10 Movies Where You Want The Villain To Win
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- Опубліковано 14 чер 2024
- We’re bad people for thinking this way...
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"I'm the bad guy?... How'd that happen? I did everything they told me to." Such a sad realization he has.
Whats that from
@@helluvagooddrawer2027 Falling Down
@@darrenbeilke6173 cool
Clyde Shelton in Law Abiding Citizen.
He's the villian, but with how he was written and the things he went through, you want him to win but you know that he shouldn't because of what he wants to do.
YES!!!!!
I still maintain that he actually did win. He made Foxx's character realize the cost of taking the easy way in making deals to avoid the possibility of losing. Win or lose, Shelton wanted someone to fight for him and his family, not just treat it as a routine transaction and on to the next deal.
@@jasonibbs yeah. Since Nick resorted to illegal means to stop Clyde, I kinda see it like what Joker (Heath Ledger) said: "I took Gotham's white knight, and brought him down to our level."
100% this.
Great movie ruined by Foxx's ego. Shit ending because Foxx had him "win" in the end.
How is "Law Abiding Citizen" not on this list, (where I actually fully expected it to be number 1). Clyde Shelton was not only a genius in his planning/execution of his revenge, but he had a completely understandable motivation for his rampage.
I will also admit i was sometimes rooting for John Kramer in the Saw movies (especially in Saw VI with those POS insurance company workers)
Lol I was just about to say that about Law Abiding Citizen. Shelton’s revenge was both brilliant and understandable. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t want him to succeed with his bombing at the film’s climax.
Because that movie was trash.
My exact thought! I honestly have a love/hate relationship with that film specifically because they did TOO good at making Clyde likable. I wanted him to win so badly that I was upset by the ending of the movie.
EXACTLY! Law Abiding Citizen! For the Win!!😃👌
Absolutely.
Hannibal Lecter wasn’t the villain in The Silence of the Lambs. He was a side character whose influence helped the protagonist defeat the true villain, Buffalo Bill.
When Stephen Spielberg directed "Jaws," he made major changes to the novel because he said that he found the main characters so unlikeable, he actually wanted the shark to win!
If you read the novel, they _are_ pretty obnoxious...
jacking a spot just to say, n'jadaka
Prince Nuada, Hellboy 2: The Golden Army. The best example of a sympathetic villain. that I've ever seen.
Roy Batty in Blade Runner.
What about killmonger in Black Panther
@@xxxsully420 also Vulture and Zemo?
MAD RESPECT for reaching back for a classic black & white-era film for this list! These films get so little attention in the internet era, and this was a breath of fresh air, given the WEALTH of fantastic films of the time. Way to go WhatCulture!
Those were the times when actors actually had to act well and it was more about actors/actresses' onscreen presence that made the movie.... today alas it is much the opposite! One recent one I liked that was like these was the movie The Outfit
The character of Ed Harris from the movie Rock, is the one I'm missing here the most. Yes, he turns out to be a "good guy" in the end, but his methods were questionable enough in my opinion, that he could have made the list.
Brigadier General Francis X. Hummel! And yes, I was just going to mention him! I can really empathize with what he's trying to achieve, though he does it in a really bad way.
I think Denzel Washington was a brilliant casting in Training Day. Most people were just so used to seeing him as the good guy it really comes as a rug pull when you see him for what he is. I think that was done on purpous and its an excellent use of our own pre-prepared expectations.
Yes, but nobody wanted his character to win in the end. Great villain, but unsympathetic
A much better Denzel Washington villain role that you want to win is Frank Lucas in American Gangster
I read somewhere every villain thinks they're the hero of their own story, I can't remember where I read that but ever since I did every time I watch a villain onscreen I think how did they get to this point.
It’s true that the best wrestling heels are the ones who don’t realise that they’re the bad guys (though obviously the person themselves knows).
@@thefuturist8864 Yes definitely, I also think writers have to know their character so they can tell a good story and flesh out their characters, as the one's mentioned on this list.
🤔🧐
Tom Hiddleston said about his character Loki “Every villain is a hero in his own mind” John Barth said “Everyone is the hero of their own life story” 🤷🏻♀️
Palpatine believed he was bringing peace to the galaxy.
Falling Down is classic because the protagonist is 'us' trying to do the right thing and losing at every turn. Sure it's a touch nihilistic at times, but I still respect Foster's journey and Michael Douglas completely owned that role.
His bewilderment at the end ("Am I the bad guy here.... how did that happen?") is just heartbreaking.
