Are there any favorites of yours we left off our list? Let us know in the comments! For more movie deaths, click here!: ua-cam.com/video/fBVP4UNRNzo/v-deo.html
If there’s anyone I hate more than Mola Ram, it’s Willie, even though she’s one of the good guys. Still, I really liked Ducard and Palpatine (even more so in TROS). Margaret White, however, is tied with Willie.
Burke in _Aliens_ - #1 most satisfactory screen death of all time. Frank Nitti _The Untouchables_ Timothy _The Long Kiss Goodnight_ Hitler _Inglorious Basterds_ Beloc + Nazis _Raiders Of The Lost Ark_
The best bit about Hans Gruber's death scene is that they told Alan Rickman that they were going to drop him at the count of 3. Then dropped him at 1. His expression is priceless.
Ok we are gonna drop you on three! ONE! *drops Rickman* Rickman: WHAT HAPPENED TO TWO AND THREE?! a man only needs one to get through life. Gintama reference baby!
@@brendaduncan4347 Of course he also died as a not exactly a villain in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. He also didn't die at all in Galaxy Quest, but my sides died from laughing at that film. There is also his death opposite Tom Selleck in Quigley Down Under. That had one of the most iconic lines given by a hero to the villain while he watches the overconfident villain die at his feet. Selleck said, "I said I never had much use for one. I didn't say I didn't know how to use it." He said that in reference to the mistaken impression of Quigley's awareness of Sam Colt's Peacemaker. That alone could date this the setting of the film. Set in Australia in the late 19th century when Australia was still an open air prison. Good movie. Also stars Laura San Giacomo as a character called Crazy Cora. It is a thoroughly fun romp through a western with a twist.
sadly as series didnt count for this list the massively satisfying death of joffrey from GoT wasnt on it - that was a pretty satisfying villain death right there
My sister was a successful actress and she said if you hate a character. That it is a complement to the actors ability! It's when you don't believe them in a role that hurts!
Denzel Washington in Training Day. I actually ended up disliking the actor for a long time after that. I refused to watch his movies. Talk about a masterclass.
Your sister is right, and actors that can play both evil and heroic is masters of the craft. Just look at Christoph Waltz in Inglorious Basterds and Django unchained to see what i mean.
A wonderfully satisfying list, thank you. Especially love Mandy Patinkin's scene from Princess Bride, since he was dealing with his own father's recent death from cancer. He saw Christopher Guest's character as the personification of the cancer, and he meant what he said.
I wasn’t old enough to watch The Mist in theaters but I heard many stories about the audiences CLAPPING/celebrating when the store owner killed Ms. Carmody. Also what about Warden Norton in Shawshank? Should also have been up there.
Would also add Catherine Buxton and Gov. Scott in the movie RRR. WatchMojo doesn’t do Telugu or Indian films but if anyone watched it, hard to have any pity for such characters.
I love The Mist. Last summer I got to meet the guy who played Pvt. Jessup at a convention. I was excited because not only was he in The Mist, but he was in the pilot episode of The Walking Dead. The Mist was filmed in Shreveport/Bossier City LA, and he was telling me that he was staying right near where they filmed. He said when he got the bit part on The Walking Dead, he was happy, because he really loved and admired Frank Darabont.
When I saw the cypher die while binging all the Matrix movies I think it was last year, I remember Instinctively yelling "that's what I'm talking about you show him Tank"
Fun fact: when Alan Rickman filmed the scene where Hans Gruber falls and dies, he was falling 25ft onto an airbag and was supposed to be dropped after the count of 3. They dropped him on the count of 1 and he wasn't expecting it- that fantastic look on his face was real! Love Die Hard.
I wish you guys hadn’t excluded animated films because Frollo’s death from Hunchback of Notre Dame is literally one of the most satisfying deaths in any movie.
I kept waiting for Commodus. Like, "ok but where's Commodus. Yep there's the Patriot, but where's Commodus. Kept waiting.... Finally. When that happened, I literally cheered and so did everyone else
Except that Edmond didn't kill Fernand in the novel, which was actually the greatest revenge story (unlike the movie, the revenger didn't get his girl back)
@@bheast86 I also agree with you. I feel in the book, no one truly "won" anything or was ever truly at peace. The count of Monte Cristo is my third favorite book.
Omg i was quite literally about to write this!! Thats my favorite movie, but unfortunately its wasn't as big as any of the movies on thia list, guy pierce is an amazing villain in whatever he's in
Well , I agree This is considered to be The Greatest revenge classic story of all times .. An adaptation of the novel written by Alexandre Dumas...Although the movie differs from the original novel ...Guy Pearce portrayed the betrayal role to perfection
one thing i love about molly weasley killing bellatrix was that (at least in the film) she first attacks her with killing curses (the ones that produce a green energy)
I particularly enjoyed the death of villainess Ma-Ma in the 2012 film "Dredd". Not only did her death eloquently solve the radio controlled explosives problem but the poetic justice of her slowed down timely death was brilliant.
Dredd was so good. "Ma-Ma is not the law. I am the law." The way he says that, not like it's a catchphrase, just like it's a statement of fact, is perfect.
So many people love Joaquin from Joker. But me? For me, his Joker will always pale in comparison to Commodus. Him not getting the Oscar for that performance is absolutely criminal.
I would say he played both roles to the same level. Which is a very high level. Oscars will always be about how much money is put into things. And no movie company will put that much money into securing an Oscar for the antagonist of the movie if they have other Oscars they can secure more easily, which they did. But since it's pretty much all about money when it comes to Oscars, it's honestly not worth it to get mad about them. I mean look at some of the genres, like Animated Film. Unless you have Disney tied to you in some way, you're almost never going to win. And Academy members have been known to say things like they just vote for whatever their kid likes the best or just whatever seems the most popular in categories like that.
And usually if you meet that actor in person, they're usually really nice. I have met a few that played villains in TV shows and movies, and in person they're really very nice. It's just a testament as to how great of an actor they truly are.
Thanos' death in Endgame is NOT satisfying but tearful. It's only satisfying if AND ONLY IF the villain is a hate sink and died by karma. I mean, is there ANY purely evil villain whose death isn't satisfying?
Seeing Molly Weasley kill Bellatrix was very satisfying. Molly had already lost one son (Fred) and had another one (George) hurt while rescuing Harry, and she wasn't letting anything happen to her only daughter. Plus we finally saw how powerful Molly was.
