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Set images that will change how you see movie villains

Set images that will change how you see movie villains

Naughty: when they are poorly done, they are the thematic representation of a trash full of used dressings. Well done, they are the best part of a movie, shooting you in the story with a scar / six fingers / robotic hand and maybe convincing you that the good guys should lose this time. True cream-of-the-crop antagonists can even make you forget that you are watching a movie, instilling the real fear of pants-wetting in your butter-busted popcorn arteries.

Do not be afraid, son. Even the most terrifying cinematic personifications of evil are, at the end of the day, just regular people with half a pound of latex glued to their heads or riddles magic eye-catching motion dots covering their unitards. If you do not believe us, or even if you do, check out these Behind-the-Scenes put in pictures of some of the best villains in history in their full Candid Candidate Backstage. Just WARNING: You will never see Darth Maul the same way again after these pictures together.

1 Pennywise the dancing guy who sells grass in the high school parking


Stephen King is a Bonafide cultural phenomenon, well-liked by occasional fans of the clowns' fears and people whose attention allows them to finish a 1,200-page book like. The OG miniseries of 1990, while definitely a cult classic, left much to be desired in terms of Pennywise performance as the dancing clown as an incarnation of fear and destruction. Frankly, all the nostalgia in the world can not commit the Ray-Harryhausen-on-Quaaludes Claymation spider they used to close the series. Tim Curry chewed his share of landscapes and saved the day, but overall, the series ended up feeling like more of a schlocky camp festival than true horror.

But then, 27 years later, he came back, as is the custom. This time, the multi-dimensional beast was played coldly thanks to a collaboration between Bill Skarsgard, a lot of CGI, and the scary Bill Skarsgard eyes. A quarter century of hibernation leaves a demon clown with a lot of downtime, however, and from this behind-the-scenes photo of the new, we can deduce that Pennywise spent his time working part-time crazy scalping Clown Posse tickets in the parking lot of a Denny.

2 Maybe you should put Darth pants on


The Star Wars prequels have gotten more than their fair share of guff over the last 20 years to be caricatural, stilted, and totally devoid of Han Solo, but if you were a kid when the episode came out, you probably remember to be equal parts Stoked and terrified the first t IME you saw Darth Maul. Originally played by the human gyroscope Ray Park and voiced by Peter Serafinowicz's Tick, maul was the double-faced sword-wielding tattoo-faced dance fighter whose fighting scenes were one of the few parts of the ghost threat that nobody seemed to mind so much.

In this series photo, however, we see a different side of Maul; a side that looks like he probably likes to shot a beer or two when he gets home and would probably wear a trucker hat if she could find one with holes for his horns. Although it may not be the most intimidating outfit of the Sith Lord, we can at least agree that it is prophetic that his legs are cut. Bonus points for Liam Neeson on the left, Rocking the first recorded sighting of a Jedi Bun man.

3 Secret agents


Matrix films: were they perfect? It's up to historians to decide, but no. They were not. Yet, one does not deny that Hugo's weaving agent Smith was quite remarkable. His sneering personification of the ills of conformity was cold, and he did not hurt that he was one of the only characters in the series who ever showed emotion. Two decades later, it is still difficult to say the words "Mister Anderson" without accidentally making his voice.

At the end of Matrix: Revolutions, Smith assimilated thousands of programs and humans into the matrix, turning them into replicas of himself. In the series' final fight, Neo and Smith face OFF on a street lined with dozens and dozens of blacksmiths.

Considering that the Matrix series has been hailed as a special effects revolution, one would think that this scene would have been made with pure CGI. It turns out that was not the case. The special effects team built more than a hundred replicas of Smith for the shoot. Some were actors in the masks, and many were photorealistic animatronic puppets. It sort of takes the wind out of this last battle when you realize that it was removed using the same level of technology as the presidents' hall or the rock-blazing explosion.

4 So polite


If you asked your grandparents what gave them nightmares when they were kids, the first thing they would probably say would be "war." then they were silent for a moment and had a sad and distant look in their eyes. But like, 20 minutes later, if you asked them what else they were doing to scare them, they would almost certainly raise the flying monkeys of the 1939 oz wizard.

The wicked witch of the flying monkeys of the West are still synonymous with "Evil sbire" 80 years after the release of the film. Their movements were Ooky. Their uniforms, disturbing. They spun and they chatted and they were mean to the scarecrow, who was frankly unforgivable.

The good news is, they were also just a bunch of little guys in monkey costumes with funny hats and vests, tied up with battery-powered wing packs and held in the air by the piano wire. Also, apparently, they were relatively cordial. (The dwarves, however, would not be, I hope they were different people.)

5 What did Thanos eat?


Ten years, three comers, and nearly 20 films led to the correct introduction of Thanos, the main antagonist of the 2017 Avengers: Infinity War. It's a huge commitment of time and resources to a character who, at the end of the first Avengers movie, had your average moviegoer asking "who was the purple dude?"

As hard as it is to remember now, Thanos was a relatively obscure villain back in 2012, but Marvel did not have the rights to much of their nasty signature at the time. Spider-Man's Rogues Gallery still belonged to Sony. Magneto and Dr. Doom were still under the fox umbrella. Disney does not even have movie rights to one of Marvel's most recognizable antagonists, Galactus, the bucket-headed space-eating guy who's eating whole planets.

