Disney/Characters/Villains
Forget Disney Princesses. It seems that the characters that stick in the viewer's minds are the villains. Because let's face it, whether they're terrifying, hilarious, appealing (either because they're evil or despite it) or just plain dominate the scene, Disney makes some damn fine baddies.
General
Disney Animated Canon
Queen Grimhilde
"...A special sort of death for one so fair."
Voiced by: Lucille LaVerne
- All There in the Script: Her name Grimhilde was given in early publicity materials, including a Comic Strip Adaptation. The Disney Company tends to forget / ignore this fact nowadays though.
- Big Bad
- Dangerously Genre Savvy: "I'll be fairest in the land! Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha... But wait! There may be an antidote! Nothing must be overlooked!"
- Disproportionate Retribution: Snow White is the fairest in the land... so she wants to kill her.
- Fairest of Them All
- Greed
- God Save Us From the Queen
- Jerkass
- Karmic Disney Villain Death
- No Name Given
- Vain Sorceress
- Vile Villain Saccharine Show
- Wicked Stepmother
Honest John
Stromboli
The Coachman
"Give a bad boy enough rope, and he'll soon make a jackass of himself."
Voiced by: Charles Judels
- Ambiguously Human
- Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"
- Fascinating Eyebrow
- Jerkass
- Karma Houdini (though you do get to fight him and give him a Disney Villain Death in the Super Nintendo game)
- Slasher Smile
- Talking to Himself: Charles Judels also voiced Stromboli.
- Whip It Good
- Would Hurt a Child: Transformed into donkeys, but...
Lampwick
- And I Must Scream/Baleful Polymorph: Turned into a donkey and sent off to the salt mines.
- Jerkass
- Tempting Fate: What do I look like, a jackass?
Monstro
Chernabog
- Big Bad
- Evil Overlord
- Glowing Eyes of Doom
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Slavic for "black god"(read: devil)
- Satan
- Sealed Evil in a Can: A timed can, but a can nonetheless
Man
- Egomaniac Hunter: Very likely.
- Family-Unfriendly Death: In an early draft for the film, there was a scene planned in which Bambi's dad showed Bambi the charred corpse of Man, as an aesop for Bambi to learn not even Man could escape death's clutches. Thankfully Walt Disney found it too graphic and cut it.
- In the original, there is the underlying implication the hunters did not survive the forest fire.
- He Who Must Not Be Seen: It's commonly commented on that he/they is/are (one of) Disney's most hated villains, but he/they isn't/aren't so much a person as well as an evil, eerie presence.
- Justified; Bambi was shot from an animal's point of view. Looking man into the eyes would be certain death for most of them.
- Nothing Is Scarier: Could be counted as Trope Maker, at least for the Disney Animated Canon.
- Villain by Default: And according to the other wiki, real-life hunters openly criticized Bambi when it was released, for villifying them and insulting the American sportsmanship of hunting.
- True, shooting animals can be viewed as Kick the Dog at worst and morally fault-free at best, but the hunters in Bambi actually sent packs of bloodthirsty hounds after animals, implying they weren't hunting for food, but for the pleasure of seeing animals being ripped apart. Oh, and let's not forget they actually lit a whole forest on fire by carelessly setting up their camp..
Headless Horseman
- Ax Crazy
- Badass Cape
- The Bad Guy Wins: Well, maybe.
- Evil Laugh: This is all the dialogue he gets. And it is awesome!
- Headless Horseman
- Hellish Horse
- The Hyena: Oh, yes.
- No-Nonsense Nemesis: One of the very few Disney villains who just shoots his foe. Kind of...
Lady Tremaine
"These beads... they give it just the right touch."
Voiced by: Eleanor Audley (Cinderella); Susanne Blakeslee (sequels)
- Karma Houdini: At least, until the end of the third movie.
- Manipulative Bitch
- Parental Favoritism
- Right-Hand-Cat
- Smug Snake
- Wicked Cultured
- Wicked Stepmother
Lucifer
Queen of Hearts
"All ways are my ways!"
Voiced by: Verna Felton (Alice in Wonderland); Tress MacNeille (current)
- Adaptational Villainy: In the book, the King pardons anyone that she sentences to death, so no one is actually harmed by her.
- Catch Phrase: "OFF WITH THEIR HEADS!"
- Composite Character: Of the Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen from Lewis Carrol's books.
- Faux Affably Evil
- God Save Us From the Queen
- It's All About Me
- Karma Houdini: Though understandable since she was just a figment of Alice's dreams anyway.
- Large and In Charge
- Large Ham
- Pimped-Out Dress
Captain Hook
"...and Captain Hook never breaks a promise."
Voiced by: Hans Conried (Peter Pan); Corey Burton (1992-present)
- Affably Evil: To being someone who don't hesitate to kill children, he's quite The Charmer with polite manners.
- Bad Boss: Shoot one of his own just because he was annoyed with his singing.
- Badass Long Hair
- Badass Mustache
- Butt Monkey
- Dirty Coward
- Evil Feels Good: As he says in Jake and the Never Land Pirates, "it's good to be bad!"
- False Reassurance
- Hook Hand
- Manipulative Bastard
- Pirate
- Wicked Cultured: Plays piano and dress in expensive clothes, fit for nobles.
Si and Am
- Cats Are Mean
- Creepy Twins/Single-Minded Twins
- We Are Song: We are Siamese, if you please...
- Talking Animals
- Wounded Gazelle Gambit: Pulled one off that convinced Aunt Sarah to give Lady a muzzle and leash.
Maleficent
"You thought you could defeat me, me, the mistress of all evil!"
Voiced by: Eleanor Audley (Sleeping Beauty); Lois Nettleton (House of Mouse); Susanne Blakeslee (Kingdom Hearts)
- Ascended Extra: In the fairy tale, the unnamed evil fairy disappears after cursing the baby princess.
