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  • Scott Adkins on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#1) Scott Adkins

    • X-Men Origins: Wolverine, The Bourne Ultimatum, The Expendables 2, Zero Dark Thirty, The Pink Panther, Undisputed II: Last Man Standing, Undisputed III: Redemption, Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning, Ninja, The Medallion, Stag Night, The Legend of Hercules, Assassination Games, The Tournament, Black Mask 2: City of Masks, El Gringo, Pit Fighter, Special Forces, Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, Re-Kill, The Shepherd: Border Patrol, Extreme Challenge, Tomb of the Dragon, Grimsby, Green Street 3: Never Back Down

    The Merc with a Mouth is notoriously hard to pin down - sometimes he's working with the forces of good, and other times he has no problem wrecking heroes. In X-Men Origins: Wolverine, he's activated by Stryker and becomes a villain Wolverine has to fight (seriously, thank God for the 2016 film Deadpool finally giving audiences a good version of the epic character - they deserved it after this abomination). 

    The X-Men Origins filmmakers wanted to go for a more “realistic” take on Deadpool by manipulating his body to convey similarities with his comic costume. This was a bad idea. First of all, they used skin to cover his mouth as a way mimicking the lack of a mouth hole on his costume. They also gave him adamantium arm blades to emulate his katanas, and optic blasts that imitated the signature look of his mask. The whole thing was a sh*t show, and sparked a lot of disappointment from fans. On top of that, these awful "costume" choices made it nearly impossible for Scott Adkins to really inhabit the role - he didn't even have a mouth to speak with. Talk about being set up to fail. 

  • Topher Grace on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#2) Topher Grace

    • Spider-Man 3, Ocean's Eleven, Interstellar, Traffic, Ocean's Twelve, Valentine's Day, Predators, Take Me Home Tonight, Mona Lisa Smile, The Big Wedding, P.S., Too Big to Fail, Win a Date with Tad Hamilton!, The Giant Mechanical Man, In Good Company, The Double, Coxblocker, Crocodile Tears, A Many Splintered Thing, American Ultra, The Calling, The Beauty Inside

    The release of Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man in 2002 was a momentous occasion as viewers finally got to see the wall crawler making his long-awaited big screen debut. Many fans started eagerly counting down the days until Spider-Man would face off against his arch nemesis, Venom.

    And then, five years later, fans got Topher Grace, the guy from That ‘70s Show. The casting was beyond questionable because Grace was a far cry from being physically imposing, a signature trait of Venom. And even though Grace went through heavy weight training to prepare for his role, the transition was from a naturally skinny guy into an average built guy. In terms of character, this version of Eddie Brock came off more like an overdramatic whiner who even stopped by a church to ask God to put a hit out on Peter Parker. Remember that? That happened. Grace's timid acting didn't help add any menace to the character, and the performance overall was pretty terrible. In the end, this Venom was underwhelming and jarringly disappointing.

  • Peter Sarsgaard on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#3) Peter Sarsgaard

    • Green Lantern, Garden State, Boys Don't Cry, Dead Man Walking, Jarhead, An Education, The Man in the Iron Mask, The Cell, Rendition, Blue Jasmine, Knight and Day, K-19: The Widowmaker, The Salton Sea, Orphan, The Skeleton Key, Kinsey, Flightplan, Shattered Glass, Robot and Frank, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh, Unconditional Love, In the Electric Mist, Another Day in Paradise, Lovelace, The Center of the World, Housebound, Empire, Very Good Girls, Elegy, The Dying Gaul, Death of a Dynasty, Desert Blue, Night Moves, Year of the Dog, Subway Stories, High Falls, Pawn Sacrifice, Wholphin: Issue 4, Freak City, Bone Tomahawk, Experimenter

    Sarsgaard’s performance as Hector Hammond in Green Lantern told the story of one man’s journey to become a brilliant, cosmic, screaming pimple. It was so painful to watch, everyone was ecstatic when Parallax finally put him out of his - and the audience's - misery. If he wasn't being extremely creepy, he was yelling. And that was all there was to it.

