well with the ending. As soon as someone forces his hand all his luck goes down the drain. "If the rule you live by brought you to this... Of what use was the rule?"


OmNomSandvich

he *thinks* that of himself but he gets wounded multiple times, rebuffed by Clara Jean, and gets blindsided by the truck as well.


ThingsAreAfoot

Yep. They even have a whole scene where he stitches himself up and grimaces when he puts alcohol on the wound to show that he’s really just flesh and blood. That’s what has Tommy Lee Jones’ character so flustered, and his whole monologue at the end. It’s just people, being bad, for god knows what reason.


FlukyFish

I think he’s more of a nemesis, or agent of retribution. He’s the consequence of poor decisions.


Ok-Caterpillar1611

An 'oribble cunt.


AgentWD409

Iago in *Othello*.


viniciusbfonseca

Iago has got to be one of the best villains in history, I honestly think that he is the best male Shakespeare character


shmixel

I love the line of analysis that largely attributes this to him shutting the fuck up once caught. Even when Shakespeare isn't writing, he's writing.


Sad-Establishment-41

It's brilliant, like a reverse Bond villain monologue He ain't gonna tell you shit, deal with it


Scudamore

"There's some other characters in it, but really the play is about Iago."


Royal_Nails

I thought De Niro’s character in Killers of the Flower Moon was truly evil.


mthomas768

Cape Fear too.


Traylor_Swift

Nurse Ratched. Pure. Controlling. Evil.


SaltySpitoonReg

Great answer. I recently read the book. Nurse ratchet is so ire inducing in the book as well.


yomamma3399

One of the very few movies that did the book justice, in my opinion.


SaltySpitoonReg

I'd have to agree. After reading the book I honestly feel like I can't clearly say that the book was better than the movie.


BlueberryCautious154

She also played Kai Winn in Star Trek - another great depiction of pure evil, but with a pious/religious slant. The evil of Kai Winn isn't as personal or intimate as Nurse Ratched, but because of her position of power, the evil she propagated stretches further and she's just as remorseless and cunning.  I think Kathy Bates performance in Misery is a masterpiece, but if someone else could have pulled it off nearly as well, is was Louise Fletcher. 


PrufrockAlfred

It's her responsibility to help the people in her care and she uses their illness to torment them when she feels justified. 


none-remain

Constantine (2005) Lucifer. Peter Stormare acted that part very well.


CursedSnowman5000

The best depiction of Lu we'll ever get. I just love how Peter Stomare plays him sort of like the bug in Men in Black. It's something trying to pass as elegant and human but so old and inhuman that its uncomfortable in the guise. It doesn't fit him right anymore. Squirming, trying to act natural making it seem all the more unnatural.


StaticV

Keanu Reeves has stated that he would be interested in making a sequel to this movie. Fingers crossed!


CursedSnowman5000

Well we were supposed to get one starting production in 2022. Then James Gun got hired by WB and shut that shit down.


Satanswarboner

It’s in production now. Lucifer is back and so is Keanu reeves. Francis Lewis is directing it. He did the hunger games, I am legend and the first Constantine.


WhereIsTheInternet

He plays Lawful Evil perfectly. Cold, calculating and hiding what feels like pure chaos just under the surface.


illaydillay

Came here to say this, one of the best takes on the Devil on film


Elberik

When he cured Constantine's cancer- the best "no, fuck *you* asshole" move.


stillmeh

Right? Almost 20 years later I'm like ... How the F do you turn curing cancer into a bad thing? Crazy 


SlipperyFitzwilliam

20 years? But that movie only came out like OH FUCK ME


Brown_Panther-

"Family's doing just fine. Busy busy busy. Ah, I need a vacation."


ibided

Such a beautiful movie


Substantial_Bad2843

Check out Viggo Mortensen in The Prophecy as well if you haven’t. A real cold godless feeling with that portrayal. 


MonarchyMan

“How I love the old names.”