- Badass Boast: "Now, shall you deal with me, oh Prince, and all the powers of HELL!"
- Badass Cape: Well, cloak, but still.
- Big Bad
- Breakout Villain: Among the Disney villains. She was even voted as the most favorite Disney villain of all time, and she usually gets the leading role in crossovers. Kingdom Hearts helped her popularity grow even bigger, not just in the USA but in Japan as well.
- Card-Carrying Villain - "The Mistress of All Evil"
- Cruel Mercy: She could have easily killed Prince Phillip without turning into a dragon; this is her reason.
- Disproportionate Retribution: She wants Aurora dead because the King and Queen didn't invite her to a birthday party. Talk about someone who hates to be snubbed.
- It is, however, quite possible that she wasn't all that bothered by her lack of an invitation, and could be placing a curse on Aurora just For the Evulz. Or perhaps a combination of both.
- Distaff Counterpart: Jafar
- Evil Cannot Comprehend Good
- Evil Counterpart: To the the three Good Fairies, obviously.
- Evil Eyebrows
- Evil Is Petty: Why is she mad? She got snubbed an invite to a baby shower.
- Evil Sorcerer
- Excessive Evil Eyeshadow
- The Fair Folk
- For the Evulz:
The Nostalgia Chick: She kidnaps Aurora's boyfriend and, instead of killing him, plans to keep him until he's old and decrepit while Aurora's sleeping self is still young and perfect, and only then will he be able to be with his one true love. When he's old and shriveled and can't get it up any more anyway. Now that's evil.
- Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons
- Lady of War: She usually had her minions do her dirty work but if she wanted to, she could probably kill everyone.
- Large Ham
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast
- Nice Hat: Her headdress... assuming it is a headdress and not real horns.
- Obviously Evil
- One-Winged Angel: When she becomes a dragon.
- Scaled Up
- What Could Have Been: She was originally going to have a Villain Song, but it was cut.
- What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Prince Phillip is allowed to throw a sword into her once she becomes a dragon.
Cruella de Vil
I don't care how you kill the little beasts, but do it! And do it now!"
Voiced by: Betty Lou Gerson (101 Dalmatians); April Winchell (101 Dalmatians: The Series); Susanne Blakeslee (since 1999)
- Big Bad
- Chaste Toons: She has a Enfant Terrible niece named Ivy in the series.
- Clothes Make the Legend
- Cool Car
- Cruella to Animals: The Trope Namer
- Drives Like Crazy
- Fur and Loathing: A proto example, if not the Ur Example.
- Mad Libs Catchphrase: "Memo to myself..." in the TV series.
- Meaningful Name
- Multicolored Hair
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast
- Politically-Incorrect Villain: Retroactively.
- Woman in White
Madame Mim
"Sounds like someone's sick. How lovely! I do hope it's serious - something dreadful."
Voiced by: Martha Wentworth
- Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad
- Big Bad
- Card-Carrying Villain: Delightfully so.
- Combat Pragmatist
- Faux Affably Evil: Is actually not completely mentally composed, which shimmers through from time to time.
- Evil Counterpart: To Merlin.
- For the Evulz: She doesn't even play a plot part, apart from being... well, a filler.
- Greed
- Jerkass
- Impossible Hourglass Figure: In her beautiful form.
- Laughably Evil
- One-Scene Wonder: She is a remarkably popular character, while the film she originates from is one of the lesser known works of it's particular era in the canon. Especially in the Netherlands, where she is a longtime character in comics in a Donald Duck magazine, albeit she is a LOT more composed, intelligent and benevolent, even appearing as a friend and ally to Donald in a few comics.
- Scaled Up
- Villain Song: "The Marvelous Mad Madame Mim."
- Wicked Witch
Shere Khan
- Affably Evil
- Big Bad
- Cats Are Mean
- Corrupt Corporate Executive (in Tale Spin)
- Deadpan Snarker
- Even Evil Has Standards (in Tale Spin)
- Evil Sounds Deep: His one-line Villain Song says it all!
- Knight of Cerebus: In the sequel.
- The Stoic: In Tale Spin.
Kaa
"He won't be here in the morning."
Voiced by: Sterling Holloway (The Jungle Book); Jim Cummings (The Jungle Book 2, Jungle Cubs)
- Adaptational Villainy: In the original book by Rudyard Kipling, Kaa was one of Mowgli's friends and allies.
- Even Evil Has Standards: He finds it despicable that Shere Kahn wants to kill Mowgli pretty much just for being alive, as opposed to him, who wants to eat them to survive.
- Hypnotic Eyes
- Sssssnaketalk
- Villain Song: "Trust in Me"
Edgar
- Bond Villain Stupidity: Although it's not impossible that he just wasn't evil enough to actually kill the cats himself.
- Butt Monkey: Napoleon and Lafayette's primary purpose in the film seems to be assaulting him.
- Did Not Do the Research
- Humiliation Conga
- Illegal Guardian
- Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain
- I See London
- The Butler Did It: Although it isn't really much of a secret to the audience.
- Villainous Breakdown
Prince John
"This crown gives me a feeling of power! Power! Forgive me a cruel chuckle, heh, heh, heh, power."
Voiced by: Peter Ustinov
- Big Bad
- Dirty Coward
- Greed
- Historical Domain Character
- Smug Snake
- The Unfavorite: "Mother always did like Richard best!"
- "The Villain Sucks" Song: "A pox on the phony king of England!", which leds to...
- Villainous Breakdown: Once he hear the song itself, being sung by the Sheriff and Sir Hiss, no less!
- He has an even worse one when his castle is set on fire at the end. Even Sir Hiss screams "He's gone stark raving MAAAAAAD!"
- Villainous BSOD: Mention his mother around him and he'll grab his ear and suck his thumb.
Madame Medusa
"What makes you think anyone would want a homely little girl like you?"