This should have been Neville or andromeda Tonks. Bella killed her own sisters daughter. And tortured Neville’s parents into insanity. It’s a shame he didn’t get his revenge
@@Bilski86 Fair points. As I remember. Andromeda was not involved in the Battle of Hogwarts. She was taking care of her grandson (Remus and Nymphadora's son). Not sure Neville had the experience to kill Bella. Remember that Bella was dueling Hermione, Luna and Ginny all at once when Molly stepped in.
Fun fact: Alan's reaction when he falls is real because the team didn't tell him he was gonna legit fall for the scene in die hard because they wanted it as real as possible
From what I heard they dropped him on the count of 2 instead of 3 like he was told. There's no way they dropped him twenty feet without making him aware of the stunt
@@stephengrigg5988 yes that's how they did it played like they were popping a dislocated arm if you will one.. two..POP!! So to clear up my earlier comment they DID tell him but dropped him at the "wrong" time lol
I will forever remember and cherish the day I sat in the cinema seeing mama Molly dropping the B-word before totally obliterating Bellatrix. It was the first time I experienced the audience collectively gasping in awe and cheering in amusement. Just wow!!!
I'm surprised that Gladiator was chosen as number 1, I was afraid everyone had forgotten all about it, after so many years. Too bad The Last Samurai was not on this list, it was good to see Nathan Algren kill Colonel Bagley before the samurai army was defeated.
Not a movie, but the death of Handsome Jack at the end of Borderlands 2 was the most catharsis I’ve ever had at the end death of a main villain The whole game has you growing angrier and angrier with him. And after finally destroying the thing he’s been working for the entire time, to finally be able to blast him is the greatest feeling of stress relief.
There was Ma-Ma's death in judge dread reboot, most of the "Maze runer" main villian deaths. Agent Smith in the matrix. Most of the Harry potter villains.
I think this doesn't make it because the first fight when he tries to pay off the villains is even better. The Equalizer (2014) "That girl, Alana... She's gonna go on living. You... You're gonna bleed out all over this funky floor... All over 9,800 dollars"
How. Oh HOW is Jason Issacs character from The Patriot only an honorable mention? Did you forget that he killed a whole town in a church by burning them alive!!!! One of those people was the protagonist’s fiancée. And that’s only an honorable mention??
I would have liked to see the assassin from Dreamscape make the list, but that was not a blockbuster, was it, just a cult hit indie film. The POTUS' advisor who ran the assassin also got a quite satisfying death as well.
Nice to see the princess bride film on a list. It is a classic film with many set pieces, and just as many plot twists that make it a film where you need to watch it at least 3 times before you have noticed all the signs that give the film its consistency and its unique character development.
I absolutely love this list. While I may not agree with all the positions I do agree with each selection. And I feel like there are enough satisfying deaths in film out there that you could do “20 more satisfying character deaths of hated characters”.
I think my most favourite death of a hated film character would be Calvin Candie in 'Django Unchained'. Also Carter Burke in 'Aliens' was pretty satisfying.
I was going to say, Carter Burke is an omission that should be on this list- although the list is very good. But the sliminess of Carter was exceptional, Paul Reiser did an amazing job.
just expensive flash compared to the book, where Saruman gets his throat cut from behind in the midst of being insufferable, and his body decays: Not only a valid excuse for extending the story beyond the big ending, but downright wretched
I mean, the death of the Nazgûl with the classic “I am no man” in the Return of the King is top 5 for me… It was ahead of its time in the books and really in the 2000s.
Damn good list. However, I am surprised that you lack a single Western movie in it! Frank's (Henry Fonda) death in Once Upon a Time in the West was really, really satisfying. That scene also revealed a backstory that explained Harmonica's (Charles Bronson) decades of seeking vengeance.
They could also, if you desire a western, do a western with a twist. Selleck's character killing Alan Rickman's character in Quigley Down Under was perfect, and Selleck had the perfect line as he shot Rickman. This movie is well worth a watch.
@@heinleinreader Yeah, I remember that one! The Australia location/production made it uniquely interesting. I recently read it was written originally for Steve McQueen; however, he unfortunately succumbed to cancer, so it ended up with Selleck. "The Good, the Bad, the Weird" was also quite atypical too, having it's setting in an 1939 Manchurian desert. I think that (a south Korean Western) would also fit into your "Western with a twist" category; however, I'd just be happy with Westerns being represented!
@@GreenwoodQuake So, oddly in a way, might the Seven Samurai, as that Kurosawa classic was the basis for the original Magnificent Seven film. It certainly had a quasi-Western flavor to it. And the main reason I mentioned the film is that I thought it was a great performance by Rickman (as usual), and was perhaps the best of Tom Selleck. And Laura San Giacomo gave a brilliant performance as Crazy Cora. I thought it was a movie worthy of far more recognition than it has gotten. It was well written, well directed and well acted. Rickman was also, in my view, underappreciated in his role in Galaxy Quest. The man was arguably one of the greatest character actors of his generation, perhaps in all of acting history period. This is my opinion, but a credible on I think. If anyone deserves a posthumous lifetime achievement Oscar, Rickman does. That's my story, and I am sticking to it.
You know that Cypher proved that Neo was the One prior to anyone else knowing because a minute before he said it would take a miracle for Neo to live and then he got one when Cypher was killed suddenly against all odds
@@75Everett47 Of course, but how many people caught on to it? After all most of the critics just got stuck on the action sequences and missed what the plot meant completely.
@@DracarysSnow What was evident? A cypher is an encryption code, if it was supposed to be obvious then would his name be Judas instead? If you meant Neo then that means new which doesn't give any guarantees of being better, just different from what came before since it could still have plenty of new flaws
Word has it JK Rowling decided to have Molly deal with Bellatrix after someone said Molly was, quote, "Just a mother," unquote. More like magical Mother Bear.
Like the old saying goes "Hell hath no fury like the wrath of a woman scorned or angered." That is true especially if the woman is a mother willing to do anything to protect her kids as Bellatrix learned the hard way.
@@harryboyes2812 still robbed neville of his moment of revenge, and for that reason alone it was garbage. Iknow neville got THE biggest moment, by literally saving all 3 core members at once with the same swing, but that was for the overall good of the world, not his personal tragedy, which he deserved. THey could have let molly kill another DE, Bella was marked for Neville, and no amount of girl power or soccer moms unite or mama bear nonsense will make it okay
@@TheGhostofMrArthurs Did you actually read the books or watch the movies? At what point in any of them did Neville Longbottom seem like the type that was looking for vengeance?