Yes! This is exactly right! Falling Down!
Not having Law Abiding Citizen on this list is an absolute crime.
The bigger crime is the ending
I think falling down is about me. When you lose so much until theres nothing left to live for, snapping becomes an option. I refuse to go off the rails though. I see my little girl every week and that's why I'm still alive.
It's a sad statement that this movie highlights how much we need a break just to survive. Not even succeed. When life doesn't give you that break, you lose. Hope, persistence, patience. If life wo t work out for me, I'll do it myself.
There are only 5 things you need to survive: oxygen, water, food, fire and shelter in that order. Sometimes you just have to survive to get to a place worth living again.
7:15 I actually felt so bad for Michael Douglass ' character in Falling Down, I cried when he died at the end. 😥
It’s hard for me to feel bad for the white man who sees himself as a victim after his kind spending literally HUNDREDS of years victimizing POC and women.
He was a little too unhinged to sympathize with. Still a great movie though.
This should be on this list. I agree.
He's a principled man that speaks for all of us that our intrusive thoughts won't let us who couldn't take it anymore.
Never knew that Baltimore was a state until i watched this Video. Lol.
I was looking for this comment!
I was looking for it too
That makes4 of us unfamiliar with The entire state of Baltimore
I definitely did NOT want Denzel Washington to win in Training day. Proof what a great actor he is.
really thought law abiding citizen would be on here, high on the list too.
Law abinding citizen is probably the top movie where I wanted a villain to win and was a Lil mad when he didnt🖤
Exactly!
Thank Jamie Foxx's ego for ruining the end.
Yeah and also Zemo from Civil War
What about Neil from Heat? My wife and I found ourselves cheering for him and were disappointed when he didn’t
Whoa whoa whoaaaa. Where's Law Abiding Citizen? Not only should that movie be on the list, but it should be number 1 too for the way we symphonthyze for the villain and the only reason the good guy won was because the main star of the film threatened to walk unless he got the win, making it all right that we get screwed by the system.
While talking about silence of the lambs, you actually said, ‘…the entire state of Baltimore…’ Um, Baltimore is a CITY, not a state. 🤣
Ok, I combed the comments to make sure I didn't hear it wrong.
Specifically at 4:30.
And he actually escaped from Memphis, not Baltimore.
Give him a break, he's British
@@cleverboy867 and I am South African 😂
Khan in Star Trek Into Darkness. Khan, in this case, is a mirror version of Kirk. If Kirk's crew were kidnapped and threatened and he was forced to do things he doesn't want to do in order to keep them safe, I argue that he would have done almost everything Khan did to save the people he cared about. And, in the end, it's Khan who does win because he is reunited with his crew.
100%
Star Trek: Into Darkness is underrated. Sure, it doesn't hold a phaser to the original Wrath of Khan (let's not forget how compelling Ricardo Montalban's depiction of the character was), but Benedict Cumberbatch brought his a-game to the roll and made it his own rather than try and one-up Montalban. I especially loved the final chase scene between him and Spock. Never before in Trek had I scene such an action spectacle of two super-strong characters beating the crap out of each other while performing parkour Tom Cruise would be proud of.
The joker shooting those guys on the subway was based on Bernie Goetz who in 1984 shot some hoods on the NY subway and became a hero (although there was debate as to whether he was in real danger, if he used excessive force, and if the heightened crime and fear in NY at the time excused any overreaction).
Actually that incident was inspired from another movie where the protogonist of the movie was completely opposite of joker i think joker is actually everything evil and worst things of a human being the movie did a very disgusting greedy idea to turn that into a hero by changing characteristics of the character and giving him characteristics of The Thomas Wayne And The Bruce Wayne And giving Joker's characteristics to joker shows how much industry has gone greedy because all of people who support this!
Jules, your motivational quips at the end of your videos really hit hard when its what I need to hear. Thank you.
I would add the movies Blow, with Johnny Depp playing George Jung, Ray Liotta's portrayal of Henry Hill in Goodfellas, and Woody Harrelson/Juliette Lewis as Mickey and Mallory Knox in Natural Born Killers.
Not a movie but I think Ward from agents of shield fits the description of this list so well, I loved his character and was rooting for him for the entire time he was on the show and was quite upset when he finally died
Loved these movies! Reminds me of my first reading of the novel, "The Chocolate War". Bad guys win, heroes lose, and the corruption of life continues on. Truly left me baffled and quiet, like The Empire Strikes Back kind of ending.
That book was why my schools furniture was welded.