Voiced by: Geraldine Page
- Bad Boss
- Cool Boat
- Drives Like Crazy
- Evil Redheads
- Expy: One early draft of the film cast Cruella de Vil as the villain. Consequently, Madame Medusa bears more than a passing resemblance to her, in both appearance and mannerisms, and even drives the same car.
- Greed
- Kick the Dog: See the quote above.
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast
- Obviously Evil
Amos Slade
The Horned King
"Now I call on my army of the dead -- the Cauldron Born!"
Voiced by: John Hurt
Professor Ratigan
"You know what happens when someone upsets me..."
Voiced by: Vincent Price (The Great Mouse Detective), Corey Burton (audiobook), Maurice LaMarche (House of Mouse)
- Affably Evil: Voted by TV Tropers as the greatest Disney villain!
- All There in the Script: In the original book series "Basil of Baker Street", the professor is revealed to be A Mouse! And his first name is Padraic.
- Arch Enemy
- Bad Boss
- Berserk Button: "I AM NOT A RAT!"
- Insistent Terminology: He's a "big mouse."
- Big Bad
- Card-Carrying Villain
- Evil Is Stylish
- Expy: Professor Moriarty.
- Foe Yay
- Genius Bruiser
- Greed
- I Am Not Weasel: He hATES being called a rat.
- Karmic Disney Villain Death
- Large Ham - He's voiced by Vincent Price, and is actually even hammier than most of his other characters.
- Also probably the hammiest of all Disney characters.
- Word of God has it that his script was written specifically so Price could ham it up, and Vincent Price himself was once rumored to have said it was his favorite acting role in his career.
- No-Holds-Barred Beatdown - Memorable enough to provide the page image
- Offstage Villainy - "From the brain that brought you the Big Ben Caper ... and wondrous things like the Tower Bridge Job..."
- Not to mention the widows and orphans he drowned.
- Right-Hand-Cat: Felicia
- Secret Identity: The Chemical Brothers, or Jason Kreis.
- Sissy Villain [1]
- That is, up until his....
- Villainous Breakdown
- Villain Song: "Oh, Ratigan! To Ratigan! The world's greatest criminal mind!"
- Xanatos Gambit: "Poor Basil -- oh, he is in for a little surprise..."
Sykes
Ursula
"So much for true love!"
Voiced by: Pat Carroll
- Adaptational Villainy: The Sea Witch in the original fairy tale was a neutral character.
- Bad Samaritan
- Berserk Button - Ursula grows to giant size after she accidentally kills her Mooks Flotsam and Jetsam
- Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: As a result of said Berserk Button.
- Big Eater
- Deal with the Devil - Her specialty.
- Evil Laugh
- Evil Sorceror
- Excessive Evil Eyeshadow
- Fan Disservice - "... The importance of BODY LANGUAGE!" Gah.
- Fat Bastard
- Impaled with Extreme Prejudice
- Jabba Table Manners: The very first time we see her.
- Kick the Dog - Literally
- Large Ham
- Mama Bear
- Manipulative Bitch
- A Mother To Her Henchmen
- One-Winged Angel: In the climatic scene.
- Power Hair
- Villainous Glutton
- Villain Song: "Come on, you poor unfortunate soul!"
- Wicked Witch
Morgana
Marina del Ray
Percival C. McLeach
"I didn't make it all the way through third grade for nothing!"
Voiced by: George C. Scott
- Batman Gambit: He played this card on Cody then he realized that psychologically torture the boy wasn't enough. By pretending that the Eagle had been shot by another hunter and acting upset of it, Cody played right into his hands by leading him to the eagle's nest.
- Book Dumb: For someone who barely got through the third grade, he's pretty smart.
- Faux Affably Evil: A lot more down-to-earth than most Disney villains
- Evil Poacher/Greed
- Karmic Disney Villain Death/Inevitable Waterfall
- Large Ham: Voiced by George C. Scott!
- Right-Hand-Cat: His pet goanna, Joanna.
- Shark Pool: With a river full of crocodiles
- Villain Song: A rather warped version of "Home on the Range"
Gaston
"Don't I deserve the best?"
Voiced by: Richard White
- Bad Boss
- Book Dumb ("How can you read this? There's no pictures!)
- Crazy Jealous Guy
- Dirty Coward: Once the Beast finally fought back.
- Egomaniac Hunter
- Even the Guys Want Him: LeFou's slavish devotion could be seen as this.
- Jerkass
- Karmic Disney Villain Death
- Lust Makes You Evil
- Lust
- Miles Gloriosus
- Pride
- Prince Charming Wannabe
- Scarpia Ultimatum
- Stalker with a Crush
- Ted Baxter
- Testosterone Poisoning
- Took a Level in Jerkass: As his animator once put it "He goes from a buffoon and a jerk to a murderer."
- Villain Song: "No... one's... ...slick as Gaston! No one's quick as Gaston! No one's neck's as incredibly thick as Gaston!"
- Villain with Good Publicity
- Yandere!!
Jafar
"How many times do I have to kill you, boy?!"
Voiced by: Jonathan Freeman
- A God Am I
- Animal Motifs:Snakes
- Ax Crazy
- Badass Cape
- Beard of Evil
- Charm Person
- Color Coded for Your Convenience
- Evil Chancellor
- Evil Counterpart: To the Genie after his transformation into a genie.
- Evil Laugh
- Faux Affably Evil
- Evil Sorcerer
- Family-Unfriendly Death
- Hoist by His Own Petard
- Hurricane of Puns: After he makes his second wish to be "The most powerful sorceror IN THE WORLD!"
- I Have You Now, My Pretty
- Jackass Genie: In the sequel.
- Large Ham
- Lean and Mean
- Manipulative Bastard
- Nice Hat
- One-Winged Angel (several levels of it, actually)
- Scaled Up
- Smug Snake: In the original movie.