  • Paul Giamatti on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#4) Paul Giamatti

    • Saving Private Ryan, Planet of the Apes, The Truman Show, 12 Years a Slave, Donnie Brasco, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, The Hangover Part II, John Dies at the End, Cinderella Man, My Best Friend's Wedding, The Illusionist, Big Momma's House, American Splendor, Rock of Ages, The Ides of March, Saving Mr. Banks, The Negotiator, Robots, Paycheck, Private Parts, Singles, Dr. Dolittle, Sabrina, Turbo, Man on the Moon, Deconstructing Harry, Shoot 'Em Up, Mighty Aphrodite, Win Win, Lady in the Water, Fred Claus, Before and After, Too Big to Fail, Big Fat Liar, San Andreas, Confidence, Safe Men, Bubba Ho-Tep, The Ant Bully, Ironclad, Duplicity, The Nanny Diaries, Cosmopolis, The Last Station, Straight Outta Compton, Storytelling, Love & Mercy, Barney's Version, Duets, Asterix and the Vikings, If These Walls Could Talk 2, The Haunted World of El Superbeasto, Madame Bovary, Past Midnight, Prohibition, Cold Souls, The Congress, Parkland, The Goon, Thunderpants, The Amazing Screw-On Head, The Pentagon Papers, The Hawk Is Dying, Romeo and Juliet, Pretty Bird, All is Bright, Winchell, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, The Fan and the Flower, The Roosevelts

    Quick: what do you think of when you hear the phrase "actor Paul Giamatti?" Affable? Schlubby? Endearing? Chances are, you probably don't think "very intimidating, physically." Yet that's exactly what Giamatti expected audiences to buy in 2014's The Amazing Spider-Man 2. In a film irresponsibly overstuffed with villains, Giamatti tries to stand out by putting on the worst Russian accent known to man and moving like a constipated dumpling.

    He's so unthreatening and forgettable, even the classic move of getting a barbed wire head tattoo can't elevate him above of the level of "wait, was he in that movie? I think he might have been in the first one." 

  • Jesse Eisenberg on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#5) Jesse Eisenberg

    • Zombieland, The Social Network, Adventureland, Now You See Me, The Village, Rio, The Squid and the Whale, Cursed, Rio 2, The Emperor's Club, 30 Minutes or Less, To Rome with Love, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Roger Dodger, The Double, Holy Rollers, Free Samples, The Hunting Party, Solitary Man, Why Stop Now, Camp Hell, While We're Young, Night Moves, The Education of Charlie Banks, The Living Wake, Lightning: Fire from the Sky, He's Way More Famous Than You, Beyond All Boundaries, Addicted To Fame, Some Boys Don't Leave, One Day Like Rain, The End of the Tour, American Ultra

    Fans were, to put it lightly, doubtful about the idea of casting Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. In the end, those doubts were justified.

    Eisenberg’s portrayal of Lex was all over the place. It seemed like he was suffering a psychosomatic identity crisis on set. His performance has been likened to being a cross between the Joker and just Eisenberg being himself. It was also hard to believe that this portrayal was the same brilliant, calculating mastermind that Luthor is renowned for in the comics. He left a piss-filled jar in the Senate, set up his super secret server room next to his kitchen (easily breached via RF switch), and just fidgeted and stuttered all about.

  • Toby Kebbell on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#6) Toby Kebbell

    • Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, War Horse, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, RocknRolla, Dead Man's Shoes, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Wrath of the Titans, Match Point, Alexander, Control, The Conspirator, The East, The Fantastic Four, Wilderness, The Counselor, Chéri, Warcraft, The Veteran, Northern Soul, Control, The German, Tea and Biscuits, Buddha's Little Finger, Ben-Hur

    It's frustrating to see one of the most badass supervillains of the Marvel Universe get so poorly portrayed time and time again. The Fantastic Four reboot from 2015 is best remembered as a movie that did a great job in taking too much time focusing on the things that didn’t matter, while taking too little to explore the things that did.

    There was absolutely no exploration of Dr. Doom's time spent on Planet Zero prior to the moment when he received powers from his space suit. And the character's motivations throughout the film were murky at best. Toby Kebbell sported some charisma in his role as Doom, but the combination of horrible writing and direction hindered Kebbell’s performance. Dr. Doom ended up as a weak, plot-driven obstacle that the heroes overcame in less than half an hour. Terrible CGI, and a cheesy hood and cape didn't help, either. 

