Hey there everyone, Well let me say that no matter who you are and what type of movies you're use to watching you know that your story in that forum of art has a villain in it. Sometimes if not always the villain of our favorite stories is definitely a surprise in a way that we never realize. Sometime as I was just saying whoever the villain in a film is definitely defined by their reactions to dealing with their moral codes and their ways of dealing with their concerns is by not dealing with said concerns without letting their fists or weapons do their answering. Villains in some ways may come from being not just simple human beings at times. At times there are plots in any movie or stories that has villains take a moment or a chance at being a good person. One example of a villain having a chance of not being just a bum is the character of Apollo Creed from the Rocky film franchise in the first two films he is the world's boxing champion who offers a low ranking boxer named Rocky Balboa a chance at going to distant at fighting the the best of the best! In Rocky the fight ends in a draw by the boxing commission, In Rocky II the two contenders come to find out that they both have to prove if not to the whole world but themselves that their last fight proved nothing at all. By the next film Rocky has his former manager Micky Goldmill, (portrayed by Burgess Meredith) get winded by Rocky's current contender to be the world's next boxing champ. Then Rocky takes up unwilling at first Allpo his former foe as his new manager then regains his courage to beat the new world boxing champ known as Cubber Lang then by the end of the film Apollo and Rocky settle who could win between them. In Rocky IV a new challenger from Russia comes to America to showcase his fighting skills and hurts Rocky's former enemy now friend and results in Rocky dueling with the Russian fighter.
Then there are certainly several villains in movies or novels that literally refuse to change no matter how strong they are depicted. The one example of a villain being unable to change is the Emperor from Star Wars films before he was the shriveled old man that he was in the original trilogy, he was a cropurut senate leader in the government and his motivation was just to get control of both the trade Fredration and his understanding of the force but the Darkside never the Lightside. He used the power of the Darkside to gain the trust of a certain young Jedi known as Ankiain Skywalker and trun him into his pupil called Darth Vader. He used Vader as his way to speak for him throughout the Empire. Till Vader eventually turned against him by throwing him down the power core of his second destroyer of planets known as the Death Star.
Now you're asking so villains are not always justified as just from being only humans right... villains come in other forms than from just becoming monsters. Now speaking of monsters as villains is a little more complicated at times because at times a writer will make the monster like the creature from Frankenstein a character we the reader do care about, the same is also building traits of the Wolfman or even Dracula... the writers of those literary characters saw their creations as actual living beings in their hearts and eyes as they wrote that given character. Yet other writers of the same characters find a way to add more to the lore of the monsters with their own type of words in their own stories.When I was growing up it was a time of transition in the way of how some thing came about for animation in the regulations of selling future toys to children came from the president of the United States who was Ronald Regan at the time of the early nineteen eighties. Before that time when cartoons were made they had a free range of adding a lite bit of true craziness of whatever the storyteller and animators had going on in the short. Here's a example of what I mean by creativeness from a Warner Brothers Looney Toons Bugs Bunny short called "Rabbit Seasoning" has Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck trying confound Elmer Fudd over what season it is hunting wise of the two animals. At one point in the cartoon Bugs Bunny fools the hunter by pretending to be a woman

Now I will actually admit that for a moment I got off topic here of favorite villains of cinematic history... but I'll get right back to it by saying my most favorite top villain of all of the many cartoons that I saw as a child was for most vile isn't Gargmel from the Smurfs series or even the Seawitch from the old Popeye cartoons... and even though I was a huge Masters of the Universe fan of all of the many nineteen eighties toylines, yet as I feel the greatest villain of the cartoons of the eighties is the transformer leader of the villainous deceptions known as
Megatron. Oh you know what yours, truly just realized that I totally forgot to talk about among of all villains out there, I didn't tell you about my favorite literary one from books or novels... I guess that it really means besides getting more reading and thinking from the past... I certainly have more to write about of great villains of the printed word.... to come out eventually!
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