- Spear Counterpart: According to Word of God, his final design was deliberately meant to be a male equivalent of Maleficent, with black clothes, a bird on his shoulder, a staff, and even taking the form of a giant reptile toward the end.
- Villain Song: "You're Only Second Rate" in the sequel
- Not to mention his Dark Reprise of "Prince Ali" in the first movie
Scar
"Long live the king."
Voiced by: Jeremy Irons (speaking, singing); Jim Cummings (partial singing)
- Big Bad
- The Caligula
- Color Coded for Your Convenience: His fur is noticeably darker than the other lions, and is the only one (in the first film) with a black mane.
- Deadpan Snarker
- Evil Prince
- Evil Uncle
- Evil Gloating (which ultimately gets him in trouble...)
- Expy: Claudius.
- Family-Unfriendly Death (hoo boy...)
- Gory Discretion Shot - Not technically seeing it may or may not make it even worse.
- Fisher King
- Faux Affably Evil
- Greed
- Jerkass
- Genre Blind: Sending minions who already failed to kill someone out to kill the same person again, plus the results of the aforementioned Evil Gloating.
- Ironic Echo ("Run away and never return.")
- Large Ham
- Manipulative Bastard (In all of the movie... until he ends up angering the hyenas and provoking them into turning on him)
- Only Known by Their Nickname: According to a storybook published following the film's release, his birth name was Taka (Swahili for "trash").
- "Trash"? No wonder he didn't have a good relationship to his family...
- Red Right Hand: Aside from the obvious, his claws (unlike the other lions') are always bared.
- Smug Snake (After becoming king)
- Surrounded by Idiots
- Villainous Breakdown: "The Madness of King Scar" in the Broadway musical version.
- Villain Song: "Yes, my teeth and ambitions are bared! Be prepared!"
Shenzi, Banzai, and Ed
Voiced by: Whoopi Goldberg, Cheech Marin and Jim Cummings
- Better Living Through Evil
- The Brute: Ed.
- Cloudcuckoolander: Ed.
- Comic Trio
- Dark Chick: Shenzi. She also seems to be The Dragon.
- The Dog Bites Back
- Equal Opportunity Evil
- Evil Genius: Banzai
- The Hyena: All three of them, obviously, but Ed is this especially as all of his dialogue" consists of him laughing.
- Mook Face Turn
- Terrible Trio
- Villain Song: They and the other Hyenas act as backup singers for "Be Prepared", though its mostly for Scar. The cut reprise would've been more of a Villain Song for the Hyenas.
Zira
"I now see the path to our glorious return to power!"
Voiced by: Suzanne Pleshette
- Abusive Mother: Until Nuka dies.
- Avenging the Villain
- Ax Crazy (much less composed than Scar)
- The Chessmaster
- Cult Leader
- Disney Villain Death / Inevitable Waterfall
- Driven to Suicide in the original script.
- Lady Macbeth: Posthumously for Scar.
- Large Ham
- Loves the Sound of Screaming: She even SINGS about it.
- Mama Lion: She did not take Nuka's death well. At all.
- Parental Favoritism
- Villain Song ("The sound of Simba's dying gasp! His daughter squealing in my grasp! His lioness' mournful cry! That's my lullaby!")
Governor Ratcliffe
"I'll need those witless peasants to dig up my gold."
Voiced by: David Ogden Stiers
- Badass Cape: Part of his outfit in "Savages".
- Bavarian Fire Drill: Waging war against the natives. Sure, Smith was in very real mortal peril (although there was no way Pocahontas was going to let him die) but Ratcliffe actually didn't give a rat's ass about Smith's life. In fact, he wanted to rid himself of Smith.
- Also, he ordered for anyone who wouldn't shoot a native at sight to be hanged for treason. So by his own laws, Smith would have to be considered a bloody traitor.
- Corrupt Corporate Executive
- Color Coded for Your Convenience: Wears purple, and later, dark red-shining black. Though the purple is at least a bit ironic, since that was the color for nobility and royalty.
- Greed
- Evil Counterpart: To Powhatan. Both are commanders of a group of warriors and both have someone prone to overshadowing them (Smith for Ratcliffe, Kocoum for Powhatan). What really sets Ratcliffe apart from Powhatan is his motivation; greed and expansion as opposed to preservation and protection.
- Evil Is Petty: A xenophobic and horrifyingly racist, elitist bastard.. and also a bully to Thomas.
- Evil Is Stylish
- Faux Affably Evil: Oh, so much.
- Failure Is the Only Option: Well, if your Get Rich Quick Scheme was to find gold in Virginia.. yeah.
- Historical Villain Upgrade
- If I Were a Rich Man: Combined with I Just Want to Be Special.
- Implausible Deniability: Denies to himself that there is no gold, just to reassure himself he won't have to return to England having failed his last assignment.
- Ironic Echo: "And he came so highly recommended." Ratcliffe says it of Wiggins after perceiving the latter to be inept; Wiggins utters the very same line tearfully after seeing Ratcliffe being taken away for his crimes.
- It's All About Me: "This is MY land! I make the rules here!" ..Even though he did absolutely nothing besides shooting Nanutek.
- Jerkass Woobie: Somewhat redeems himself with his worries about the Virginia Company being his last chance at fame and glory.
- And then destroys it completely by still wanting to kill the Indians after it has been proven to him a hundred times that there is no gold.
- Large and In Charge
- Moral Event Horizon: Crosses it by trying to shoot Chief Powhatan, in-universe. For the audience, he could have crossed the line way earlier for his disregard of other cultures and their significance, but to be fair.. every single British person in the movie thought like that.
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Ratcliffe. Ironically, his real-life counterpart did bear that name.
- Politically-Incorrect Villain
- "The Reason You Suck" Speech: To Thomas.
Ratcliffe: Oh, and Thomas... you've been a slipshod sailor and a poor excuse for a soldier. Don't disappoint me again.
- Sissy Villain: "Remember when Disney used to make COOL villains?"
