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28 Characters Who Seemed Like The Villain In A TV Show Or Movie, But Then Actually Came Across As The Hero Upon Reflection
"Most <i>Spongebob</i> episodes I watch nowadays have me rooting for Squidward to just murder those two morons before they induce a depression breakdown on our squid boy."

28 Characters Who Seemed Like The Villain In A TV Show Or Movie, But Then Actually Came Across As The Hero Upon Reflection

Have you ever been watching a TV show or movie, and gone, “wait a minute…the villain is right!”

NBC

Well, recently Reddit user u/Chadderbug123 asked just this — here are 28 TV and movie villains that weren’t the villain at all…or at the very least, made some solid points!

1. Benny from Rent

Paramount Pictures

“I, too, would go absolutely berserk if a talking bee stole my girlfriend and gaslit me into thinking I was out of my mind.”

—u/_shes_a_jar

3. AUTO From WALL-E

Pixar

“It was one of the only almost perfectly executed AI villains. He never really talks unless needed because he wasn’t programmed to, no malicious motives, and does everything efficiently. He’s only ‘bad’ because he’s following his programming: protect the humans, and don’t let them back to earth. Not out of malicious intent, but it was what he was programmed to do. And his directive isn’t even incorrect. WALL-E finding that plant was like finding a four-leaf clover in a field of grain. The planet was nowhere near habitable, and they barely know how to stand when they get back, in reality you know nobody on that axiom is going to make it very far.”

—u/Creepercolin200

4. Ozymandias from the Watchmen comics, film, and TV show

Warner Bros. / courtesy Everett Collection

“He outsmarted the most powerful being in the universe, and WON. There actually weren’t flaws in his logic or execution.”

—u/sonic_tower

“Ozymandias is the greatest antagonist. He became a villain to save the lives of everyone on the planet from nuclear war and fallout. The premise of the end justifies the means at its core.”

—u/cookies4me04u

5. Screenslaver from The Incredibles 2

Pixar

“The monologue given during that movie regularly rings in my head. I’m sure the creepy bass robotic voice doesn’t help too. … TLDR: you think everything will always be okay and while you remain distracted, the powers that be will continue to steal from you.”

—u/kickthefuckit

6. Chuck McGill from Better Call Saul

Ursula Coyote / ©AMC / courtesy Everett Collection

“He was ultimately proven 100% correct in asserting that his brother being a lawyer would eventually ruin lives and hurt people. Granted, he was a total dick about expressing it, as well the way he went about undermining Jimmy…but he was right.”

—u/Schmedlapp

7. Aria’s parents from Pretty Little Liars

Freeform

“They’re villainized for not letting their high school daughter date her teacher??”

—u/clarabelle220

“I understand they tried to do it from the teen’s POV however it just doesn’t fit right. Like in real life he’s a predator and would be in serious trouble.”

—u/Odd-Skirt4029

8. Captain Hook from Peter Pan (the original story)

Disney

Suggested by u/AlecShadow

“The Captain Hook that has to deal with Peter Pan killing lost boys before they age out and become pirates? Or every other sanitized version of the story?”

—u/Disorderly_Chaos

“This — in the original version, Peter Pan is a monster (kidnapping boys and taking them to ‘Neverland’, but only until they reach a certain age). Captain Hook seems more like Chris Hansen if he had a penchant for the pirate life!”

—u/Queen_Cheetah

9. Squidward from SpongeBob Squarepants

Nickelodeon

“Not a true villain but Squidward. Damn, is Spongebob an annoying neighbor; I’d hate him, too.”

—u/JeffreyHugh

“Squidward’s a minimum wage worker in a monotonous day job with a boss who explicitly wants him to earn as little as possible and cuts costs everywhere, while having a musician’s heart and playing his passion instrument to have some happiness and relaxing time for himself. He then proceeds to have his only time of peace and tranquillity stolen from him by a loud, inconvenient neighbor who doesn’t take care of his shit and makes fun of him for not being a pro at music. Most Spongebob episodes I watch nowadays have me rooting for Squidward to just murder those two morons before they induce a depression breakdown on our squid boy.”

—u/RFB-CACN

10. General Hummel from The Rock

Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Suggested by u/SideQuestWriter87

“Literal terrorist, but he got sympathy from pretty much every character in the movie, including those trying to stop him. Loyal leader, made concrete demands, and never actually intended on killing anyone.”

—u/sonic_tower

“He wasn’t even really a bad guy. He went out of his way to not kill innocents (even though he threatened to), and his mission was entirely noble.”

—u/MrZeusyMoosey

11. Doofenshmirtz from Phineas and Ferb

Disney Channel

“The dude just wanted to resolve normal, common day problems like people who can’t decide what they want to order stopping the queue. We’ve all thought what he thinks, but only he has the will, intellect, and resources to actually try it.”

