20 Recent Movie Villains Who Were Instantly Iconic

You won't forget these bad guys anytime soon.

Iconic Movie Villains
Warner Bros.

Just as important as crafting a compelling movie hero is rustling up a worthy villain, because if the antagonist is a damp squib, it becomes a whole lot easier to not really care about the central conflict.

But a basically solid villain is one thing - the sheer confluence of circumstances that goes into delivering a great, even iconic all-timer antagonist is unfathomable.

Beyond the writing itself, there's casting the right actor for the part and then directing them to a phenomenal performance, while hoping that the film as a whole strikes a chord with audiences.

But sometimes a movie villain just has The Sauce, as the kids say these days, and you know from spending just a scene or two in their presence that you're watching something truly special.

And that's absolutely the case with these 20 recent movie villains, who near-instantly entered the annals of legendary, iconic movie villains, recency bias be-damned.

Regardless of what you thought of each film as a whole, these villains absolutely brought their A-game to the table, enough that they might've even left the hero choking on their dust...

20. Steven J. Lockjaw - One Battle After Another

one battle after another sean penn
Warner Bros.

Paul Thomas Anderson's superb One Battle After Another saw Sean Penn receive some of the best reviews of his career for his sublime, ultimately Oscar-winning performance as Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw - a psychotic military officer who spends the movie pursuing the members of the revolutionary outfit known as the French 75.

While it would've been easy for a character like Lockjaw to feel like a pure caricature, Penn infuses him with so much unsettling physicality - his facial tics, his stilted way of walking - that he becomes a more distinct, and distinctly horrifying antagonist.

It helps that Anderson writes Lockjaw with considerable shade, for as monstrous as Lockjaw is, there's also a fundamentally pathetic quality to him, that he's so desperate to belong to a white supremacist outfit that he fails to anticipate their ultimate decision to assassinate him.

In a movie packed with brilliant characters and performances, it's Lockjaw who makes the deepest impression - a villain who is terrifyingly believable and yet just ridiculous enough to laugh at.

 
Posted On: 
Contributor
Contributor

Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.