Every Main James Bond Villain Ranked Worst To Best

By Connor J. Smith /

18. Dr. Kananga (Live and Let Die, 1973)

United Artists

The first, and so far only, black Bond villain is the head baddie of a memorable film but there are several knocks against him. Dr. Kananga, drug trafficker and dictator of San Monique, tries at first to give the impression of a unique Bond antagonist but eventually becomes more of a gently-spoken Blofeld clone, not present during any of the film’s better moments, and lacking any truly notable individual traits as a villain.

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Kananga’s main problem is that he tends to get upstaged by the motley crew under his employ; Tee Hee and Baron Samedi are far more animated characters with more chances to shine and more memorable encounters with Bond.

His relationship with mystical Bond girl Solitaire is semi-intriguing but seems forgotten about by the film’s climax, in which Bond kills him by shoving an air pellet into his mouth, inflating Kananga, portrayed by a painfully obvious dummy, which then explodes, apparently.

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Best Moment: Kananga’s best moment actually comes while in disguise as his alternate persona, gangster Mr. Big. “Names is for tombstones, baby!” Instant t-shirt material.

Worst Moment: It's tempting to point to the least surprising twist in cinema history early in the film which “reveals’ that aforementioned gangster Mr. Big is actually Kananga himself, wearing a flimsy mask, but seriously, it has to be the dummy at the end.

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