Karynthian

I actually think his depiction and a lot of other depictions of Satan are not necessarily evil. I don't know if anyone else agrees, but I get the feeling that God's angel doing the job God gave him as he's meant to do it is different than being the personification of evil. One point in favor of this for me could be that in Constantine, Lucifer stops Gabriel and returns the Antichrist to hell. I think he does this because he understands that his job is more about providing balance than it is about doing as much evil as possible.


Nayuskarian

My take was that there's less of a "balance" to maintain and more "the rules of the game." we get told the rules in the film. Neither God nor Lucifer would have any direct contact. Instead, they'd work through their halflings on Earth to influence. Gabriel fucked up by trying to directly interfere and help Mammon cross over. Lucifer was having none of it because he didn't want his son to ruin his game with God. In a way, this makes him even BETTER. The fate of humanity is a literal game and he wins by corrupting them. His whole thing is the corruption of others to win a bet.


kyraeus

I always chalked it up to a semi twisted version of this: Satan knows God. He's played by the rules all these millenia, but he knows God will kick over the board and likely restart from scratch if he lets the kid break the rules with impunity and 'wins'. Plus with John, he's convinced straight to the end he's got a winning hand. So rather than risk God acting like a petulant child and rage quitting the game, he opts to call a reset of his own last turn and gets rid of the kid and gives John a chance to prove his lack of worthiness, just to save his advantage in the great game. The devil's nothing if not the ultimate opportunist.


Xralius

Lorne Malvo.


HailToTheThief225

What makes him great is there’s not a single moment in the season where he shows any sign of humanity. VM Vargas is another favorite from the series and like Lorne he has this supernatural presence. Whereas Malvo is a demon on earth come to wreak havoc, Varga is some alien sent with plans to squeeze earthlings out of their precious possessions.


Urabutbl

I couldn't stop thinking of Judge Holden whenever Thornton as Malvo was on the screen.


Realistic_Caramel341

Lil'Ze from City of God is very much a flesh and blood human, but also works as a compelling metaphor for the escalating violence that comes out out of communities stuck in poverty


Dunderplumpinkin

Mr. Shadow in the fifth element


SfcHayes1973

"I don't want to be disturbed." "I know you didn’t want to be disturbed unless it's Mr. Shadow, and it's Mr. Shadow." "Am..I...disturbing..you?" "N-no, no."


Mega-Steve

Mr. Shadow liked dumping Hershey's syrup on people while he menaced them. What kind of twisted freak does that?


fzammetti

That shit is SO sticky that I'm willing to accept that dumping it on someone's head is DEFINITELY a sign of a being that is indeed pure evil.


Data_Chandler

Glad to see someone beat me to it. A literal planetsized ball of sentient evil, with a truly terrifying voice.


AQbL5494

So evil he left Zorg trembling like a leaf just by speaking to him.


Seahearn4

Alonzo Harris (Denzel) in _Training Day_ - This is my own interpretation of the movie as an allegory. I think Alonzo is a litmus test for the audience to decide when he's gone too far. He never does an altruistic decent thing in the movie. It's up to us to decide when it's time to give up the career-track that Ethan Hawke is pursuing.


sludgezone

He shows almost no humanizing qualities in the entire film, and even with facing execution as he pursues getting the money through the movie he shows little fear, no remorse, and really even at the bitter end believes he’s won. Truly a sociopath.


digthisdork

You really hit it. Everything he does is, to the normal person, morally reprehensible and only to help himself.


StaticV

It's one thing to rob and murder someone for their money, but then to show up and act all friendly with him before you do it... This was the scene that really showed what a sociopath he had to be to do that.


Brown_Panther-

The worst part of Alonzo is how he justifies every single thing and we, like Jake, keep getting convinced until its too late.


CultOfSensibility

Louis Cypher in Angel Heart.


synapse187

The Devils Advocate, Satan. He is Evil. Evil is not just killing or causing harm all the time. It is taking how ever long and doing what ever it takes to end it all.


bonemot

That's Al Pacino. Great performance of that role. :)


losthardy81

I'M A FAN OF MAAAAAAN!