- Smug Snake: Overconfident? Check. Sarcastic? Check. Not that much of a villain? Double check..
- Talking to Himself: He and Wiggins were both voiced by David Ogden Stiers.
- Villain Song: Mine, Mine, Mine and most of Savages.
- Villain with Good Publicity: Doubles for a 0% Approval Rating. While his men and underlings greatly trust and admire him at least at first, everyone in the palace, as Wiggins denotes, thinks of him as a pathetic social climber, whose last chance of glory is a semi-prestitious journey they actually deem doomed to fail. Ratcliffe even fantasizes about proving those "royal backstabbers" wrong by returning with eons of gold.
- The Unfavourite: Of all Disney Renaissaince villains.
Judge Claude Frollo
- Abusive Father-Figure
- Adaptational Villainy: In the book, Frollo was a somewhat more sympathetic Anti-Villain.
- Bad Boss: Has his previous captain of the gaurd (Phoebus' predecessor) tortured for failing him.
- Big Bad
- Deadpan Snarker ("I had a little trouble with the fireplace.")
- Dirty Old Man
- The Fundamentalist
- Hanging Judge
- Hey, It's That Voice!: The late Tony Jay.
- Jerkass
- Karmic Disney Villain Death
- Knight Templar
- Light Is Not Good (Looks like a priest, and imposes order and law. Is one of the most evil villains Disney's ever created.)
- Not to mention that his epic villian song takes place right in front of bright flames. Dark fire? Not at all!
- Lust Makes You Evil
- Sex Is Evil and I Am Horny: He mentions that he's especially proud of "his virtue" and begins going over the edge when he realizes he's hot for a member of the ethnic group he's trying to exterminate.
- Manipulative Bastard
- Stalker with a Crush
- Straight Edge Evil
- Torture Technician: "Ease up! Wait between lashes. Otherwise the old pain will dull him to the new."
- Villain Song: "HELLFIRE".
Shan Yu
"Your walls and armies have fallen. And now, it's your turn."
Voiced by: Miguel Ferrer
- Blood Knight
- Fake Nationality
- Good Eyes, Evil Eyes
- Kneel Before Zod
- Rape, Pillage and Burn
- Scarily Competent Tracker
- Villain Song: Averted, Shan Yu one of the few official Disney Villains (technically, there isn't such as they're all included in the franchise) not to have one. Probably because it doesn't even suit him at all.
Clayton
"I was made for Africa, and Africa was made for me!"
Voiced by: Brian Blessed
- Bottomless Magazines
- Egomaniac Hunter
- Family-Unfriendly Death/Hoist by His Own Petard: We actually HEAR his neck snapping!
- Good Smoking, Evil Smoking: Possibly averted, He's shown smoking a pipe in several scenes, but considering the time period it doesn't really serve as an indicator of villainy.
- Manipulative Bastard: Manipulated Tarzan's feelings for Jane so he could show him where the gorillas were hiding.
The Firebird
- Eldritch Abomination: Arguably
- Enemy Rising Behind: Does this to the Nature Sprite
- Evil Is Burning Hot: And how!
- Eye Awaken: Combines with a Scare Chord
- Glowing Eyes of Doom
- Hot Wings
- Kill It with Fire: Duh
- Lava Adds Awesome
- Magma Bird
- Ripped from the Headlines: He's based around the eruption of Mt. Saint Helens
- Sealed Evil in a Can: Well, a sleeping evil.
- Super-Persistent Predator: Relentlessly chases down the Nature Sprite.
- World-Wrecking Wave: In a living form, no less.
The Carnotaurus
Yzma
"It's brilliant, brilliant, brrrrilliant, I tell you! Genius, I say!"
Voiced by: Eartha Kitt
- Ax Crazy
- Chaste Toons: She has twin nephews, Zim and Zam, who were voiced by Dylan and Cole Sprouse.
- Fan Disservice: Bigtime (That is, until she becomes a cat).
- Hey, It's That Voice!: The late Eartha Kitt
- I Was Quite a Looker: Her teenage self is quite a cutie.
- Laughably Evil
- Lean and Mean
- Mad Scientist
- One-Winged Angel: Hilariously parodied when she gets turned into a fluffy little kitten, doubling this with Sealed Evil in a Teddy Bear.
- Paper-Thin Disguise: Her alter-ego of Principal Amzy doesn't really fool Kuzco, but Kronk can never seem to recognize her.
- Surrounded by Idiots: Or rather one idiot, Kronk. But the effect is the same.
- Treacherous Advisor
- Villainous Valor: During the last fight. Not even the risk of dying by falling 100 feet down from a building, or turning into a small cat will stop her.
Atlantis: The Lost Empire
Lyle Tiberius Rourke
Helga Katrina Sinclair
"Well, I came down the chimney. Ho ho ho."
Voiced by: Claudia Christian
Gantu
Scroop
"I say we kill 'em all now."
Voiced by: Michael Wincott
- The Bully: He's like this towards Jim
- Mix and Match Critter: He's an alien that looks like a cross between a spider, scorpion, and crab
- Psycho for Hire:
- The Sociopath:
Alameda Slim
Mike "Bowler Hat Guy" Yagoobian and DOR-15
" Everyone will tell you to let it go and move on, but don't! Instead, let it fester and boil inside of you! Take these feelings and lock them away. Let them fuel your actions. Let hate be your ally, and you will be capable of wonderful, horrid things."
Dr. Faciler, a.k.a. The Shadow Man
- Affably Evil
- Bare Your Midriff: A rare male example!
- The Barnum
- Batman Gambit
- Big Bad
- Blood Magic
- Chain of Deals
- Circling Monologue
- Deadpan Snarker: "Fun fact about voodoo, Larry."
- Deal with the Devil: He's the "Devil" to other people and the "Friends on the Other Side" shadows are the "Devil" to him.
