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15 Villains Fans Defend Thanks To Great Writing

1-15

Maybe they had a point.

Nazarii Verbitskiy Nazarii Verbitskiy
Entertainment - June 17th 2026, 19:00 GMT+2
The Riddler

15. The Riddler

The Riddler trades campy wordplay for serial killer methodical precision, turning Batman's most theatrical villain into something that feels genuinely dangerous. Paul Dano's performance strips away all the goofy charm and replaces it with the quiet fury of someone who believes Gotham's corruption justifies his methods. The riddles still matter, but now they serve a larger point about systemic rot rather than just showing off how clever the villain thinks he is. This version makes you understand his anger even when his solutions are completely unhinged. | © Warner Bros.
Poison ivy

14. Poison Ivy

Poison Ivy works because she never feels like a cartoon, even when she's literally made of plants and toxins. Uma Thurman brings a theatrical sensuality to the role that matches the over-the-top world perfectly, turning environmental extremism into something seductive and strangely sympathetic. The character's motivations make sense even when her methods don't. Batman & Robin might be camp, but Ivy's blend of ecological fury and femme fatale charm gives her depth that most comic book villains never find. | © Warner Bros.
Cropped Mystique

13. Mystique

Mystique walked into the X-Men movies as a blue-skinned assassin working for Magneto, but Rebecca Romijn's physical performance turned her into something more complicated than a typical henchwoman. The character says almost nothing in the first film, yet every scene makes it clear she has her own agenda and her own pain driving the choices. When she finally switches sides, it feels earned because the movies let her exist as more than just Magneto's weapon. The shapeshifting powers became a perfect metaphor for someone who has never been allowed to show her true self to a world that would reject it. | © 20th Century Fox
Amanda Waller from The Suicide Squad

12. Amanda Waller

Amanda Waller works because she never pretends to be anything other than what she is: a government official who will sacrifice anyone to protect national security. Viola Davis plays her with such cold conviction that even her most ruthless decisions feel logical rather than evil, turning moral compromises into calculated strategy. The character cuts through superhero fantasy with bureaucratic realism, making choices that feel genuinely difficult instead of obviously wrong. She is the kind of antagonist who makes you understand her point even when you hate her methods. | © Warner Bros.
Catwoman

11. Catwoman

Batman Returns introduced a Catwoman who felt like she crawled out of a fever dream, all leather and psychological damage and barely contained rage. Michelle Pfeiffer's Selina Kyle doesn't just put on a costume after her boss throws her out a window. She stitches together her own twisted rebirth, complete with a makeshift suit and a personality that shifts between purring seduction and unhinged violence. The character works because she feels genuinely unbalanced rather than safely rebellious, making every scene unpredictable in ways that most comic book movies never attempt. | © Warner Bros.
Two face

10. Two-Face

Two-Face works because Tommy Lee Jones commits completely to the coin-flip madness without ever winking at the camera. The character could have been pure camp, but Jones finds real menace in Harvey Dent's split personality, making every scene feel genuinely unpredictable. Batman Forever gets criticized for a lot of things, but Two-Face's internal war between order and chaos actually drives the movie's best moments. When he flips that coin, you believe something terrible might happen. | © Warner Bros.
The Governor

9. The Governor

The Governor starts as a charming small-town leader who seems like the perfect refuge from the zombie apocalypse, which makes his slow transformation into a monster feel that much more personal. David Morrissey plays him with just enough warmth that you understand why Woodbury's residents follow him, even as his methods get increasingly brutal. The writing never lets him become a cartoon villain because his logic always makes sense from his perspective. He genuinely believes he is protecting his people, which makes him far more unsettling than any mindless zombie. | © AMC
V

8. V

V for Vendetta turns a terrorist into a romantic hero without ever pretending the violence isn't real. Hugo Weaving's masked revolutionary commits actual acts of terrorism against a fascist government, but the script gives him eloquent speeches about freedom and just enough personal tragedy to make audiences root for the explosions. The movie walks an incredibly thin line between justified rebellion and dangerous extremism, somehow landing on the side that makes Guy Fawkes masks feel heroic. Warner Bros. released a film where the villain wins by blowing up Parliament, and millions of viewers cheered. | © Warner Bros.
Wilson Fisk