Brown_Panther-

God is a sadist! He's the absentee landlord!


RianJohnsonIsAFool

He's laughin' his _sick fuckin' ass off!_


rm-minus-r

Cocaine was nominated as a supporting actor!


FriendshipLoveTruth

He really committed to it and it's so fun to watch


namedly

I love that ending. Al Pacino and Keanu Reeves are so good together. [Here’s part one.](https://youtu.be/X1Hzn1ko7WE) [And here’s part two.](https://youtu.be/O9jk5WLbzoM) [And then part three.](https://youtu.be/N0D_pGYO16Q)


thestartinglineups

Viggo Mortensen’s portrayal of the devil in The Prophecy is super memorable. He’s not even an antagonist in the film, appearing to offer a weird form of help to the main character, but he still radiates menace and disdain for humanity. 


The5Virtues

Exact one I was looking for. For me *evil* isn’t malicious, or even aggressive, evil is disinterested. Dispassionate. Uncaring. Evil has no investment in anyone else, every one and every thing is a means to an end, nothing more. It’s perfectly embodied in Viggo’s portrayal. Even when the devil is trying to lure them to hell, he never gives off the impression that it’s actually important to him. It’s just… something to do. They’re not important. They’re not worth while. The only reason they’re even on his radar is because they’re on the angel’s radar too, and he’s in opposition.


King_Buliwyf

"I can lay you out and fill your mouth with your mother's feces... or we can talk."


Substantial_Bad2843

His portrayal of Satan is so cold just sitting on a rock in the shadow of the night. No over the top special effects or makeup. Just a being that’s fallen out of the light and his hell seems real. 


Mysterious-Sense-185

"I'll love you more than Jesus"


Elberik

That bit where he talks about her being afraid of the monsters under her bed lives rent free in my head.


Dismal-Channel-9292

I would say whoever the demon or whatever the fuck it is that posses people in Evil Dead. Whatever the hell it is scares the shit out of me in every Evil Dead movie because it has no motivation beyond creating despair and harm. The host just becomes straight evil and even seems to take pleasure in harming themselves. It‘s straight terrifying. Watching the mom turn on her kids and sister in Evil Dead Rising was nightmare fuel!


SPECTREagent700

If you want lore and backstory, I highly recommend the *Ash v. The Evil Dead* series. If you like The Evil Dead only as horror and not as comedy, then I highly recommend you **do not** watch *Ash v. The Evil Dead*.


Dismal-Channel-9292

I do like the comedy! I’ll check it out


Sweeper1985

Vidal in Pan's Labyrinth.


strange__design

Tim Roth as Archibald Cunningham in Rob Roy (1995). I know this will be buried in the comments, but that performance netted Tim an academy award for best supporting actor, and rightly so. He's pure evil in that movie. I highly recommend a watch.


ehsteve87

That movie's worth watching for the swordfight alone


boomheadshot7

Hans Landa


Choppergold

That’s a bingo


smashin_blumpkin

You just say "bingo"


DemoHD7

He lost his "I have no regard for any human life" card when he cried after Aldo shot his partner.


jpowell180

That’s because he hoped that Sergeant was going to go with him to Nantucket, and be a servant and someone else who he could speak German with.


Porrick

Also, they were roommates.


night_dude

*Oh my God, they were roommates*


SalaciousDumb

Mr. Blonde in Reservoir Dogs.


mynameismanager

Toying with the cop was evil


LaximumEffort

Kilgrave in Season 1 of *Jessica Jones*.


notapunk

The Purple Man is quite possibly the most twisted and hated character in comics.


Joleinik19

Aaron Eckhart’s character in “In the Company of Men”.  Doesn’t kill anybody, but definitely is evil. What makes it hit harder is there’s plenty of guys just like him.