- Does This Remind You of Anything?: "Friends On The Other Side"
"If you relax, it will enable me to do, anything I please."
- Eldritch Abomination: Amazingly for a Disney film, his Friends on The Other Side may count.
- Faux Affably Evil
- Evil Counterpart: To Mama Odie.
- Evil Is Stylish
- Evil Laugh
- Evil Sorceror
- Family-Unfriendly Death: ARE YOU READY?!
- Foil: He and Prince Naveen have racked up loads of debts and are running out of time to pay...
- Also, he and Tiana both have their goals and it's implied that both have been dumped on plenty by society. Tiana reaches her goal by hard work. Facilier takes the easy way out and winds up in debt with demons.
- Hey, It's That Voice!: It's Goliath!
- And Captain Anderson!
- Jackass Genie
- Large Ham: In classic Disney fashion.
- Lean and Mean
- Literal Genie
- Living Shadow
- Magic A Is Magic A
- Manipulative Bastard
- The Man Behind the Man: It's pretty clear that the "Friends" on the "Other Side" are the real power behind Facilier.
- Meaningful Name: His name is a pun on the French word "facile" for "easy" indicative of how he always offers the easy way out to his clients (or how he tries to take it for himself).
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast
- No Self-Buffs: He can't directly help himself with magic, so he works schemes through others.
- Oh Crap
- Soul Jar: Dr. Facilier's amulet, since he appears to have sold his own soul to the Friends on the Other Side.
- Tarot Motifs: Plays an especially significant role during his Villain Song.
- Villainous Breakdown
- Villain Song: "And I've got friends on the other side....."
Mother Gothel
"Look in that mirror. Do you know what I see? I see a strong, confident, beautiful young lady. Oh, look, you're here too!"
Voiced by: Donna Murphy
- Abusive Parents: Emotional abuse to Rapunzel.
- Action Mom
- Badass Normal: In the movie and amongst most of the other villains in this folder. She has no magical power other than some hinted healing ability (which she still needs an outside source for), only has two hulking henchmen whom she later betrays and beats up at that, and her only weapon is a knife.
- Badass Abnormal: If you want to count her magically-obtained immortality, though even then, it was dependent on Rapunzel rather than her own power.
- Bitch in Sheep's Clothing
- Family-Unfriendly Death: One that combines the traditional Disney Villain Death with disintegration.
- Immortality Seeker
- Kick The Chameleon
- Knife Nut
- Lady in Red
- Mama Bear: In a way...
- Manipulative Bitch: How many Disney villains can convince the heroine to obey her because she's her mother?
- My Beloved Smother
- No Immortal Inertia
- Raven Hair, Ivory Skin
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old
- Unkempt Beauty
- Villainous Breakdown
"You want me to be the bad guy? Fine -- now I'm the bad guy..."
- Villain Song: The first time she sings it it's really bouncy and cute...
- Dark Reprise: ... But the second time around, it's played pretty straight.
- Yandere
Pixar
Sid Phillips
Scud
Hopper
It's not about food. It's about keeping those ants in line.
Voiced by: Kevin Spacey
- Ax Crazy
- Big Bad
- Greed
- Jerkass
- Slasher Smile: When about to crush Flik's head.
- Manipulative Bastard
- The Sociopath
- Villainous Breakdown: At the end.
- Would Hurt a Child
Molt
Thumper
Al McWhiggin
Stinky Pete
Zurg
Randall Boggs
Look at everybody's favorite scarer now! You stupid, pathetic waste! You've been #1 for too long, Sullivan! Now your time is up! And don't worry! I'll take good care of the kid!
Voiced by: Steve i
- Big Bad
- Greed
- Jerkass
- Slasher Smile
- Manipulative Bastard
- Manipulative Child
- Would Hurt a Child
- The Sociopath
Henry J. Waternoose III
Jeff Fungus
Buddy Pine
See? Now you respect me. Because I'm a threat. That's the way it works. Turns out there are a lot of people, whole countries who want respect and will pay through the nose to get it.
Voiced by: Jason Lee
- Anime Hair
- Ascended Fanboy
- Big Bad
- The Chessmaster
- Dangerously Genre Savvy
- Disproportionate Retribution: He became a villain because Mr. Incredible wouldn't let him be his sidekick
- Evil Genius
- Evil Redhead
- Family-Unfriendly Death
- Greed
- Jerkass
- Large Ham
- Would Hurt a Child
Chick Hicks
Kabuto
AUTO
I must follow my directive.
- Creepy Monotone
- Eye Lights Out
- Kick the Dog
- Long Monotonous No
- Married to the Job: His directive comes first, above all else.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning
- Well-Intentioned Extremist
Charles Muntz
Lots-o'-Huggin' Bear
"Welcome to Sunnyside!"
Voiced by: Ned Beatty
Professor Z
Miles Axlerod
Classic Disney Shorts, comics, and television animation
Pete
"Nobody, I mean nobody, messes with the mighty Pete!"
Voiced by: Billy Bletcher (classic shorts), Jim Cummings (1991-present)
- Cats Are Mean
- Go-Karting with Bowser
- I Have Many Names: Pete, Pete Pete, Bad Pete, Black Pete, Pistol Pete, Peg-Leg Pete... Pierre...
- Epic Mickey even adds "Big Bad", "Small" Pete (For Small World), Petetronic, Pete Pan, and Colonel Pete.
- Large and In Charge
- Sitcom Arch Nemesis
- Stout Strength
- Villain Song: "Petey's King of France" in Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers
The Big Bad Wolf
The Mad Doctor
The Nazis
The Phantom Blot
"The late Mickey Mouse... Ooh, I like the sound of that."
Voiced by: Frank Welker (DuckTales (1987)); John O'Hurley (House of Mouse)
- Dangerously Genre Savvy: In some continuities. House Of Mouse, in particular had him actually try to kill the heroes in his first appearance onscreen, of course, it was a James Bond type of trap, but the next time, he tries to make sure that they can't survive a fall. And his final plan involved hijacking the machine that gave the characters clues as to where the villain was, or who they were, making sure they didn't know what to do.