@@davidchappell1548 well, when bella first appeared to them and he said he gets to avenge his parents is a good start. I'm a big believer in earned kills, I dont like quota kills. Look at Game of Thrones, Sansa didnt deserve ramsey's kill, that was theons. Joffrey wasnt Olenna's kill. I get people love to pull the rug out, but JUST because its the obvious way, doesnt mean its wrong. Neville should have gotten Bella, fact. To hell with writing it in "because she's just a mom"
@@kyleketchum9576 I don't remember him actually dying in either the book or the movie. I think that he was just driven insane to the point where he was committed to the same psych ward that he was supposed to start working at.
The whole video, I'm thinking. The bad guy in Dirty Harry will be in the top 5 at least. There's no villain I've hated more in a movie. And he's not even mentioned.
In the movie he calls himself Scorpio making him a fictional version of the Zodiac Killer. Aside from being a psychopath who picks randomly selected innocent victims including little kids to murder what makes him especially loathsome is the way he exploits bleeding heart liberal judges and the media to portray himself as a poor abused victim of police brutality literally being allowed to get away with murder. Dirty Harry's whole iconic "Do you feel lucky?" routine at the beginning of the film showing that Harry never loses track of how many bullets he's fired is basically to set up Harry giving this guy an excuse to shoot him.
Why WOULD you exclude animated deaths, though? When I saw "Beauty and the Beast", the entire audience cheered when Gaston bit it. That said, Commodus being #1 is spot on.
Out of all of the villains I’ve seen die on this montage, I am sorely missing Cyrus “The Virus” Grissom of Con Air fame. True, his death was nothing short of Rasputaniun, but the fact that he had the stones to go after the protagonist’s daughter can’t be ignored.
“And then the emperor comes back somehow, we don’t know how he just does” Kathleen Kennedy aka The absolute least qualified person to ever write a Star Wars film ever in existence of humans
0:51 that part with Leia pwning Jabba, apparently she was unconsciously drawing on the Dark Side to have enough oomph to choke his lights out. Just something I found out about recently.
Cunningham in Rob Roy. Burke in Aliens. Lursa and Betor in Star Trek Generations (never have I ever seen people jump out of their theatre seats until this happened)
425: 5 -no wonder this got ton of awards 4 -nicely done Jordan Peele 3 -Very indeed 2 -Hands down, best one and should be number one 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 1 -I hate him and is the worst
The most satisfying movie death for me was Amon Goeth in Schindler's List. After everything that piece of filth did, it was so therapeutic to see him hang.
@@jamesbell1613Not you too!! You call yourself a Star Wars fan and can’t even remotely try to enjoy episodes 7, 8 and 9??? I thought that end battle in ep. 9 was absolutely epic!! A Star Wars fan’s dream come true!! Magnificent!! All those Star Destroyers, Large Rebel ships, Dreadnaughts, Frigates and others!!
Dune - Baron Harkonnen Star Trek II - The Wrath of Khan - Khan Willow - Bavmorda OR General Kael Tombstone - Johnny Ringo Last Action Hero - Ripper True Lies - Aziz License to Kill - Franz Sanchez Conan the Barbarian - Thulsa Doom
@@mish375 oh yeah absolutely. The best line of the series was at the end when snow fell Katniss evening. “You’re lying” Katniss says. “Now miss Everdeen….we both agreed never to lie to each other” Say what ya want about snow. Dude knew how to play
@@Bilski86 Yep. You see, what Alma didn't understand was Snow had established a particular decorum with Katniss. Because even though he's a sociopath, he still has rules of engagement. One of those rules was not lying to Katniss and being upfront about what he was willing to do. So when he said that Coin killed Prim and the children without reason, Katniss knew he was telling the truth. Generally I hate villains and especially sociopaths, but Suzanne Collins wrote him so well that Coriolanus is that villain you love to hate in a way. He has dimension to him. And if you watch the prequel, then rewatch the trilogy (quadrilogy?), a lot of his actions are given additional context for why he acts the way he does. Doesn't make it right, but it does make sense given that he grew up in a literal war zone and sees the Games as preventing another Dark Days descent in chaos (as well as believing they show people who they really are). It's incredibly rare for a sociopathic character to operate on that level of honesty. He knows he's a monster but feels his actions are necessary for Panem's survival. Alma Coin lost it after losing her family and had no limits to what she wanted to do to secure power. As someone once said, "there's not much we can say we like about Prez Snow, but oh the reasons be real good."
@@mish375 absolutely I don’t have anything to add you nailed it President snow is one of the better villains written recently. Cause at the end of the day when he’s dead the audience thinks “damn….maybe he wasn’t totally wrong” Don’t get me wrong. I enjoyed the way he died. He did more to the people than he did to Katniss. He didn’t kill her sister. He didn’t bomb the children at the capitol. He did starve the people and treated them them horribly. I love how he dies as much as I loved his character One of the few villains that is all political. I don’t believe he personally killed anyone in the movies
@@Bilski86 Something I particularly like about Collins' writing is that even before she wrote the prequel, you knew there was an untold depth to Coriolanus that Donald Sutherland acted out masterfully. (And Tom Blyth in the prequel also did an equally fantastic job) You knew Snow wasn't just some stock villain dictator character, but that there was some real depth there. We just didn't get the full picture until the prequel. Something I always wondered was whether he was afraid of a descent into another war having lived through The Dark Days, which is why he had hope in the Games satisfying humanity's bloodlust and how he saw them as getting people to adapt and survive. What was it he said? "Hope is the only thing stronger than fear." The collapse of the system meant that Panem's future is unknown and I do like that Mockingjay ends with that uncertainty. Everyone hopes that they can make a better system with the Games gone, but it will be a long road to get there. And we are left wondering whether things will be better. Personally I thought it was poetic justice how Coriolanus died. It wasn't one person who killed him, he was trampled by the people he oppressed for decades. And some theorize that the circle he stands in is the same one he stands in at the end of the prequel, staring up at the statue, contemplating the future Panem will have under him. Suzanne's thematic mirroring is fantastic. Everything comes full circle. I'd say Coriolanus killed on his way to the top, which is established in both Mockingjay and TBOSAS, then had others do it for him. Octavius (the general) was the only one in the OT movies that he personally poisoned.
Are there any favorites of yours we left off our list? Let us know in the comments!
For more movie deaths, click here!: ua-cam.com/video/fBVP4UNRNzo/v-deo.html
Chief Warren Kincaid (Bride of Chucky) didn't want Jade To be with Jesse Miller and asked for it (Getting stabbed To Death by Chucky)
If there’s anyone I hate more than Mola Ram, it’s Willie, even though she’s one of the good guys. Still, I really liked Ducard and Palpatine (even more so in TROS). Margaret White, however, is tied with Willie.
Burke in _Aliens_ - #1 most satisfactory screen death of all time.