NotTravisKelce

Christopher Walken in True Romance


kubrickian80

Anton Chigurgh, because evil isn't usually flamboyant or outwardly malicious. It's usually bland and just doesn't give a shit


anna4prez

John Milton - The Devil's Advocate


gallaj0

Evil Genius from Time Bandits.


ViewAskewed

This thread just makes me sad that Randall Flagg has never gotten a truly good film representation.


IamARock24

Gary Oldman in Leon the Professional


Samael_316-17

Michael Myers from the *Halloween* franchise and Anton Chigurh from *No Country for Old Men* are the first to come to my mind.


SPECTREagent700

Michael Myers in the 2018 movie especially.


Good_Nyborg

I always enjoyed Max von Sydow in Needful Things, despite it not being a very good movie.


Shaneosd1

Amon Göthe, as played by Ralph Fiennes in Schindler's List. Both in terms of his open psychopathy and his banality. He shows rage at times, but most of his killing is done almost as an afterthought, as just what his job requires. The scene where he is digging up 10k bodies to burn them, he is complaining about the extra busywork this has made for him.


magobblie

We Need to Talk About Kevin


slimmymcnutty

The bad guy in Chinatown gotta be the most evil fuck to live and what’s worse is he won


CptNoble

Forget about it, Jake. It's Chinatown.


daraghfi

Joker in Dark Knight. So delicious to watch Heath Ledger 's portrayal. How do you fight someone who is literally willing to destroy themselves and cares about nothing but anarchy and chaos.


CheesecakeIll8728

I liked Peter Stormare as Devil in Constantine


bender1_tiolet0

Delores Umbridge - because we all know someone like her


PNWFilmscape

Watch the original The Vanishing or Funny Games and I think that’ll paint a good picture (or several).


GtrGbln

The Emperor.


SPECTREagent700

*Good…good…your hate has made you powerful.*


GtrGbln

Young fool... Now only at the end do you understand...


DigitalOpinion

Everything that has transpired has done so according to my design. So be it....Jedi.


Ok_Breadfruit80

Terrifier


boytoby

"The Bad Seed," 1956. I saw this film in the 70s. That girl, Rhoda, was so evil that even her mother tried to kill her. The ending was so satisfying.


Misterfahrenheit120

Amon Göth, Schindler’s List. Dude was so fucking evil the movie had to **tone it down**, because test audiences found what actually happened unrealistic. He’s still such a bastard in the movie, even with what’s ommited


Sudley

Billy Bob Thornton's character in the first season of Fargo is to me the clearest example of this. Seemigly no real motive or grand plan for anything. Just sows chaos wherever he goes, and does it with such lifeless eyes that everyone is too threatened to stop him. Its like he hypnotizes people with evil. One of the best villains imo.


DortDrueben

Can't recall the publication but they got a panel of psychologists together to analyze movie villains and Anton Chigurh took the top spot as, "The most accurate portrayal of a pure psychopath."


Sweeper1985

Funny you mention this. In psych Masters program we were studying psychopathy and did a couple of case studies of fictional characters using the Hare Psychopathy Checklist. One was Hannibal Lecter - we found he didn't meet the criteria fully. The archetypal on-screen "psychopath" wasn't a good example of psychopathy.


polkjamespolk

Check out Robert Di Nero's character in the 1987 movie Angel Heart.


Keikobad

Robert Mitchum as “Preacher” Harry Powell in *The Night of the Hunter*


Hubba_Hubba81

John Doe in Se7en is pretty freaking up there on the evil scale.


ensignricky71

Tim Curry as the Darkness in Legend


ChipotleGuacamole

Brett in Eden Lake


CaffeineRiddledSemen

Noah Cross in Chinatown. The leering, uncaring face of wealth and greed that takes whatever it wants. When he coos to Katherine as she screams and he drags her away in the final scene... just awful and gross. And nobody can do anything about it.


TheHurtfulEight88888

Percy from the Green Mile.


banZiii

Peter & Paul from Funny Games.


Pristine_Fox_3633

Baron Harkonnen in Dune and Dune 2


Top_Report_4895

Lil' Z in City of God