10 Perfectly Weird David Bowie Movie Performances

By Jack Morrell /

9. Malthazard - Arthur And The Invisibles (2007)

Bowie€™s having fun here in this charming, underrated animated fantasy from Luc Besson, playing the twisted ruler of dark forces in the miniature kingdom of the Minimoys (each the size of a tooth). Malthazard is a former Minimoy knight, the most charismatic and brave in all the kingdom, who commanded a force to range out into the wastelands to find his people a new source of water. When he returns victorious but traumatised from his trials, the sole survivor, his people have forgotten him, and society has changed: courageous knights are no longer necessary in this new egalitarian Minimoy kingdom, and Malthazard finds himself irrelevant and cast aside. That's all fuel for a Disney-villain-style transformation into a warped, scarred version of himself, the general of legions of sinister warriors.Bowie is creepily compelling throughout, in a kind of cracked, ugly, kids redux of his superior Goblin King of two decades earlier. Where Jareth is a fantasy figure though, Malthazard has more in common with Rowling€™s Voldemort: a wracked, exiled, haunted figure whose name must never be mentioned (he€™s referred to as €˜M€™, or €˜Evil M€™), poisoned and poisonous. Incidentally, if you€™re going to seek out Arthur And The Invisibles, it€™s recommended that you find the European or UK version of the movie - some of the running time was snipped to cater to American audiences, and whoever wielded the scissors left some important plot and character beats on the cutting room floor.