  • Jared Leto on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#7) Jared Leto

    • Fight Club, American Psycho, Requiem for a Dream, The Thin Red Line, Girl, Interrupted, Mr. Nobody, Urban Legend, Panic Room, Lord of War, Dallas Buyers Club, Alexander, Phone Booth, Prefontaine, Sol Goode, How to Make an American Quilt, Lonely Hearts, Highway, Chapter 27, TT3D: Closer to the Edge, Switchback, The Last of the High Kings, Black and White, Basil, Sunset Strip, Cool and the Crazy, Artifact

    A lot of true believers, including Leto himself, argue that the theatrical cut of Suicide Squad doesn't provide a lot of time and exposure to appreciate Leto’s take on the Clown Prince of Crime. But the truth is, his acting in the film wasn't great, and his laugh was downright awful. 

    On an episode of Conan, Leto explained how he took great care in emulating the Joker’s iconic laugh. But when you look over the performances of Cesar Romero, Jack Nicholson, Heath Ledger, Mark Hamill, and even Cameron Monaghan (who wasn't even in costume and makeup), Leto's laugh sounded a lot like a creaking door and didn't quite live up to the laughs that came before him. 

    Jared Leto’s Joker was the walking personification of everything that is wrong with the DC Extended Universe - he overcompensated, overacted, and ended up giving a performance that was completely underwhelming.

  • Jamie Foxx on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#8) Jamie Foxx

    • Django Unchained, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Ray, Any Given Sunday, Collateral, Horrible Bosses, Ali, Law Abiding Citizen, Rio, Valentine's Day, Jarhead, Dreamgirls, Due Date, Miami Vice, White House Down, The Kingdom, The Soloist, Bait, Toys, Rio 2, Booty Call, The Players Club, The Great White Hype, Annie, Shade, The Truth About Cats & Dogs, Breakin' All the Rules, Stealth, Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story, Life Support, Fall Of Chances, Jamie Foxx: I Might Need Security, Jamie Foxx: Straight from the Foxxhole, Held Up, Kane & Lynch, Beef IV, Shaq's All Star Comedy Roast 2: Emmitt Smith, Laffapalooza! #5, Jamie Foxx Unleashed: Lost, Stolen and Leaked!, Laffapalooza! #8, Laffapalooza! #7, Laffapalooza! #4, Alex Thomas: Straight Clownin', Laffapalooza! #1, Jamie Foxx Presents: America's Funniest Comics: Vol. 1, Laffapalooza! #3, All Jokes Aside, Celly Cel Presents: Rap Life: Behind the Scenes, Jamie Foxx Presents: America's Funniest Comics: Vol. 2, Jamie Foxx Presents: America's Funniest Comics: Vol. 4

    In all honesty, Jamie Foxx’s performance as Max Dillon in early parts of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 wasn’t so bad. It was different from his usual work and he ran with it very well. And the special effects helped to bring the character justice, too. This all sounds like the makings of a fantastic supervillain performance, there was just one problem: the motivations.

    Electro in the film was motivated by the fact that nobody gave him attention, which drove him insane. Once that motivation was established, it never really got off the ground. If this was a one-off episode of a TV series, it would’ve been feasible in that function. However, for a feature film, it’s expected that a character might actually develop. But Foxx continues his static portrayal of the character throughout the film and with little help from the writers, Electro never gets any added depth. In the end, he comes off as completely flat.

  • (#9) Arnold Schwarzenegger

    • Terminator 2: Judgment Day, The Terminator, Predator, Batman & Robin, Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian, The Expendables, The Expendables 2, True Lies, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, Commando, Around the World in 80 Days, Kindergarten Cop, The Running Man, Jingle All the Way, Conan the Destroyer, Twins, The Long Goodbye, Last Action Hero, The Expendables 3, The Rundown, Dave, Hercules in New York, Eraser, Junior, Encino Man, Raw Deal, Red Sonja, Dr. Dolittle 2, The Last Stand, Escape Plan, Scavenger Hunt, End of Days, Sabotage, The Villain, Terminator Genisys, The 6th Day, Red Heat, Collateral Damage, Maggie, Stay Hungry, Killer At Large, Happy Anniversary and Goodbye, The Kid & I, Cry Macho, The I Love Lucy 50th Anniversary Special, Christmas in Connecticut, The Jayne Mansfield Story, T2 3-D:Battle Across Time, Beretta's Island, Triplets, Captive, The Legend of Conan, Unknown Soldier

    Of all the members of Batman’s rogues gallery, Mr. Freeze has always been a villain that many fans sympathize with. Despite all the murders he commits, and all the heists he attempts, everything he does in the comics and animated series is not out of malevolence, but out of a desperate desire to save his ailing wife. You just have to feel sorry for the guy.