Frank Nitti _The Untouchables_
Timothy _The Long Kiss Goodnight_
Hitler _Inglorious Basterds_
Beloc + Nazis _Raiders Of The Lost Ark_
16:36 2nd most hated villain in the wizard in world
Top 10 Revenge movies (i.e Gladiator, Death Wish)
Joaquin's Commodus was perfect. You hate him in every scene he's in. That's how you portray a villain people can't stand. Great acting 👌
First time I saw Gladiator it made me hate Joaquin so much. It of course changed since then, cause that man is such an amazing actor.
His acting was so good despite the fact that most of his character was historically inaccurate much like Robert the Bruce in Braveheart.
And this was how he ended up getting the oscar for his role in Joker.
💯
Facts!🗣️
The best bit about Hans Gruber's death scene is that they told Alan Rickman that they were going to drop him at the count of 3. Then dropped him at 1. His expression is priceless.
If I remember right, Alan Rickman thought it was a brilliant decision.
Ok we are gonna drop you on three! ONE! *drops Rickman*
Rickman: WHAT HAPPENED TO TWO AND THREE?!
a man only needs one to get through life.
Gintama reference baby!
Alan Rickman was the best. He also died as a villain in "Quigley Down Under".
I love that
@@brendaduncan4347 Of course he also died as a not exactly a villain in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. He also didn't die at all in Galaxy Quest, but my sides died from laughing at that film. There is also his death opposite Tom Selleck in Quigley Down Under. That had one of the most iconic lines given by a hero to the villain while he watches the overconfident villain die at his feet. Selleck said, "I said I never had much use for one. I didn't say I didn't know how to use it." He said that in reference to the mistaken impression of Quigley's awareness of Sam Colt's Peacemaker. That alone could date this the setting of the film. Set in Australia in the late 19th century when Australia was still an open air prison. Good movie. Also stars Laura San Giacomo as a character called Crazy Cora. It is a thoroughly fun romp through a western with a twist.
Commodus’ is absolutely the most satisfying villain death. Glad you guys ranked it correctly.
sadly as series didnt count for this list the massively satisfying death of joffrey from GoT wasnt on it - that was a pretty satisfying villain death right there
@@Morethanannoyed This list is only for movie characters
Warden Norton
The "busy bees" monologue is one of the best acted moments in film history. God, was that creepy.
What about Last of the Mohicans?
My sister was a successful actress and she said if you hate a character. That it is a complement to the actors ability! It's when you don't believe them in a role that hurts!
Facts! 🗣️
Denzel Washington in Training Day. I actually ended up disliking the actor for a long time after that. I refused to watch his movies. Talk about a masterclass.
Your sister is right, and actors that can play both evil and heroic is masters of the craft. Just look at Christoph Waltz in Inglorious Basterds and Django unchained to see what i mean.
Very true.
Bolton Ramsay and Joeffrey are prime examples. Tv show and not movie, but damn I hated them
A wonderfully satisfying list, thank you.
Especially love Mandy Patinkin's scene from Princess Bride, since he was dealing with his own father's recent death from cancer. He saw Christopher Guest's character as the personification of the cancer, and he meant what he said.
For real?! Damn I need to see that movie
Um What? 😒
I saw Mandy explain this and I cried. So glad that even when enacting a scene he was able to give himself some semblance of closure.
I remember reading that! It almost made me cry after I found that out because you can hear the pain in his voice
I wasn’t old enough to watch The Mist in theaters but I heard many stories about the audiences CLAPPING/celebrating when the store owner killed Ms. Carmody.
Also what about Warden Norton in Shawshank? Should also have been up there.
Would also add Catherine Buxton and Gov. Scott in the movie RRR. WatchMojo doesn’t do Telugu or Indian films but if anyone watched it, hard to have any pity for such characters.
If only The Mist had a better ending after Carmody’s death
Her death is actually one of the high points in the movie. Other than that, too depressing.
Can confirm. I watched The Mist in theaters. Her death got a standing ovation.
I love The Mist. Last summer I got to meet the guy who played Pvt. Jessup at a convention. I was excited because not only was he in The Mist, but he was in the pilot episode of The Walking Dead. The Mist was filmed in Shreveport/Bossier City LA, and he was telling me that he was staying right near where they filmed. He said when he got the bit part on The Walking Dead, he was happy, because he really loved and admired Frank Darabont.
When I saw the cypher die while binging all the Matrix movies I think it was last year, I remember Instinctively yelling "that's what I'm talking about you show him Tank"
Fun fact: when Alan Rickman filmed the scene where Hans Gruber falls and dies, he was falling 25ft onto an airbag and was supposed to be dropped after the count of 3. They dropped him on the count of 1 and he wasn't expecting it- that fantastic look on his face was real! Love Die Hard.
I wish you guys hadn’t excluded animated films because Frollo’s death from Hunchback of Notre Dame is literally one of the most satisfying deaths in any movie.
Yep, even more satisfying than Gaston’s death.
Most Satisfying Disney Villain deaths
6 Horned King
5 Clayton
4 Dr. Facilier
3 Scar
2 Gaston
1 Frollo
How true
That deserves it's new list!
@@ChibiProwl Add Gothel and Shan Yu to that list. Plus if we're including Pixar, add Muntz, Hopper and Syndrome.
@@coolnerdlll6053
Definitely Hopper or Syndrome. Muntz was more of a tragic villain than a true monster.
I kept waiting for Commodus. Like, "ok but where's Commodus. Yep there's the Patriot, but where's Commodus. Kept waiting.... Finally. When that happened, I literally cheered and so did everyone else
The list should have included when Edmond kills Fernand in the greatest revenge story of all time, 2002's "The Count of Monte Cristo."
Except that Edmond didn't kill Fernand in the novel, which was actually the greatest revenge story (unlike the movie, the revenger didn't get his girl back)
I agree
@@bheast86 I also agree with you. I feel in the book, no one truly "won" anything or was ever truly at peace. The count of Monte Cristo is my third favorite book.
Omg i was quite literally about to write this!! Thats my favorite movie, but unfortunately its wasn't as big as any of the movies on thia list, guy pierce is an amazing villain in whatever he's in
Well , I agree This is considered to be The Greatest revenge classic story of all times .. An adaptation of the novel written by Alexandre Dumas...Although the movie differs from the original novel ...Guy Pearce portrayed the betrayal role to perfection
Lena Headey's death in Dredd is also satisfying. Experiencing slo-mo just before her death makes it that much more satisfying
Too bad cersei wasn’t. ;). She is the sweetest thing ever but so attractive.