—u/Bamboozler522

12. Stevie from Wizards of Waverly Place

Disney Channel

“Her entire goal was to stop families from giving up their magic to just one person in the family. Like…we’re really supposed to be rooting against her? It just seemed super out of character for Alex to go against that plan.”

—u/LunarRabbit18

I was thinking exactly this. Why give up your powers when everyone can have them? Only one member of the family having wizard powers seems unsustainable for the wizarding world. I get it that it was not very nice of her to trap her brother but she was 100% right. I really thought Alex would do it, I cannot understand how or why did Alex double cross her.”

—u/More-Masterpiece-561

13. Lex Luthor from Superman comics, films, and TV shows

Clay Enos / Warner Bros. / courtesy Everett Collection

“We’re only safe as long as Superman think it’s fun to be the hero.”

—Hawu/thorne_Abendsen

“I root for Luthor as he’s my favorite DC character. I like the continuities where he isn’t cartoonishly evil but a nuanced villain who understands how dangerous an all-powerful alien could be and does some morally dubious things to ensure humanity’s survival.”

—u/Expensive-Argument-7

14. Miranda in Mrs. Doubtfire…

20th Century Fox

Suggested by u/nakedcupcake92

“Something you don’t understand as a kid watching it, but totally get as a parent. Shit, if i was married and came home to literal zoo animals in my house, I’d def go find James Bond and a nanny instead.”

—u/Ntrpd_Bot001

“Sure the zoo part is bad, but worse is planning a secret birthday party for your kid that excludes your spouse. Even if it was a simple party without a zoo, that’s messed up.”

—u/Ultrasod

15. …and also Stu

20th Century Fox / Courtesy Everett Collection

“Forget the mom, her boyfriend was really screwed. [He] was a nice guy who got hated for being a good dude.”

—u/Grizknot

16. Gorr the God Butcher from Thor: Love and Thunder

Marvel

“He was pretty scary and his motives were fair; he was just giving the Gods what they have given others for centuries.”

—u/ThePlatKnight

“Totally. Seeing all of the gods in Omnipotence City or whatever it was called really had me wanting all of them dead. Especially Zeus.”

—u/Reasonable-Exit-2811

17. Doctor Zaius from Planet of the Apes

20th Century Fox / Courtesy Everett Collection

“Dr. Zaius in Beneath the Planet of the Apes has this line which sums up his ideology to a T (paraphrasing as it’s been a hot minute): “Help you?! Why should I help you? Man is evil! Capable of nothing but destruction!”

And the best part is, while yes, by refusing to help George he leads to the world being destroyed, he wasn’t ever wrong. The end of the first movie has George learn that mankind caused a nuclear apocalypse whilst he was out in space, leaving the other apes to evolve in more or less a wasteland. And the second movie ends with George activating nukes underground in a last-ditch hail Mary and blowing Earth up.

While yes, it could’ve been avoided if Zaius just helped George, why should he have? Everything from both the Apes’ religious beliefs and their knowledge of history shows mankind to be an evil, destructive species. … And the last thing Dr. Zaius experienced was just confirmation of his belief as a human destroyed not only himself, not only Dr. Zaius, but literally the entire planet.”

—u/DuskEalain

18. Roger from Friends

NBC

“He saw the group for what they were almost immediately and when he calls them out on it, instead of saying, ‘Y’know what? He’s right, we should work on ourselves and not spend the next decade bouncing from one failed relationship to the next’ they bad mouth him behind his back and throw cookies at him after he leaves the room. He was the hero they needed but didn’t deserve.”

—u/Longjumping-Party186

19. Magneto from the X-Men comics and films

20th Century Fox

“I root for Magneto when watching the X-Men movies. He’s objectively right, and Days Of Future Past proves it.”

—u/ElodinPotterTheGrey1

“First Class, too. They save the world and are immediately betrayed, just how Magneto thought they’d be.”

—ilovesharkpeople

“He knew the hate humans had for mutants, and wasn’t as blindly optimistic as Xavier. True Malcolm X of the mutant rights movement.”

—u/sonic_tower

20. Vulture in Spider-Man: Homecoming

Chuck Zlotnick/ Columbia Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection

“I still remember I’m sitting there watching that movie and I’m like, ‘Hey this guy actually has a point!’ After Spider-Man and mainly Tony Stark fucked him over on purpose I was like, ‘Yeah Adrian, fuck those guys!’”

—TheRegular-Throwaway

21. Poison Ivy from the Batman comics, films, and TV shows

Warner Bros.

“Poison Ivy is an environmentalist at heart. … Both [Poison Ivy and Raj Al Ghul] were pushed into extremism after the broken system they’re trying to fix simply refused to change for so long that they decided the system itself needed to be torn down.”