- Depending on the Writer: Is he a Large Ham? Is he a Card-Carrying Villain? A Complete Monster?
- Diabolical Mastermind
- Evil Sorcerer: In Wizards of Mickey
- Large Ham
- The Un-Reveal: His face is never really seen. But Subverted in his first appearance, where he is unmasked, having a thin mustache and a gaunt face according to That Other Wiki, apparently, his appearance was also based on Walt Disney himself.
- A lot of other writers seem to have Retconned his true face as being unknown. This Troper has read one story where it is vaguely implied that his real identity is in fact Goofy.
- Wizards of Mickey inverts it, with the Blot never using the cloaked diguise until later though it's more him becoming an inky monster similar to the approach in Epic Mickey
The Beagle Boys
- Appropriated Appellation
- Card-Carrying Villain
- Characterization Marches On (In the Beagle Boys' early appearances, they actually represented a threat to Scrooge and Donald Duck. Today they are incompetent buffoons who are usually easily thwarted.)
- Not all the time. Italian-produced comics make them buffoons, but quite a number of Egmont and Dutch-produced stories feature the Beagles being quite menacing with the point typically being that while just a few Beagles are fairly inept by themselves, a large number can be quite effective crooks.
- Their threat seems to be directly propotional on how many of thema re working together. Usual trio plus granpa usualy are not much of a threat, but when the entire Bealge clan sets it's eyes on Scrooge...
- Depending on the Writer (Just how many Beagle Boys exist is very inconsistent. They are commonly shown three at a time, but in Don Rosa's stories, there are seven of them (who are occasionally aided by their much smarter grandfather, Blackheart). Some authors show the Beagle Boys to be all over the world in some form or another. Their relationship is also somewhat inconsistent. They are usually seen as being brothers, but according to Don Rosa they are actually a group of brothers and cousins.)
- Distaff Counterpart: The Beagle Babes.
- Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas (In DuckTales (1987), at least. The closest thing to Ma Beagle in the comics is their grandfather or, occasionally, Granny Beagle.)
- Harmless Villain
- Murder, Inc.
- Paper-Thin Disguise (The Beagle Boys constantly wear black masks that only serve to make them more recognizable, since they never, ever take them off, not even when they are actually trying to disguise themselves. Let alone the prisoner's numbers on their chests.)
- Theme Naming: In the cartoon, they all have names beginning with the letter B.
- Villain Protagonist (There are plenty of comic stories with the Beagle Boys as the main focus, often showing them trying to rob someone other than Scrooge for a change.)
- Villain Song: "Boogie Beagle Blues"
- You Are Number Six: In the comics, they only referred to each other by their prison numbers.
- Lampshaded in Don Rosa comic where Beagle boys get their hands on Scrooges lairs blueprints. One of them found complete biograpghy of Beagle Boys and decides to check if it has his name because "my mommy never told be, only used to say..."
Flintheart Glomgold
Voiced by: Hal Smith
- Corrupt Corporate Executive
- Depending on the Writer (He is sometimes shown living in Duckburg and being a member of Scrooge's Billionaire Club rather than living in South Africa.)
- Et Tu, Brute? (see "The Terror of the Transvaal")
- Evil Counterpart/Foil/Shadow Archetype (Glomgold's whole character can be described as what kind of person Scrooge would be like if he never even tried to make his fortune square. Not to mention his lack of relatives and allies in comparison to Scrooge's large group of family and friends.)
- Humiliation Conga (He gets these in "The Last Lord of El Dorado", "The Terror of the Transvaal" and "A Little Something Special." Don Rosa seems to be fond of putting him through these.)
- My Name Is Not Durwood (In the DuckTales (1987) episode "Attack of the Metal Mites", Dijon could never pronounce his name correctly.)
- The Rival
- Self-Made Man
Magica De Spell
"Sorry, I get carried away."
Voiced by: June Foray
- Arch Enemy
- Chaste Toons: She has a niece named Minima in the comics.
- Depending on the Writer (Just how much power Magica has varies between writers. Carl Barks and Don Rosa generally showed her as not having any genuine magical abilities on her own, but merely using magical trinkets, but many other writers show her as a powerful witch in her own right and interacting with many other powerful witches.)
- Evil Sorceress
- Failure Is the Only Option
- Flanderization: How many people remember that her spell originally just required coins in general from various rich people? Barks himself feared this would happen.
- Foe Yay
- Hey, It's That Voice!" June Foray provided the character's voice in animation and video games, and as a result, she sounds just like Natasha Fatale.
- Implacable Man
- Older Hero vs. Younger Villain
- Surveillance as the Plot Demands: When bored, she spends her free time spying on Scrooge in her crystal ball.
- Stalker with a Crush: See above. Common fan explanation for the above Flanderization as well.
- Villain Team-Up: With Negaduck in the Boom Kids Darkwing Duck comic book.
- Witch with a Capital B: Used frequently in DuckTales (1987).
Croc
Voiced by: Alan Oppenheimer
Merlock
Voiced by: Christopher Lloyd / Corey Burton in the video game Donald Duck, Goin' Quackers
- Atlantis: Ever wonder why Atlantis really sank?
- Disney Villain Death
- Evil Is Hammy
- Evil Sorcerer
- A God Am I
- Hair-Trigger Temper
- Immortality Immorality: His first wish to the Genie was to live forever.
- Large Ham: To be expected, considering his voice actor.
- One-Winged Angel
- Our Gryphons Are Different: Turns into one for his One-Winged Angel act.
- Three Wishes: His talisman allows him to bypass this rule.
Fat Cat
Voiced by: Jim Cummings
- Cats Are Mean
- Right-Hand-Cat (to his master Aldren Klordane)
Don Karnage
"You have made Don Karnage - which is me - very unhappy!"