    The former governator’s portrayal of the conflicted ice villain failed to stir up any these feelings in audiences. For decades, Arnold Schwarzenegger's propensity for delivering humorous one liners has always been culturally significant, and of course that was carried over in his role as Mr. Freeze. The result, though, is that Mr. Freeze ended up as the film’s comic relief, and one of several reasons why Batman and Robin pretty much sucked.

  • Colin Farrell on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#10) Colin Farrell

    • Minority Report, Daredevil, Horrible Bosses, Total Recall, In Bruges, Fright Night, Seven Psychopaths, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Crazy Heart, Saving Mr. Banks, Miami Vice, Alexander, The New World, Phone Booth, Epic, The Way Back, Veronica Guerin, American Outlaws, A Home at the End of the World, Intermission, The Recruit, S.W.A.T., London Boulevard, Tigerland, Hart's War, Winter's Tale, Cassandra's Dream, Dead Man Down, Pride and Glory, Ordinary Decent Criminal, Ondine, The War Zone, Miss Julie, Ask the Dust, Triage, Falling for a Dancer, Kicking It, We Are Ireland, The Disappearance of Finbar, Solace, The Lobster

    2003's Daredevil is, objectively, the worst film about a blind lawyer who fights crime ever made. Now, a lot of the blame falls on Ben "Wait, What Are Human Emotions Again?" Affleck, but Colin Farrell's turn as Bullseye is particularly onerous. His attempt to be menacing just come off as cartoonish, as if he's a doing an impression of what a leather jacket would be like if it could talk. 

    The thing is, Farrell gets a lot of undeserved criticism as an actor. When he gets the right material, like he did in the 2015 film The Lobster, he can really put in a stellar performance. Unfortunately, that was certainly not the case in this dumpster fire of a film. 

  • Wes Bentley on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#11) Wes Bentley

    • The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1, American Beauty, Ghost Rider, Interstellar, Underworld: Awakening, Jonah Hex, The Four Feathers, Beloved, Soul Survivors, Lovelace, Gone, The Game of Their Lives, The Claim, P2, Rites of Passage, Dolan's Cadillac, The White River Kid, Tilda, We Are Your Friends, Weirdsville, There Be Dragons, The Ungodly, Edgar Allan Poe's Ligeia, The Last Word, After-School Special, The Time Being, Cesar Chavez, The Better Angels, Carving Out Our Name, My Big Break, Pioneer, 3 Nights in the Desert, After the Fall, Final Girl, Pete's Dragon

    Wes Bentley is a very capable actor. He put in amazing performances in American Beauty and Interstellar, and he even brought a kind of melancholic edge to his role in The Hunger Games. His role as Blackheart in the insanely poorly adapted live-action Ghost Rider (starring Nicolas "I'll Literally Do Any Movie, My Finances Are Horrifying" Cage) was basically a master class in how to play a paint-by-the-numbers villain. Despite working with a fascinating premise (Blackheart is the son of the devil, basically) Bentley's delivers a dull, flat performance that leans on well-worn movie villain tropes and fails to provide any sort of depth. Essentially, he provided the template for most of the Marvel movie villains who followed him.    

  • Svetlana Khodchenkova on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#12) Svetlana Khodchenkova

    • The Wolverine, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Kilometer Zero, Little Moscow, Rzhevsky vs. Napoleon, Pregnant, Sluzhebnyy roman. Nashe vremya, Bless the Woman

    Among the biggest disappointments in The Wolverine was its portrayal of Madame Viper. She was first introduced as an oncologist and was revealed to be something of a mad scientist with very unclear motivations and methodology - if she can implant a device that nullifies Wolverine’s healing factor, wouldn’t she also be able to steal it?