Love that book
I prefer the Hannibal show Mads version over the movie Hopkins version. Also didn't hate the final season. Really really really want a session 4.
I wanted to see Mr Pink from 'Reservoir Dogs' to win in the end.
Yes. I carry this hope that he blasted his way free of the police once again and escaped.
What about Gerrard Butler's character in Law Abiding Citizen?
They should have kept the bonkers motivation Thanos originally had. I get why they didn't, and a lot of audiences would disagree with me. But he's called the MAD Titan for a reason (and it's not being multi ability dependant).
Tom cruise in collateral was so unbelievably cool! I'd kill for a entire movie about that character
What about historical villains like 'Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid'? Their deaths in Bolivia, after being cornered by the local federales, was truly heartbreaking. Robert Redford & Paul Newman really made you love these guys even as they became public enemies 1& 2!
Training Day was a superb film, but no way did I want denzel to win. When the Russians pulled up alongside, I was like 'Karma, dude!'
Yeah nobody did. He's just a villain. A great one but unsympathetic
@@crankfastle8138 It was when he murdered his 'buddy' Roger (Scott Glenn), just to steal his stash that I knew he was never gonna get my sympathy. So cold!
I wanted him to win
I was 100% wanted Ethan Hawke to take Denzel down in Training Day. Denzel was great, but I actually cared for Hawke, and he was great.
Same here. I can't imagine people rooting for Alonzo.
I agree. I am surprised that the movie was on this list considering nobody I know in person would root for Denzels character.
Great villain, but unsympathetic or relatable. Nobody wanted Denzel to win that day.
I wanted him to win, I love when the bad guy beats the good guy😎
DIE HARD!!! every Christmas (and yes it is a Christmas movie) I always hope I have stumbled across a directors cut when Hans Gruber wins.
I’ve just started watching this and am hoping that Robin Williams’s character from One Hour Photo isn’t in this list, because it should be clear he’s not a villain.
I’m so confused how Daniel Day Lewis is the villain in there will be blood, he killed 2 ppl who were one trying to trick him and the second was trying to finesse him. He’s at most an anti-hero
He’s more of a stand-in for capitalism, which is the real villain of the movie. Based on an Upton Sinclair book (Oil!).
@@tylerposing3585 interesting I might need to read that, I love movies like this because the main character is flawed like real life but you still want him to succeed
I disagree with Training Day. I wanted something to catch up with him.
Who wanted thanos or denzel to win? Missed this one. You had a clockwork orange, pulp fiction, oceans eleven…
I was hoping for Magneto and Cumberbatch as Kahn in 'Into The Darkness'.
I’m surprised that Tamara wasn’t in there: she’s hated by several students, her mother left, her dad was a sicko and she’s love-starved, with her teacher being the only source of comfort in her life.
I haven’t seen it for many years, but as soon as I saw the title of this video I thought of Edward Fox’s character from The Day of the Jackal (1973). Even since I watched the movie, I have carried with me a great deal of respect for how seeing much of the movie from the Jackal’s perspective gives the viewer permission to root for him, even though we know what he is doing is wrong and doomed to failure.
This is a really great list. I think it’s a fantastic conversation. Every entry on the list belongs here. Looking forward to the next volume.
Killmonger would a worthy addition to that next list.
Honestly, one of the best, most sympathetically written villains ever, imo.
@@Anurepa wildly disagree. Sorry, he "kills" T'challa, takes a throne he didn't deserve, mobilizes his war dogs around the world so the people that "look like us" can take the world. Literally decided wakandan weapons needed to be distributed first. Not one altruistic or selfless action by him. He's just an angry man who wants to punish the world because his dad was killed after betraying his king and country.
Along with Mr Glass,Zemo and the vulture
I've spent a depressing amount of time without Jules videos on WhatCulture. So happy to see you back!
Darth Vader... I sooooooo wanted him to grease all the ewoks😘
I was definitely not rooting for Alonso in training day!
By the third act.. when he's stalking the rookie in the project houses.. the Denzel character is like a monster from a horror movie!
I was rooting for him
I know there was no reason to bring it up, but MAN, Third Man has an AMAZING score. Jaunty and riveting, seriously a one of a kind in noir
Love that zither !
Obviously, you haven't had the delightful experience of seeing "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot"!
Character for character sake - leaving aside the actor's performance itself - Falling Down should be #1. For one he does do what we all wanted to do at one time or another and also for the fact that if anything he needed help more than the others on this list which becomes clear at the end.