She was HOT in 300 as Gorgo
All the deaths were satisfying, bit I practically cheered when Mrs. Carmody died.
one thing i love about molly weasley killing bellatrix was that (at least in the film) she first attacks her with killing curses (the ones that produce a green energy)
Judge Doom being melted in his own Dip concoction is justification to me.
oh heck yes....!
“I’m melting, melting!”
Technically he doesn't qualify... they excluded animated villains. And he was a toon.:)
@@bigmookie27 He’s the boundary line between human and toon.
Quite fitting.
Ego's death from Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2 is satisfying
Definitely
Not even his death. I love when Peter just unloads as soon as Ego slips up
Also Rose the Hat from Doctor Sleep.
Let’s not forget Ronan and Taser Face from those too!
I particularly enjoyed the death of villainess Ma-Ma in the 2012 film "Dredd". Not only did her death eloquently solve the radio controlled explosives problem but the poetic justice of her slowed down timely death was brilliant.
Dredd was so good.
"Ma-Ma is not the law. I am the law."
The way he says that, not like it's a catchphrase, just like it's a statement of fact, is perfect.
Thanos, he’s one of the rare villains to get a peaceful moment of reflection at his loss before dying and actually use it.
im not gonna say thanos was a villain
@@TheGhostofMrArthurs Right, because any respectable person would slaughter trillions of innocent people.
@@coolnerdlll6053 I call it, mercy
@@TheGhostofMrArthurs That won't hold up in space court.
@@TheGhostofMrArthurs im with your sir
I can't believe there wasn't even a mention of Cohagen from Total Recall! They WAY he died was great as well!
Facts! 🗣️
Not to mention Rictor from Total Recall.😏
@@sekenamcmurren2217 Yea, I miss Michael Ironside.
@@TheGemini5 He's still alive lol
@@sekenamcmurren2217 See you at the pahtee Richter!!!!
Warden Norton should've been on the list
Done over by Andy Dufresne
Agree. I can't believe the mad max dude was on here and warden Norton wasn't...
Death proof and that ending scene are literal gifts to cinema.
So many people love Joaquin from Joker.
But me? For me, his Joker will always pale in comparison to Commodus. Him not getting the Oscar for that performance is absolutely criminal.
I would say he played both roles to the same level. Which is a very high level.
Oscars will always be about how much money is put into things. And no movie company will put that much money into securing an Oscar for the antagonist of the movie if they have other Oscars they can secure more easily, which they did.
But since it's pretty much all about money when it comes to Oscars, it's honestly not worth it to get mad about them.
I mean look at some of the genres, like Animated Film. Unless you have Disney tied to you in some way, you're almost never going to win. And Academy members have been known to say things like they just vote for whatever their kid likes the best or just whatever seems the most popular in categories like that.
And that opinion is 100% fair.
For me though, it’s Commodus all the way.
Honestly Joker killing Robert DeNiro sjould've made this list, even though DeNiro's character wasn't even a real villain.
If you genuinely hate a character that means the actor did an amazing job.
And usually if you meet that actor in person, they're usually really nice. I have met a few that played villains in TV shows and movies, and in person they're really very nice. It's just a testament as to how great of an actor they truly are.
Well I hated Gary Oldman 3 times, In Fifth Element, as Doctor Smith in Lost In Space, and the Russian terrorist leader in Air Force One!!!
@@darkangel_1978 did u meet Jeffrey Dean Morgan??
@@David_Theisen I wish. He hasn't come down here, that I know of. Met a lot of other people from the Walking Dead, but not JDM.
did you get to meet him?? him and sam elliot are two dudes id pay out the booty to meet@@David_Theisen
Thanos in End Game was great!!! Especially when Tony Stark said "I am Iron Man" and snapped his fingers!!!! Just epic!!!!
Thanos' death in Endgame is NOT satisfying but tearful.
It's only satisfying if AND ONLY IF the villain is a hate sink and died by karma.
I mean, is there ANY purely evil villain whose death isn't satisfying?
Seeing Molly Weasley kill Bellatrix was very satisfying. Molly had already lost one son (Fred) and had another one (George) hurt while rescuing Harry, and she wasn't letting anything happen to her only daughter. Plus we finally saw how powerful Molly was.
Yeah Bellatrix is weak and idiot.
Hot take: Molly was a great mom
Perfect line too!! Even though I’m not a Harry Potter fan that “Not my daughter you bitch” sounds perfect!!
This should have been Neville or andromeda Tonks.
Bella killed her own sisters daughter. And tortured Neville’s parents into insanity. It’s a shame he didn’t get his revenge
@@Bilski86 Fair points. As I remember. Andromeda was not involved in the Battle of Hogwarts. She was taking care of her grandson (Remus and Nymphadora's son). Not sure Neville had the experience to kill Bella. Remember that Bella was dueling Hermione, Luna and Ginny all at once when Molly stepped in.
I still love that Inigo overcame a near fatal stab wound simply by sheer force of will, and burning vengeance.
I would’ve picked Monsieur Calvin Candie from Django Unchained
I would say more his butler Stephen
@@nokturnalwerewolf7746 him and Walton Goggins character too
The Brittle brothers
@@scabbaraethe ones that killed Django’s brothers??
Fun fact: Alan's reaction when he falls is real because the team didn't tell him he was gonna legit fall for the scene in die hard because they wanted it as real as possible
From what I heard they dropped him on the count of 2 instead of 3 like he was told. There's no way they dropped him twenty feet without making him aware of the stunt
@@stephengrigg5988 yes that's how they did it played like they were popping a dislocated arm if you will one.. two..POP!! So to clear up my earlier comment they DID tell him but dropped him at the "wrong" time lol
Commodus throwing those weak punches right before he was stabbed makes it that much more satisfying.
Commodes? Is he the bad guy in Gladiator?? You know they are doing a sequel to that finally!! Don’t know why!!!
I will forever remember and cherish the day I sat in the cinema seeing mama Molly dropping the B-word before totally obliterating Bellatrix. It was the first time I experienced the audience collectively gasping in awe and cheering in amusement. Just wow!!!
The mother from Carrie still haunts my nightmares.
I can't imagine what would have happened if she and Mrs. Carmody met...
I’d love to see a drawing of the mother burning in hell while Carrie looks down at her from heaven with a smug expression! 🤣
They're all gonna laugh at you
The mother in Mommy Dearest creeped me out! And of course Mrs. Bates
I'm surprised that Gladiator was chosen as number 1, I was afraid everyone had forgotten all about it, after so many years.
Too bad The Last Samurai was not on this list, it was good to see Nathan Algren kill Colonel Bagley before the samurai army was defeated.
