In the movies, what nasty person is your personal favorite. You can have a couple, but your all time favorite.
I think for me, it’s The Sheriff Of Nottingham ( Alan Rickman or Basil Rathbone)
In the movies, what nasty person is your personal favorite. You can have a couple, but your all time favorite.
I think for me, it’s The Sheriff Of Nottingham ( Alan Rickman or Basil Rathbone)
The three bad guys from “The three musketeers”
with Tim Curry (the Bishop) taking top honors.
Destroyer of grammar
matser or typos.
Typo artist fo the world Untie!
Alex Baldwin played a bad guy in a few movies.
** Sigh. So many men, so few who can afford me ** Original by Wally
I’ve learned that if someone says something unkind about me, I must live so that no one will believe it.
Homepage: www.superlativeandsassy.com
Occupation: Temptress
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Interests: surpluses, excesses, abundances, extras, lagniappes
profile by UncleBeer
http://i95eriol.island.liu.se/roydieing.jpg
I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.
Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion.
I watched C-beams glitter in the darkness near Tannhauser Gate.
All those moments will be lost in time like tears in the rain.
Time to die.
Hanibal Lecter in ‘Silence of the lambs’.
Brilliant AND evil. Yikes!
I have thought about it and I will have to say my favorite all time bad girl is …
Ultress
One of the few to be personally welcomed to this board by Ed Zotti.
Yours truly,
aha
Osip, I must ask which three bad guys you mean - the Musketeers were good guys - please don’t say you are referring to them!
And I humbly report that Tim Curry played a cardinal, not a bishop. Be careful, he might throw you in the dungeon for such a grievous error.
Charles Laughton as Dr. Moreau in Island of Lost Souls (1933).
Ernest Thesiger as Dr. Praetorius in The Bride of Frankenstein (1935).
John Lithgow as Dr. Lizardo in The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai in the Fourth Dimension (1984).
Hmmmm…three evil doctors. No WONDER I always skip my annual check-up.
Uke
Barbara Stanwyck in “Double Indemnity”
Bette Davis in “The Little Foxes”
Jean Harlow in “Red-Headed Woman”
Jimmy Cagney in “Little Ceasar”
Theda Bara in “A Fool There Was”
Kathleen Turner in “Body Heat”
Margaret Hamilton in “The Wizard of Oz”
Oh, golly gee whiz, you KNOW I meant Jimmy Cagney in PUBLIC ENEMY! It’s early, what can I say . . .
DAMN. I was all set to jump all over ya for that!
Kurtwood Smith as Clarence Boddicker in Robocop.
“Can you fly, Bobby?”
“No, Clarence, noooo!!!”
One of my recent favorites is Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving), the lead AI in “The Matrix,” made even more amazing by the fact that he played a drag queen in “Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.”
For a hero, give me Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) from the “Alien” series. Bitch kicked ass.
Esprix
Evidently, I rock.
Ask the Gay Guy!
“DAMN. I was all set to jump all over ya for that!”
—Oh, Ike; as if you needed an excuse to jump all over me.
aha I’m not a bad girl, I’m just all woman
** Sigh. So many men, so few who can afford me ** Original by Wally
I’ve learned that if someone says something unkind about me, I must live so that no one will believe it.
Homepage: www.superlativeandsassy.com
Occupation: Temptress
Location: Ultra, California
Interests: surpluses, excesses, abundances, extras, lagniappes
profile by UncleBeer
I liked Edward Norton in Primal Fear.
Christopher Walken in ANYTHING.
That guy’s freaking creepy!
Well, I’m fond of Death in The Meaning of Life, but he’s not one of your more frightening bad guys.
And then there’s John Huston in Chinatown.
I’m your only friend
I’m not your only friend
But I’m a little glowing friend
But really I’m not actually your friend
But I am
What a great topic… isn’t it amazing how often the BAD person is the most memorable one in the movies?
I’d say a short list would have to include Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins) AND Ed Norton (Primal Fear)…
but Kevin Spacey in The Usual Suspects was just unbelievable… a truly twisted and ruthless bad guy that you would never ever suspect. So that’d be my favorite. At least for now… off the top of my head… until I think of another one.
–I am Soren Kierkegaard.–
“People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid.”
http://www.dtek.chalmers.se/~d3wall/pics/ming2.GIF
Nobody was ever as mercilous as Ming.