And as for Thanos oh the irony... in the movies they show how nature recovers after half the population is wiped out then comes the pandemic and lo and behold: nature starts recovering as soon as humans are quarantined.
If you want filmic morality ambiguity, check out Shane Meadows' 'Dead Man's Shoes.' Not an easy watch. 😅
That movie is haunting.
According to TV Tropes this list would be an example of "Rooting for the Empire."
Wolf of Wall Street! I know Leo's take on Jordan Belfort is absolutely amazing, you know he's going to go down at somepoint, and you know he's just a despicable individual, but man do uou enjoy watching him!
"I'm the bad guy?"
"Yeah."
"How did that happen?"
You cannot have this list without including Law Abiding Citizen or Faster although he really did away with it in Faster but deservedly so...
Faster was a weak movie (imo). But yeah, law abiding citizen should be on top. You can thank Jamie foxx for that ending
Dude. I have the number 1 "villain". Clive Owen in inside man! His character was so amazing. And whats even better, he wins!!! It's such a happy ending. I love that movie so much
"Has rarely put a foot wrong." Love it!
What about Law abiding citizen?
Hummel, played by Ed Harris, in The Rock. I absolutely wanted him and David Morse's characters to win.
Honorable Mentions: Law Abiding Citizen & Grudge Match
"the entire state of Baltimore", man how I love you Brits 🤣
Jules message at the end always hits on a day I need it most. Thank you!
Good list.
I would have put, “Law Abiding Citizen”, in there too.
Gerard Butler was amazing in it…I wanted him to get away scott free. Cheers. 🇨🇦
He supposed to win the day. But jamie fox's ego got in the way
What about Law Abiding Citizen?
I for one, would've liked a different ending.
The way I understood it was he was suppose to get away with it but Jamie Foxx refused to do movie unless he could win at the win
@@brianericisking Man! If that's true it sucks. You'd think the director would've put his foot down and said 'the proper ending, or we hire another actor.'
Heat was amazing, as was Silence of the Lambs!
Nice message at the very end. Hit the nail on the head.
Thanks for the Pep talk Jules; it's why I like your work.
Erik Killmonger is the sympathetic villain Marvel wishes Thanos was. His backstory and goals are entirely relatable while his actions still remain clearly condemnable. In comparison, Thanos feels cheap.
His plan was to arm his war dogs around the world with Wakandan weapons and take the world. Kill mongers goals aren't relatable, he's an asshole who wants to kill T'challa and take a throne he doesn't deserve.
Totally agree. I just posted this before I saw your comment.
Nope. Thanos is the most iconic character in Marvel, at least 10X popular than Killmonger ever will be. Killmonger was forgotten in 1 movie, whereas Thanos' shadow has haunted the MCU ever since Infinity War.
No, no he is not. You need to control your white guilt, it clouds your judgment.
Ah yes, an ethno nationalist that wanted global domination and oppress people he didn't like, a very sympathetic villain indeed if you're into ethnosupremacy.
This list BEGS a "WhatCulture" philosophy video. No. 1 was a welcome stunner. Honorable mention to "Changing Lanes!"
He may be a bit obscure for this list but I think Edward Lionheart from Vincent Price’s ‘Theater of Blood’ should be on this list too. Price is so good that I pretty much root for any villain he plays (Dr. Phibes could probably be added to this list) but here he plays a wronged Shakespearean actor who is savaged by the critics guild. Interestingly many of their criticisms were leveled at Price in real life. After he supposedly kills himself Lionheart proceeds to kill each critic in a manner from one of the plays of Shakespeare that he acted in. The critics are played as pretty vile characters (except for one) and the kills are done with such style that it’s regrettable when Lionheart finally dies. It’s a really a fun movie if you haven’t seen it.
Great choice- love that movie !
I'm sorry, every time I see Thanos I can't help but see Josh Brolin riding a little girls bike with the training wheels popping off in The Goonies movie🤣
Thank you Jules, you total legend!!! Much love to you!!!
Some movies that could be added:
-Law Abiding Citizen
-Watchmen
-Bram Stoker's Dracula
-The Accountant
-The Mummy (1999)
-Pulp Fiction
-Star Trek Into Darkness
Ok, Estella was not the villain in Cruella, it was the Baroness. She sent the dogs to kill her parents and manipulated Estella to her will.
I have only seen There Will Be Blood once, and that was back in 2015. I bought it at a Pawn Shop on dvd like 2 weeks ago (it's currently 2022) because it was $1. I really need to watch it again. Paul Thomas Anderson is amazing. we should start a Paul Thomas Anderson fan club and call it the PTA hahaha. hold the meeting at a school and when all the moms walk we'll start off Daliel Plainview abandoning his son lol
Thanos didn't go far enough
I watch Jules' videos till the end for the positive encouragements.