I loved the last samurai
Not a movie, but the death of Handsome Jack at the end of Borderlands 2 was the most catharsis I’ve ever had at the end death of a main villain
The whole game has you growing angrier and angrier with him. And after finally destroying the thing he’s been working for the entire time, to finally be able to blast him is the greatest feeling of stress relief.
I dumped my entire ammo and grenade pool on that fucker's corpse, and then melee'd him relentlessly, after.
There was Ma-Ma's death in judge dread reboot, most of the "Maze runer" main villian deaths. Agent Smith in the matrix. Most of the Harry potter villains.
I know it doesn't count in this particular category, but Judge Doom's demise in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" was most entertaining.
I didn't scroll down far enough. I thought someone had to have mentioned Dredd. That death was excellent.
The equalizer that Robert shoots teddy with a nailgun that was satisfying
I think this doesn't make it because the first fight when he tries to pay off the villains is even better. The Equalizer (2014)
"That girl, Alana... She's gonna go on living. You... You're gonna bleed out all over this funky floor... All over 9,800 dollars"
The entire series could be an entry on this list.
Ma-ma's death in Dredd, Alonzo's death in Training Day, and Marla Grayson in I Care A Lot. All worthy of this list
Colonel Tavington’s death was definitely the most satisfying for me. He did an amazing job as the villain.
Agree 100% Hands down, he was the most vile villain I have ever seen on film.
King Einon from Dragonheart should have been on this list. Close to the top, if not the top spot. That guy was about as evil as they get.
yup 👏
Yo that's a pull
@@tevshy I don't know what that means.
Agreed
Alan Rickman death as Hans is satisfying. His death as Snape in Harry Potter can go in the list of sad deaths.
How. Oh HOW is Jason Issacs character from The Patriot only an honorable mention? Did you forget that he killed a whole town in a church by burning them alive!!!! One of those people was the protagonist’s fiancée. And that’s only an honorable mention??
jason was great in that role. wow.
Amen to that, and he killed almost all of Mel Gibson's family.
i gotta say it, molly weasley is one of the best movie mothers ever
Captain Love in “The Mask of Zorro”, Mama in “Dredd”, and Benny from “The Mummy” (1999), all should have made this list.
Benny was more karma but satisfying
Captain Love’s death is one of the most over the top deaths I’ve ever seen but god damn is it deserved
I would have liked to see the assassin from Dreamscape make the list, but that was not a blockbuster, was it, just a cult hit indie film. The POTUS' advisor who ran the assassin also got a quite satisfying death as well.
Benny would be great!
Not to mention Captain Love is killed by the cart also dragging Montero to his own deserved fate, a double death spectacular
Binged All Star Wars episodes earlier this year and even though I think I've seen the first three a couple other times Palpatine's death never got old
Nice to see the princess bride film on a list. It is a classic film with many set pieces, and just as many plot twists that make it a film where you need to watch it at least 3 times before you have noticed all the signs that give the film its consistency and its unique character development.
It's full of giant plot holes.
Immortan Joe is such an underrated villain.
Joe who?
@@--------------------------5648 Joe mama!!!
@@GodzillaFan528 Ooof got eem
Even though I am not that into Harry Potter anymore, it was satisfying to see Bellatrix go.
professor umbrige
Did she turn to stone before exploding? I don't know what happened. I don't know Harry Potter spells.
I absolutely love this list. While I may not agree with all the positions I do agree with each selection. And I feel like there are enough satisfying deaths in film out there that you could do “20 more satisfying character deaths of hated characters”.
I think my most favourite death of a hated film character would be Calvin Candie in 'Django Unchained'. Also Carter Burke in 'Aliens' was pretty satisfying.
I was going to say, Carter Burke is an omission that should be on this list- although the list is very good. But the sliminess of Carter was exceptional, Paul Reiser did an amazing job.
I know it wasn't at the end of the movie, but when William Wallace killed the English sentry who killed his love, that was most satisfying.
OOOH YEAH Le Sequel Grande!
Kristen may you stay awesome and keep on entertaining with that angelic presenting voice you have!
Sarumon in extended edition of LOTR falling to his death and landing on spikes was a satisfying end.
just expensive flash compared to the book, where Saruman gets his throat cut from behind in the midst of being insufferable, and his body decays: Not only a valid excuse for extending the story beyond the big ending, but downright wretched
What makes this scene satisfying is that Saruman's death is also Wormtongue's undoing.
@@leondzananovic6576 yes, but that had happened in the book in a less flashy fashion
Although wildly historically inaccurate, the death of Commodus in "Gladiator" was epic, and greatly satisfying. Good choice.
Who the hell cares about inaccuracy?
@@majorfanboy2005 With this movie? Nobody. BTW: I hope you weren't being a douchebag. I wasn't.
@@phyllisdicks9830 I wasn't being a douchebag! What in any way that I just said makes me sound like a douchebag!
@@majorfanboy2005 It's hard to tell, sometimes. A neutral statement can often go either way. Gladiator really was a great film.
I mean, the death of the Nazgûl with the classic “I am no man” in the Return of the King is top 5 for me…
It was ahead of its time in the books and really in the 2000s.
Calvin Candie and Stephen in the movie Django Unchained.
Damn good list. However, I am surprised that you lack a single Western movie in it!
Frank's (Henry Fonda) death in Once Upon a Time in the West was really, really satisfying.
That scene also revealed a backstory that explained Harmonica's (Charles Bronson) decades of seeking vengeance.
Liberty Valence’s death was very satisfying. Lee Marvin played one of the greatest villains in cinema ever.
They could also, if you desire a western, do a western with a twist. Selleck's character killing Alan Rickman's character in Quigley Down Under was perfect, and Selleck had the perfect line as he shot Rickman. This movie is well worth a watch.
@@heinleinreader Yeah, I remember that one! The Australia location/production made it uniquely interesting. I recently read it was written originally for Steve McQueen; however, he unfortunately succumbed to cancer, so it ended up with Selleck. "The Good, the Bad, the Weird" was also quite atypical too, having it's setting in an 1939 Manchurian desert.
I think that (a south Korean Western) would also fit into your "Western with a twist" category; however, I'd just be happy with Westerns being represented!
@@GreenwoodQuake So, oddly in a way, might the Seven Samurai, as that Kurosawa classic was the basis for the original Magnificent Seven film. It certainly had a quasi-Western flavor to it. And the main reason I mentioned the film is that I thought it was a great performance by Rickman (as usual), and was perhaps the best of Tom Selleck. And Laura San Giacomo gave a brilliant performance as Crazy Cora. I thought it was a movie worthy of far more recognition than it has gotten. It was well written, well directed and well acted. Rickman was also, in my view, underappreciated in his role in Galaxy Quest. The man was arguably one of the greatest character actors of his generation, perhaps in all of acting history period. This is my opinion, but a credible on I think. If anyone deserves a posthumous lifetime achievement Oscar, Rickman does. That's my story, and I am sticking to it.
