Villains are a lot more interesting than heroes. Well, they should be, anyway. Not a lot of movies get it right when it comes to bad guys these days. Not even with franchises we’ve celebrated in the past for having iconic adversaries. We got one of the most boring Bond villains in 2015, for instance. And a forgettable central dinosaur in Jurassic World.
In some ways, however, Hollywood seemed to be on a progressive track. This was the first time Marvel actually had some of the best villains of the year, albeit on the studio’s Netflix series, rather than on the big screen (up there they still gave us one of their most mediocre villains yet in Ant-Man‘s Yellowjacket). Also, there were many big bads in 2015 that were hilarious without having to be in spoof films and without being character spoofs themselves.
As we see movie villains become more complex or represent real issues in the world, though, it’s hard to spotlight them as favorites in an entertainment sense. In 2015, we saw such systemic adversaries as the Catholic Church and the industry and culture surrounding pro football. We can’t name those the “best” villains anymore than we can include the Indonesian killers from the documentary The Look of Silence, especially not with a numerical ranking.
Before we get to that ranking of the villains who can be treated so lightly, check out a video addressing an apparent trend this year of movies having female villains. We probably left a few out (forgive me as this is the first attempt at serious video editing I’ve done since 1996, and back then it was all with Betacam decks), because there were too many to remember. Quite a few of those seen here are among our top 15 of 2015, listed underneath.
15. Ultron (James Spader) in Avengers: Age of Ultron
He may have been shockingly stupid for an AI who’s hooked into the internet, but Ultron’s personality and physical design are enough to keep him from being the usual forgettable MCU villain. Anyway, plenty of bad guys are mentally deficient or have dumb master plans. This one is still enjoyable to watch, primarily thanks to James Spader playing an evil Tony Stark/Iron Man. The only real problem is there’s not enough of him.
14. Victoria Vinciguerra (Elizabeth Debicki) in The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
This villain also has a forgettable scheme, and that’s okay. She’s one of the most alluring and stylish villains we’ve gotten in years. She’s Bond girl and Bond villain, femme fatale and mastermind wrapped in one, and that wrapping is glamorous ’60s fashion. Debicki proves here that if she’d been born earlier she could have been one of Hitchcock’s leading ladies. She’d have been too good for him, just as she’s too good for this movie.
13. Richmond Valentine (Samuel L. Jackson) in Kingsman: The Secret Service
Jesse Eisenberg’s upcoming portrayal of Lex Luthor in Batman v Superman seems to obvious in its casting as a way of making a comic book villain akin to his own performance as Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network. Jackson’s Valentine is already a great cartoonish take on that tech entrepreneur thing, equally hip and lethal. He’s a much, much, much better Bond villain this year than Christoph Waltz’s in SPECTRE. That Valentine is responsible for the church sequence also makes him one of the most horrendously deadly of the bunch.
12. Trumper (voiced by Omid Djalili) in Shaun the Sheep Movie
Humorously doofy yet genuinely threatening in an escalating manner, animal grabber Trumper is a perfect nemesis to the animated sheep and farmer of Aardman’s latest. To a degree, he is certainly a cliche for his profession. Still, he has a sad back story that isn’t known but can be felt. I believe that he has character development, even if it’s not all laid out. It’s on the screen in the typically brilliant expression Aardman puts into their stop-motion characters.
11. Brinda (Maya Rudolph) in Sisters
There’s very little to Brinda as a character, yet Maya Rudolph makes her stand out through her performance. She needs more fun roles like this. I also like how we get a lot of who she is through the complaints and ridicule of the two main characters, who aren’t very nice people. Brinda isn’t truly an evil woman and probably feels bad about just how much damage she winds up doing. Her judgment is just really fucked up.
10. Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham) in Furious 7
Between this and his turn as the dumb spy in Spy, Statham has got to do more comedy. His role in the Fast and Furious sequel isn’t quite comedic on purpose, but it is definitely silly the way he keeps showing up wherever the heroes are — especially since they’re technically trying to find him the whole time anyway. Inspired by a joke from Spy and his performances in that and this have me wanting to see him do a remake of Face/Off where he plays both the Cage and the Travolta roles, and of course then vice versa. Confusing, sure, but also likely brilliant.
0 comments:
Post a Comment