7. Wilson Fisk

Wilson Fisk could have been another boring crime boss yelling at underlings, but Daredevil turned him into something much stranger and more human. Vincent D'Onofrio plays him as a man-child with genuine feelings for his art dealer girlfriend, explosive tantrums over omelet preparation, and a sincere belief that he's saving Hell's Kitchen through organized violence. The show lets you see his point even when he's throwing people down elevator shafts. That kind of sympathy for a murderous kingpin only works when the writing treats him like a real person instead of a cartoon. | © Netflix
Loki

6. Loki

Loki works because Tom Hiddleston found the perfect balance between genuine menace and theatrical vulnerability. The character could have easily become a one-note trickster, but the writing gives him real pain behind all that smirking chaos. He feels like the younger brother who never got the attention he deserved, which makes his villainy feel earned rather than cartoonish. When he finally gets his moment to shine in his own series, all that complicated family drama pays off in ways that make you forget he once tried to enslave Earth. | © Marvel Studios/Disney
Doctor doom movie

5. Doctor Doom

Doctor Doom should have been Marvel's greatest villain on screen, but the 2005 Fantastic Four turned him into a generic corporate bad guy who gets metal powers and shoots lightning. The writing strips away everything that makes Doom compelling in the comics: the tragic backstory, the complex motivations, the regal bearing of a man who genuinely believes he's saving the world. Instead of a brilliant monarch whose methods are questionable but whose love for his people is real, audiences got Julian McMahon delivering quips in a metal mask. Fans defend this version not because it's good, but because it represents such a spectacular waste of one of comics' most fascinating characters. | © 20th Century Fox
Eric Killmonger

4. Killmonger

Killmonger walks into Wakanda with a plan that sounds completely reasonable until you realize it involves global war. His argument about Wakanda's isolationism hits so hard that even T'Challa has to change course by the end of the movie. Michael B. Jordan sells the rage behind every word, making it clear this isn't just another revenge plot but a man carrying centuries of justified anger. The scary part is how often he sounds right, even when his methods are completely wrong. | © Disney
Xmen first class magneto cropped processed by imagy

3. Magneto

Magneto works because Ian McKellen plays him like a man who has already lost everything that mattered, not a cartoon villain collecting power-ups. The Holocaust survivor angle gives weight to every speech about human hatred and mutant survival. When he explains why he cannot trust Charles Xavier's dream of peaceful coexistence, the logic feels earned rather than manufactured. McKellen turns what could have been generic evil mutant nonsense into something that sounds like genuine political philosophy. | © 20th Century Fox
Thanos

2. Thanos

Thanos believes he is saving the universe by wiping out half of all life, and the terrifying part is how the movie almost makes that logic feel reasonable. Most Marvel villains want power or revenge, but Thanos genuinely thinks he is being merciful by choosing random genocide over total extinction. The Russos give him more screen time and character development than some heroes get in their own movies, turning a purple space tyrant into something that feels uncomfortably human. When fans argue about whether he had a point, that is exactly the moral complexity most superhero movies never even attempt. | © Walt Disney Studios
The Joker

1. The Joker

Heath Ledger's Joker doesn't just steal scenes in The Dark Knight. He rewrites the rules of what a comic book villain can be. The performance turns chaos into philosophy, making every unpredictable choice feel both terrifying and oddly logical within the character's twisted worldview. Ledger found something genuinely unsettling in the role that goes way beyond makeup and mannerisms. | © Warner Bros. Pictures
1-15

Great writing has a way of making audiences sympathize with the very characters they're supposed to root against. These 15 villains were written well enough that fans still go to bat for them, picking apart their logic and arguing their case long after the credits rolled.

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Great writing has a way of making audiences sympathize with the very characters they're supposed to root against. These 15 villains were written well enough that fans still go to bat for them, picking apart their logic and arguing their case long after the credits rolled.

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