How about the newer True Grit, I don’t remember the details but I remember crying in relief
You know that Cypher proved that Neo was the One prior to anyone else knowing because a minute before he said it would take a miracle for Neo to live and then he got one when Cypher was killed suddenly against all odds
No shit
@@75Everett47 Of course, but how many people caught on to it? After all most of the critics just got stuck on the action sequences and missed what the plot meant completely.
Was evident by his name…
@@DracarysSnow What was evident? A cypher is an encryption code, if it was supposed to be obvious then would his name be Judas instead? If you meant Neo then that means new which doesn't give any guarantees of being better, just different from what came before since it could still have plenty of new flaws
@@ArgonTheAware First, I know what a cypher is. Second, it’s not that serious, relax. Third, Neo, anagram for One.
I hope there's a pt2 to this list.. have you seen PAN'S LABYRINTH?
"Your son will never even know your name" Savage
OMG YES YES YES!!!!!!!!
I was thinking that as well..!!
Word has it JK Rowling decided to have Molly deal with Bellatrix after someone said Molly was, quote, "Just a mother," unquote. More like magical Mother Bear.
Like the old saying goes "Hell hath no fury like the wrath of a woman scorned or angered." That is true especially if the woman is a mother willing to do anything to protect her kids as Bellatrix learned the hard way.
@@derrickhaggard You got that right. Angry Mama Bear = danger.
@@harryboyes2812 still robbed neville of his moment of revenge, and for that reason alone it was garbage. Iknow neville got THE biggest moment, by literally saving all 3 core members at once with the same swing, but that was for the overall good of the world, not his personal tragedy, which he deserved. THey could have let molly kill another DE, Bella was marked for Neville, and no amount of girl power or soccer moms unite or mama bear nonsense will make it okay
@@TheGhostofMrArthurs Did you actually read the books or watch the movies? At what point in any of them did Neville Longbottom seem like the type that was looking for vengeance?
@@davidchappell1548 well, when bella first appeared to them and he said he gets to avenge his parents is a good start. I'm a big believer in earned kills, I dont like quota kills. Look at Game of Thrones, Sansa didnt deserve ramsey's kill, that was theons. Joffrey wasnt Olenna's kill. I get people love to pull the rug out, but JUST because its the obvious way, doesnt mean its wrong. Neville should have gotten Bella, fact. To hell with writing it in "because she's just a mom"
I'm surprised yall didn't put in Percy from The green mile as an unofficial death lol brain dead more like it
That one would have been good! Loved when he died.
@@kyleketchum9576 I don't remember him actually dying in either the book or the movie. I think that he was just driven insane to the point where he was committed to the same psych ward that he was supposed to start working at.
@@visgrrl1 The book mentions he eventually died later
Nice list! Can you also do Top 20 Satisfying Villain Deaths from Movies?
The whole video, I'm thinking. The bad guy in Dirty Harry will be in the top 5 at least. There's no villain I've hated more in a movie. And he's not even mentioned.
In the movie he calls himself Scorpio making him a fictional version of the Zodiac Killer. Aside from being a psychopath who picks randomly selected innocent victims including little kids to murder what makes him especially loathsome is the way he exploits bleeding heart liberal judges and the media to portray himself as a poor abused victim of police brutality literally being allowed to get away with murder. Dirty Harry's whole iconic "Do you feel lucky?" routine at the beginning of the film showing that Harry never loses track of how many bullets he's fired is basically to set up Harry giving this guy an excuse to shoot him.
Good call
Jaws from Goldfinger I think it was!!!
This was freaking amazing!😆👍🏼👍🏼
Why WOULD you exclude animated deaths, though? When I saw "Beauty and the Beast", the entire audience cheered when Gaston bit it.
That said, Commodus being #1 is spot on.
because there would have been multiple disney ones... do i have to remind you of Frollo's death?!
Cuz they wanted to do one for specific animated deaths later haha
Out of all of the villains I’ve seen die on this montage, I am sorely missing Cyrus “The Virus” Grissom of Con Air fame. True, his death was nothing short of Rasputaniun, but the fact that he had the stones to go after the protagonist’s daughter can’t be ignored.
To be honest, I want to see more hatable villains go out like he did. Over and over, being fatally wounded in a variety of ways.
Yeah Cyrus really was good! Kim Jong Un in the Interview was great!! The bad guy in True Lies
The shark in "Jaws"?
Jame Gumb in "The Silence of the Lambs"?
Vincent in "Collateral"?
Mitch Leary in "In the Line of Fire"?
No Captain Love from the Mask of Zorro?... That sure was satisfying.
“And then the emperor comes back somehow, we don’t know how he just does” Kathleen Kennedy aka The absolute least qualified person to ever write a Star Wars film ever in existence of humans
0:51 that part with Leia pwning Jabba, apparently she was unconsciously drawing on the Dark Side to have enough oomph to choke his lights out. Just something I found out about recently.
Cunningham in Rob Roy.
Burke in Aliens.
Lursa and Betor in Star Trek Generations (never have I ever seen people jump out of their theatre seats until this happened)
BURKE!!!! The epitome of corporate 😈 - great choice!
Disagree with the choices of L & B; they should not have even been in that film, and instead have had continuing storylines for DS9!
Loved seeing the borg queen die because of what she did to data.
Good list. One I thought would be on here though is Carter from Aliens. Good acting Paul Reiser.
Tavington definitely deserves more than an honorable mention, just couldn't wait for him to die...another mention is Archibald Cunningham from Rob Roy
Give no quarter! None given!
Alma Coin's death will always be satisfying, especially knowing that Snow was close to death anyways.
@ImprovFAN Yeah especially after she killed Prim
16:18 Well, when you say "play around with the details of the Emperor's end", you probably mean *just bring him back with absolutely NO EXPLANATION.*
425: 5 -no wonder this got ton of awards
4 -nicely done Jordan Peele
3 -Very indeed
2 -Hands down, best one and should be number one 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
1 -I hate him and is the worst
I would have loved it if Peter Jackson had included the death of Saurman in "Lord of the Rings." Absolutely satisfying in the book.
It's in the Extended Edition
It was better to see Gollum and Sauron’s eye 👁️ die!!!!
08:57
in the book
Mrs CARMODY
was an old woman that
became a fanatic after her
husband died
The most satisfying movie death for me was Amon Goeth in Schindler's List. After everything that piece of filth did, it was so therapeutic to see him hang.