But that does not mean they did not have at least one hungry character, since according to this series photo, Thanos apparently prepared for the final battle in the Infinity War by eating a Josh Brolin set.

The puppeteer is a crowded field


Jim Henson and his store of eponymous creatures have built some of the most dependent monsters of the millennial collective childhood. Of course, there were the Muppets, but there were also the maze goblins, the 90s live-action ninja turtles, and the barnyard animals that turned a vegan generation into Babe. Thanks to all this, their biggest turn was to make characters that were immersive enough to make the audience forget that just out of the frame there were a dozen sweaty puppeteers with their arms in the air doing these pieces of Foam rubber come to life.

Breaking this illusion is this picture of one of the Skeksis, the villains of 1982's The Dark Crystal, crowds surfing on a sea of ​​puppet performers as he just took a dive stop at Frank Ozfest. You can not say for sure from this angle, but an educated guess tells us that under the warm lights of a healthy scene, the real villain of this production was pit stench.

7 Tears your heart out


Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is still in the world. 75% of Indiana Jones movies, quality-wise. While it has its problems, Temple is also responsible for some of the most iconic imagery in the series. It gives us the chase cart, chilled monkey brains, and most importantly, the off-parodied scene where the bad guy pulls the still-beating heart out of the chest of a human sacrifice.

High Priest Mola Ram, played in the movie by Amrish Puri, may have been one of the most popular, but it is understood that the real enemy is the Sun and its unforgiving UV rays. We do not speak to the character of the actor himself, but based on the insidious grin he's sporting, it's easy to imagine that he was whispering "put Jar Jar in the prequels" right before the photographer shouted "say cheese!"

Not a leg to stand on


Jurassic Park was a pivotal moment in the cinema. It was the first time that a computer-generated living creature was featured in a movie. Still, for all the credit that digital effects are getting, the practical effects have been just as cool. Stan Winston Studios helped create the life size of the animatronic dinosaurs that blew the audience away, from the sick Triceratops to the flanged Dilophosaurus to the T. T. Rex show. Or at least, most.

With clever editing and cinematography techniques, one can never see that the Tyrannosaurus puppet was built without legs. Instead, he was propped up on a mechanical platform with wires running out of the base, connecting him to the puppeteers who controlled Offscreen. Do not tell the lawyer, but running was probably the best option.

So the next time one of your know-it-all friends tries to impress you by saying that there were only 14 minutes of real dinosaur images in Jurassic Park, you can get punny deliciously and their to say that there was still less foot-age dinosaur than they think. They will probably stop hanging out with you after that.

9 I want a good fight clean 


Look, we're not trying to blow up anyone's mind with the fact that the creatures of the Japanese Kaiju monster movies were actually just guys in rubber suits. If this does not rock your whole perspective on life, we have more bad news about the realities of professional wrestling and what really happens when you put a tooth under your pillow.

What makes this picture cool is how everyone is laid back. King Kong trails pensively in the background, watching as he tries to remember if he fed his cats this morning. Godzilla is having a word with director Ishiro Honda, who in this picture looks more like Godzilla manager, the kind of guy movie frames would describe as "the real monster."

"Zill, baby, let me take care of the money.You focus on what you do best: Giant Gorilla mouth plasma shot and enjoy the light.Now who is my favorite customer? It's just, let me see that smile, you're the best in business, kid, and do not let anyone tell you different, wait, Mothra calls me. "

10 Squad Goals


Michael Keaton is Batman. Do not you believe it? Ask Michael Keaton. His reign too short as the Crusader Caped was definitive, but if it is your favorite iteration of the character or not, you have to admit that it was a distant scream of the no-kill version of the black knight that has become more prevalent in recent times years.

In Tim Burton's Batman, Keaton blows up a chemical plant. Later, he fired missiles at one of Joker Parade's tanks and fired a machine gun at the Prince's crime clown Prince of the Batwing. Perhaps his most horrifying move comes in Batman comes back, when he drops a red penguin triangle gang member into a manhole with an army bomb and then smiles after the guy explodes. This is not the kind of action from which most relationships could recover.

From the appearance of this photo, however, everyone did it in the end.

11 The spaceship! The spaceship!


Ricardo Montalban has had a long and illustrious career. Young readers knew him as the grandfather of spy children. Chrysler fans of the 80s remember that he had strong feelings when it came to Corinthian leather. The most nerdily inclined among us remember him as the vile Khan Noonian Singh, antagonist of Khan's wrath, the second Star Trek movie and the first Star Trek movie to watch. He was vindictive and intense, and his taste in clothes really let him breathe his chest. He was a very bad guy.

Before that, however, Montalban played in the TV series Fantasy Island as the enigmatic Mister Roarke alongside Hervé Villechaize, who played his diminutive tattoo assistant. From the looks of this serial photo, someone on the set of Khan's anger pasted an image of Villechaize's face in front of an inflatable toy guy, and Montalban thought it was just the best.

No word yet on whether or not someone fired the same joke on Benedict Cumberbatch with a picture of Martin Freeman, but stay tuned for updates.
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