—u/Chasingtheimprobable

“I also like the idea that she and Batman are very similar in some respects. They’re both committed zealots in their ‘war.’ They both have a certain class of living beings they’re trying to protect, and both recognize some Gotham inhabitants as innocents versus others as free game. Apart from Ivy being willing to kill, the major difference is that Batman just doesn’t care about plants that much. If he recognized them as morally important like she does, they’d be buddies.”

—u/noisypeach

22. The Red Hood from the Batman comics and related movies/TV shows

Christos Kalohoridis / DC Universe / Courtesy: Everett Collection

“Batman beats dangerous people up. They go to Arkham, are usually experimented on there and come back worse. In a way that makes Batman one of the worst perpetrators of Gotham’s constant decline into savagery. The Red Hood just straight up kills them.”

—u/ZenithCrests

23. Agent Smith from The Matrix

Warner Bros. / Roadshow Entertainment

Suggested by u/Littlefield54

“He’s accurate AF…well, except for machines being the cure. We cut down forests to urbanize all the areas on the Earth, ranch too much livestock, burn too many fossil fuels, and leave dirty diapers in the Walmart parking lot. It’s not supposed to be 116 degrees in the San Francisco Bay Area…EVER.”

—u/jife740

24. Roy Batty (and the other Replicants) from Blade Runner

Warner Bros.

“Roy Batty. What was done to him and his kind was wrong and he had righteous anger.”

—u/Basic_Distribution11

“The Replicants from Blade Runner. Used as slaves and given artificially short lives. They just wanted to live and be free.”

—u/Chatty_Monkey_Don

25. Skeletor from He-Man and the Masters of the Universe

Filmation

“He really was lonely, surrounded by incompetent people, and just wanted to get home. He-man could have shared the power of gray skull.”

—gramercygremlin

26. Mr. Wilson from Dennis the Menace

Warner Bros.

Suggested by u/Monsterenergyboi

“Seriously, that kid was a fucking dick.”

—u/Gimpstack

“The live-action movie has one of those random scenes you see as a kid that sticks with you your whole life: Mr. Wilson has been cultivating this flower that takes like 40 years to bloom and then dies in ten seconds. At the moment it’s going to bloom, Dennis causes a ruckus and Mr. Wilson misses the blooming he’s been working his whole adult life for. Looking back, that’s like one of the most disturbing moments I’ve seen on film, partly because it gets more relatable as I get older. I mean, damn, 40 years…”

—u/Grabatreetron

27. Mojo Jojo from Powerpuff Girls

Cartoon Network

“He wanted to bring free energy and advanced technology to the people. And in one episode he actually did. He made the world an amazing place. And then the Powerpuff girls ruined it all.”

—u/TheMustardisBad

28. And finally, Killmonger from Black Panther

Marvel

“Before I get into all this, I just want to add that I’m a Black/mixed person who grew up in a neighborhood like Killmonger’s in my own hometown, so I can only speak from my own perspective here.

Dude was raised in the hood (aka a predominantly Black low-income neighborhood) and his family in Wakanda did nothing to support him or his dad. So, the fact that they, and other folks in their neighborhood, could have had financial support and didn’t receive any? Even though Wakanda had the means and the technology to help out Black folks in other parts of the African diaspora who were negatively impacted by colonialism? Yeah, I’d be a bit salty and feel abandoned, too. And on top of that, Killmonger’s father was killed by them, and he watched his father die in front of him as a kid. If that doesn’t fuck you up, idk what will, man.

Some might ask, ‘Okay, so I could see where his resentment towards Wakanda comes from. Well, how does this tie into his additional resentment towards white supremacy, imperialism, and colonialism?’ Buckle up, buttercup, because it absolutely fucking does. Economic decimation, health crises, police brutality, the school-to-prison pipeline, and mass incarceration — and so many other systems of oppression stemming from white supremacy that still exist for Black people today — are here as a result of being forced into a country that our ancestors were forced to build. Just because slavery was abolished doesn’t mean its impacts went away (in fact, they just morphed in other insidious ways, but that’s a whole other can of worms). This is especially apparent in neighborhoods that I, and Killmonger, grew up in.

Given all this, I can 100% understand why Killmonger would therefore grow to have this resentment towards white supremacy, colonialism, and imperialism; which would then fuel his rage towards Wakanda, and the abandonment he felt, which turned him into a ‘villain.’ These traumatic experiences on an inpidual level, and the heaviness of cultural and generational trauma on top of it all? This shit adds up over time.

Wakanda is essentially a look at a hypothetical African nation that hasn’t been touched by colonialism in any way, shape, or form. Its existence asks, ‘How much could we have achieved had we not been decimated by imperialism? What would the health and well-being of Black people look like? What would a nation where we aren’t made to feel less-than look like? What would it feel like to have that safe haven knowing that there aren’t any larger structural systems trying to hold us, and keep us, down via poverty, mass incarceration, police brutality, etc.?’ We’ll never truly know.

So yeah, Killmonger had some points. Thanks for coming to my TEDTalk.”

—u/motioncitysoundwhack