    And despite showing that she could deliver poison through spitting or scratching someone's skin, she always made it a point to kiss her victims in the most awkward, and unnatural ways. Seriously, her kisses were awful in this film. Towards the end she shed her skin... and for some reason also went bald. Svetlana Khodchenkova's cold acting couldn't do anything to save a character who had already been doomed by the movie's writers. Cool, sexy, and appreciated: this portrayal of Madame Viper managed to tick none of those marks. 

  • (#13) Vinnie Jones

    • X-Men: The Last Stand, Snatch, Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, She's the Man, Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, EuroTrip, Swordfish, Gone in 60 Seconds, Year One, Kill the Irishman, Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties, The Midnight Meat Train, Escape Plan, The Condemned, Mean Machine, The Big Bounce, Hell Ride, Submerged, Locked Down, Slipstream, The Ballad of G.I. Joe, Johnny Was, Strength and Honour, Cross, Age of the Dragons, Freelancers, Smokin' Aces 2: Assassins' Ball, Fire with Fire, Blast, Not Another Not Another Movie, Blood Out, (Untitled), Played, The Bleeding, Hijacked, Shamrock Boy, The Other Half, The Heavy, Night at the Golden Eagle, Powers, The Riddle, You May Not Kiss the Bride, Tooth and Nail, Company of Heroes, Assault of Darkness, Mentryville, 7-10 Split, Survive Style 5+, Tooth: Do You Believe in Fairies?, Loaded, The Number One Girl, Hollywood Flies, The 34th Battalion, Fractured, Redirected, Lurid, Extraction, Reaper, Way of the Wicked

    While not a stranger to villainous roles, Vinnie Jones is often cast as a person sporting eloquence in speech and a calculating mindset. His characters often save the use of brute force for the last minute. These are qualities the Juggernaut does not possess, and Jones's resulting portrayal in X-Men: The Last Stand fell completely flat as a result. The awkwardness of this role drowned out any breathing room for exhibiting subtle emotions or any depth of character, and the acting is just awful as a result.  

  • Oscar Isaac on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#14) Oscar Isaac

    • Drive, Sucker Punch, The Bourne Legacy, Inside Llewyn Davis, Body of Lies, The Nativity Story, All About the Benjamins, Robin Hood, A Most Violent Year, Agora, Star Wars: Episode VII, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Won’t Back Down, W.E., The Two Faces of January, The Life Before Her Eyes, 10 Years, In Secret, Che: Part One, Cristiada, Balibo, Illtown, Pu-239, The Jesuit, Revenge for Jolly!, Ticky Tacky, Mojave, Ex Machina

    As one of the X-Men’s most vicious villains, Apocalypse has terrorized mutant and humankind alike. His capacity for dominance is nothing short of biblical.

    None of that is conveyed in Oscar Isaac’s portrayal of the character in X-Men: Apocalypse. This version of Apocalypse was utilized more as a shoe-horned, by-the-numbers villain who would obviously get killed off. Isaac’s Apocalypse was nowhere near imposing and his height definitely worked against him. Isaac's portrayal of the brutal villain felt flat and unimposing, and the most notable thing about the entire role was a billboard that rightfully pissed off Rose McGowen.

  • January Jones on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#15) January Jones

    • X-Men: First Class, Love Actually, We Are Marshall, American Wedding, Anger Management, The Boat That Rocked, Bandits, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights, Seeking Justice, Unknown, The Glass House, Taboo, Full Frontal, Sweetwater, It's the Rage, Love's Enduring Promise, Swedish Auto

    Emma Frost is one of the most fascinating characters in Marvel comics. Sometimes she's good, sometimes she's bad, but she remains awesome throughout it all. Frost is highly intelligent, confident, and irresistibly charismatic. That's why it was such a disappointment to see January Jones basically act as lifeless eye candy in the X-Men film franchise. '

    Jones is a remarkably gifted actor, anyone who has watched Mad Men can attest to the wide emotional range in her command. Yet in X-Men: First Class, she was given little more to do than serve as an errand girl/honey pot for Kevin Bacon, and you can tell that she's not exactly putting her all into such lackluster writing. Having her killed off-screen in Days of Future Past was probably the best thing for everybody. 