I agree to that.
I swear to god, “GET OFF OF MY PLANE!!!!” has lasted the test of time. Who doesn’t know it, love it, need more of it…?
"Not *my* daughter, you BITCH!" never gets old
THAT was an epic kill, especially because of who did the deed.
It's the ultimate quote for loving parents who fiercely protect their children. ❤ 17:11
Mike wasn't able to pull off that stunt at the end 😂
15:27 - Palpatine *doesn't* REALLY die because he's STILL here in Episode 9, Rise of Skywalker. Maybe just sent off into the "Phantom Zone"?
To be honest what was more satisfying was vader saving his son.
Those final three movies sucked so hard I don't count those anyhow.
@@jamesbell1613Not you too!! You call yourself a Star Wars fan and can’t even remotely try to enjoy episodes 7, 8 and 9??? I thought that end battle in ep. 9 was absolutely epic!! A Star Wars fan’s dream come true!! Magnificent!! All those Star Destroyers, Large Rebel ships, Dreadnaughts, Frigates and others!!
@@David_Theisen Uhhh I did see them. They were overall awful. 😂
@@jamesbell1613 You’re impossible!! I’m sick of these so called Star Wars fans!!
Dune - Baron Harkonnen
Star Trek II - The Wrath of Khan - Khan
Willow - Bavmorda OR General Kael
Tombstone - Johnny Ringo
Last Action Hero - Ripper
True Lies - Aziz
License to Kill - Franz Sanchez
Conan the Barbarian - Thulsa Doom
Warden Norton death in The Shawshank Redemption
The last thing to go through his head before that bullet was how did Andy outwit him.
Nice one, well done
Probably your best list to date! I agree with every one of them!
I agree with your first pick.
But somehow I wish Annie in Misery was higher, at least top 5.
President snow laugh just before he dies it fucking fantastic
“One last bit of chaos!!!!”
He knew he was going down and wanted to take Coin with him. Drama King to the end.
@@mish375 oh yeah absolutely. The best line of the series was at the end when snow fell Katniss evening.
“You’re lying” Katniss says.
“Now miss Everdeen….we both agreed never to lie to each other”
Say what ya want about snow. Dude knew how to play
@@Bilski86 Yep. You see, what Alma didn't understand was Snow had established a particular decorum with Katniss. Because even though he's a sociopath, he still has rules of engagement. One of those rules was not lying to Katniss and being upfront about what he was willing to do. So when he said that Coin killed Prim and the children without reason, Katniss knew he was telling the truth.
Generally I hate villains and especially sociopaths, but Suzanne Collins wrote him so well that Coriolanus is that villain you love to hate in a way. He has dimension to him. And if you watch the prequel, then rewatch the trilogy (quadrilogy?), a lot of his actions are given additional context for why he acts the way he does. Doesn't make it right, but it does make sense given that he grew up in a literal war zone and sees the Games as preventing another Dark Days descent in chaos (as well as believing they show people who they really are). It's incredibly rare for a sociopathic character to operate on that level of honesty. He knows he's a monster but feels his actions are necessary for Panem's survival. Alma Coin lost it after losing her family and had no limits to what she wanted to do to secure power.
As someone once said, "there's not much we can say we like about Prez Snow, but oh the reasons be real good."
@@mish375 absolutely I don’t have anything to add you nailed it
President snow is one of the better villains written recently. Cause at the end of the day when he’s dead the audience thinks “damn….maybe he wasn’t totally wrong”
Don’t get me wrong. I enjoyed the way he died. He did more to the people than he did to Katniss. He didn’t kill her sister. He didn’t bomb the children at the capitol.
He did starve the people and treated them them horribly. I love how he dies as much as I loved his character
One of the few villains that is all political. I don’t believe he personally killed anyone in the movies
@@Bilski86 Something I particularly like about Collins' writing is that even before she wrote the prequel, you knew there was an untold depth to Coriolanus that Donald Sutherland acted out masterfully. (And Tom Blyth in the prequel also did an equally fantastic job) You knew Snow wasn't just some stock villain dictator character, but that there was some real depth there. We just didn't get the full picture until the prequel. Something I always wondered was whether he was afraid of a descent into another war having lived through The Dark Days, which is why he had hope in the Games satisfying humanity's bloodlust and how he saw them as getting people to adapt and survive. What was it he said? "Hope is the only thing stronger than fear." The collapse of the system meant that Panem's future is unknown and I do like that Mockingjay ends with that uncertainty. Everyone hopes that they can make a better system with the Games gone, but it will be a long road to get there. And we are left wondering whether things will be better.
Personally I thought it was poetic justice how Coriolanus died. It wasn't one person who killed him, he was trampled by the people he oppressed for decades. And some theorize that the circle he stands in is the same one he stands in at the end of the prequel, staring up at the statue, contemplating the future Panem will have under him. Suzanne's thematic mirroring is fantastic. Everything comes full circle.
I'd say Coriolanus killed on his way to the top, which is established in both Mockingjay and TBOSAS, then had others do it for him. Octavius (the general) was the only one in the OT movies that he personally poisoned.
Finally Col. Tavingtion getting some recognition! Such a despicable underrated villain. Jason Issacs killed the role!
He's so good at playing despicable characters.
@@leondzananovic6576 right
Bill’s death in Kill Bill vol. 2 deserved the number 1 spot. It’s two movies worth of satisfaction and it’s emotional and beautiful
The best thing about Commodus was you knew you could beat him up even as a kid but his power was scary 😨
Nokes (Kevin Bacon) from Sleepers. I hated him so much that when I saw him killed, I leaped for joy.
Somewhere in there, the Wicked Witch of the West deserves a mention.
Definitely!!! She dares to take Toto away from Dorothy!! You wicked old witch I’ll bite you myself!!!
Henry Rhodes death was hard core and one of my favorite villain deaths all time
Molly Weasley: "Not my daughter you bitch!"
Me reading the book: "Oh Bellatrix, now you've fucked up big time"
Rhodes is definitely up there with my favorites
Bud saluting him at the end was a nice cherry on the top
Magneto: Peace was never an option
Me: *Hol’ up-*
Great list, was hoping to see Saruman, even in the honourable mentions.
Good choice!
2002's Count of Monte Cristo honestly should have been on this list
Im so glad other people pick this movie as well, its definitely underrated and that death is easily one of the most satisfying of all time.
Captain Rhodes was so over the top in Day of the Dead. Loved him, lol.
I never realized how much I found movie deaths satisfying until now
Hogwash, sir… pure fiddle faddle