Collateral is the best Tom Cruise performance of the past few decades.
Travis Bickle? Tony Montana? Henry Hill? Heath Ledger's Joker? Jules from Pulp Fiction?
Was stoked to see Collateral on this list, glad I’m not the only one!
What we didn't know in Infinity War was that there were Celestial's to be born in each major civilization's planet waiting for enough souls to consume the energy to be born. Thanos being half eternal / half deviant, knew this and it was also a way of actually saving entire worlds by eliminating half of the population therefore keeping the dormant celestial from having what it needs to erupt. Maybe uncle Thanos wasn't that bad after all.
Jules, you are a delight as always!
Great outro by Jules as always he's the hero of this vid!
Would love to see a list of top ten early cinema influences like buster keaton lorel and Hardy and fatty arbuckle and Charlie chaplain I think it would be interesting
WhatCulture, I’m very disappointed!!! How is Eric Kilmonger not #1 on this list considering how realistic his fight is???
It falls into the classic trope that a truely great villain is a hero in their own story
8:45 I felt like Cruella was an alternate universe where 101 Dalmatians isn't going to happen to be honest... I guess if we ever get Cruella 2 we'll find out for sure, but I just feel like she didn't actually blame the dogs in the end and even loved them when she gave the freakin' puppies to the two families.
Thanos had the right idea by realizing that there is a shortage of resources in the universe but there are too many life forms fighting for said resources. Thanos just went about it the wrong way.
No he didn't. In 50 years the universe would be in the same predicament, and then what? Round up the stones and snap again?
Why not just make infinite resources or increase resources exponentially. I mean if you can wipe out half of all life I think you could increase resources.
If we're wiping out 50% of the world I vote
India, all of Africa and south America
@@Just_Pele When he destroyed the stones, he ensured that the population would eventually double and be in the same predicament. All he did was buy some time. Not much of a savior.
They were infinity stones, presumably imbued with infinite power. He wanted to retire to gardening. Why not use that power to maintain a neverending garden?
His pathology drove him to his solution to the predicted problem.
@@freakshopusa yup. I've seen Criminal Minds episodes that explain Thanos's pathology- he suffered trauma, didn't process it, projects it onto others, and forces his solution, occasionally taking a survivor as a souvenir. Then he repeats the cycle.
Glad to see The Third Man here, one of my favourites
Uhm, Baltimore is a "city" in the "state" of Maryland. HTH
loving you too, Jules! and Denzel Washington.🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
"To reunite with his wife and daughter." Shit the man had me thinking they were the same person for a second 😂
and the interesting thing about thanos' "wipe out half to save the other half" strategy is that it's proven prior to the movie that it doesn't work. in the first guardians movie when they're doing the record scan of gamora it shows she's the last of her people, meaning that wiping out half the population of her planet only succeeded in dooming the other half to extinction.
It's a massively complicated task. Wipe out half and thrive. Because the snap is dispassionate, there is no way of knowing who is gone. An entire society may lose too many of their best and brightest to recover and thrive. Thus doomed to eventual extinction.
And that’s why the movie version of Thanos’ crusade to wipe out half the universe doesn’t work quite as well as the comic book crusade did, where he was doing it in an effort to win the affection of Death.
Ngl the heartfelt message jules leaves keeps my faith humanity in tact
RIGHT?!?
it's unexpected but wonderful to have someone you don't even know validate your humanity and your worth.
speaking of which, i hope you have a great day filled with joy.😄
Training Day was brilliant, but in what world would u want Denzel Washingtons character to survive granted its an outstanding performance by the actor but my opinion when it came to the climax and you find out what kind of man he is I was relieved that he was gunned down because a character as corrupt as his surviving would have pissed off a lot of people.
What about Clyde from Law Abiding Citizen?! I wanted him to win.....mostly
10:14, doh!! Daniel didn’t break his leg looking for oil. It was silver.
Please tell me I'm not the only one who always prefers the bad guy in movies. Surely, I can't be the only person.
Most of the time I do .
@@feck2594 cool
Law Abiding Citizen without even a mention?!?
A good entry would be the Devil's Rejects, from trilogy "The house of a thousand corpses", " The Devil's Rejects" and "The Three from Hell"
Also John Travolta in Mad City may be one of my favorite bad guys I'd love to see get away with it