  • Christopher Eccleston on Random Worst Supervillain Performances In Comic Book Movies

    (#16) Christopher Eccleston

    • Thor: The Dark World, 28 Days Later, The Others, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, Shallow Grave, Gone in 60 Seconds, Elizabeth, Existenz, 24 Hour Party People, Hillsborough, Amelia, Jude, The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising, The Invisible Circus, I Am Dina, The Second Coming, Einstein's Big Idea, Othello, A Price Above Rubies, Revengers Tragedy, Song for Marion, Death and the Compass, Strumpet, Let Him Have It, Perfect Parents, New Orleans, Mon Amour, Anchoress, Sunday, The Happiness Salesman, Lewis and Clark and Other Great Adventures, The Borrowers, Masterpiece Contemporary: Lennon Naked, Business with Friends, With or Without You

    In Thor: The Dark World, Malekith led an assault on Asgard with the hopes of stealing the reality stone, which resulted in the death of Thor and Loki’s mother. It also started a cosmic event that opened portals across nine dimensions. And somehow, Malekith managed to come out in the end as the most forgettable supervillain of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. This was largely due to Eccleston's flat acting, and an overuse of CGI that detracts from his normally great face acting. 

    In the comics, Malekith wields the highest forms of dark magic, including the ability to summon the Wild Hunt. His abilities are so dangerous, he's formed partnerships with the likes of Loki and Surtur. This version of Malekith sports an uninspired costume, dull makeup, and is only remembered for engaging in a physics-defying Benny Hill styled battle with Thor. Eccleston doesn't have nearly enough lines to give the character any depth and was pretty much doomed from the start. 

  • (#17) John Leguizamo

    • Moulin Rouge!, Ice Age, Die Hard 2, Romeo + Juliet, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, Carlito's Way, Ice Age: The Meltdown, Ice Age: Continental Drift, Chef, The Happening, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar, Dr. Dolittle, Summer of Sam, Titan A.E., Miracle at St. Anna, Spun, Spawn, The Lincoln Lawyer, Regarding Henry, Ride Along, Casualties of War, Super Mario Bros., Land of the Dead, Assault on Precinct 13, Gamer, Righteous Kill, Executive Decision, The Fan, John Wick, Out for Justice, One for the Money, Vanishing on 7th Street, Repo Men, The Honeymooners, Collateral Damage, Walking with Dinosaurs, What's the Worst That Could Happen?, Empire, Love in the Time of Cholera, The Pest, Arabian Nights, King of the Jungle, The Alibi, Nothing like the Holidays, The Groomsmen, Revenge, The Babysitters, Poison, A Brother's Kiss, Crónicas, Freak, Piñero, Point of Origin, Night Owl, A Pyromaniac's Love Story, Sueño, Rage, Whispers in the Dark, Zig Zag, Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas, Fugly!, Mixed Blood, Hangin' with the Homeboys, Surviving Sid, Frogs for Snakes, Undefeated, The Take, Paraiso Travel, Dora the Explorer: Super Silly Fiesta!, Joe the King, Tlatelolco68, Pelotero, Body Count, The Ministers, Waco, Gentille Alouette, Where God Left His Shoes, Time Expired, Cymbeline, Scrat's Continental Crack-up Part 2, American Ultra, Street Hunter, Meadowland, Experimenter, The Infiltrator

    The Clown has always been known as the most menacing and violent of Spawn’s enemies. Whenever he’s around, you can be sure mayhem and bloodshed are not too far behind. This was accurately portrayed in HBO’s animated Spawn series.

    In the 1997 film, not so much. John Leguizamo’s portrayal of the Clown was stacked with toilet humor and painfully heavy attempts at levity. Every time he showed up, audiences prayed that he would just change into his CGI’d counterpart, Violator, and spare everyone from suffering anymore of his antics. According to the Nostalgia Critic’s review, there was supposedly a petition going around to get an apology from Leguizamo for his involvement in Spawn and Super Mario Bros, another awful film.

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Although the character of the villain is a supporting role, it is an important part of a successful movie, many movies no longer portray the villain as a simple evil character over the years. With the popularity of more and more comic book movies, a number of supervillains begin to get more attention from the audience, there is no doubt that the crew and production team should make contributions to create a classic and impressive villain.

It turns out that it’s not just successful characters that are memorable, you must know some of the worst supervillains performances in movies. The random tool shows more details about these 17 supervillains. Welcome to search for other interesting things with the tool.

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