Voiced by: Jim Cummings
- Affably Evil
- Badass Spaniard
- Cool and Unusual Punishment: He's pretty fond of these.
- Department of Redundancy Department: "Not only am I a genius, but I am very very smart too."
- Even Evil Has Standards
- Large Ham
- Laughably Evil
- Malaproper (much of his dialogue)
- Not-So-Harmless Villain
- Sky Pirates
- Surrounded by Idiots
- Tickle Torture: Done by him to Kit once.
Norman
Voiced by: Jim Cummings
- Canon Immigrant: Like all the characters from the Disney adaptation
- Why Do You Keep Changing Jobs?
Mirage
Voiced by: Bebe Neuwirth
- Catgirl
- Cats Are Mean
- Evil Cannot Comprehend Good
- Faux Action Girl: For someone known as "evil incarnate", she's not very impressive.
- Femme Fatalons
- For the Evulz
- Hijacked by Jesus: Just when you think Anubis is the only Egyptian god that gets turned evil for no reason, here's a blatantly obvious Evil Sekhmet.
- Large Ham
- Petting Zoo People
- Smug Snake
Mozenrath
"When I want something, I get it."
Voiced by: Jonathan Brandis
- Artifact of Death: The source of his power.
- Blue Oni
- The Chessmaster: While his is good at making plans, Aladdin is just as good at foiling them.
- Dangerously Genre Savvy: Kidnapping the hero instead of the princess and anti-magic manacles, anyone?
- Deadpan Snarker: "You were in my kingdom and you didn't look me up? I'm hurt."
- Faux Affably Evil
- Evil Sorcerer
- Foe Yay
- Knight of Cerebus
- Lack of Empathy: "And your point would be?"
- Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette
- Red Right Hand
- The Resenter
- Teen Genius: Is said to be around the same age as Aladdin.
- What Could Have Been: The original intended finale for the Aladdin series was for Mozenrath to be revealed to be Aladdin's brother.
- Your Days Are Numbered
Demona
- Big Bad
- Big Bad Duumvirate: With Xanatos.
- Corrupt Corporate Executive
- Cursed with Awesome: Twice. First when she's linked to Macbeth's life so neither can die except at the hand of the other. There is a fairly hefty downside, but still. Then, Puck gives her a parting "gift" of human form during the day. She's angry at first, but it's a big help for her nefarious plans.
- Dark Action Girl
- Evil Redhead
- Face Heel Turn: in her Backstory.
- Fantastic Racism
- Hey, It's That Voice!: Deanna Troi and Matriarch Benezia.
- Ignored Epiphany: Writ large.
- Kill All Humans
- Knight Templar: Subverted. Demona seems to think she's trying to wipe out humanity because humans are Exclusively Evil, but nearly everybody else can tell that she's lashing out at the world in general in her pain. The fact that she's completely incapable of recognizing this is a big part of what makes her such a strangely pitiable villain
- Lady Macbeth: Shades of this in her relationships with Goliath, Macbeth, and even Xanatos. Inverted with her relationship with Thailog, as he's far more straightforwardly evil and is really using her to advance his own ends.
- Magic Knight: She uses her powerful magic (she's probably the strongest mortal mage in the show, not counting the Archmage's enhanced form) and formidable combat skills about evenly.
- Mama Bear: Would rather pull an Enemy Mine than let Angela be hurt.
- My God What Have They Done?
- Never My Fault
- Psycho Ex-Girlfriend
- Revenge by Proxy: "Their descendants shall pay. I will have blood for blood!"
- Secret Identity
David Xanatos
- The Chessmaster
- Manipulative Bastard
- Noble Demon
- Pragmatic Villainy: Very clever in his goals, and never opting for Revenge Before Reason.
- Xanatos Gambit: The one and only.
- Gambit Roulette, formerly Xanatos Roulette
- Xanatos Speed Chess
Quint
Voiced by: Corey Burton
- Mad Libs Catchphrase
- Inexplicably Identical Individuals
- Why Do You Keep Changing Jobs?: His occupation is different in each episode he's in.
Doctor Drakken
Voiced by: John Dimaggio
Shego
"Whoop! Whoop! Stupid idea alert!"
Voiced by: Nicole Sullivan
- Backstory/Face Heel Turn: She used to be a superhero.
- Breakout Character: Originally set up to be just another villain amongst the series' Rogues Gallery
- Dangerously Genre Savvy
- Dark Action Girl: Heck, she's the page image for it.
- Deadpan Snarker
- The Dragon: to Harmless Villain Dr. Drakken
- Foe Yay
- Playing with Fire: Shego's "glow" power.
- Power Glows
- The Only One Allowed to Defeat You: Towards Kim
- Spy Catsuit: Her green and black suit is a combination of this and a a painted on catsuit
- Terms of Endangerment: Some of the nicknames she uses for Kim: "Pumpkin", "Princess", "Kimmie"
Doctor Jacques von Hamsterviel
Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz
"When it comes to havoc, nobody wreaks like me!"
Voiced by: Dan Povenmire
- Abusive Parents: He had a pair, played for laughs. Note that this does not apply to Doofenshmirtz himself, who if anything tries too hard with his daughter Vanessa.
- Affably Evil
- Amusing Injuries
- Anti-Villain
- Beware the Silly Ones: As shown in Phineas and Ferb's Quantum Boogaloo
- His slave-turning inventions in Bubble Boys and Phineas and Ferb's Musical Cliptastic Countdown are rather silly, but apparently effective.
- Beyond the Impossible: Both his parents managed not to show up to his own birth. He also managed to throw himself a surprise party. And that's not even getting into his magic act.
- Butt Monkey
- Bumbling Dad: To Vanessa
- Card-Carrying Villain
- Catch Phrase: "Curse you, Perry the Platypus!"
- Chaotic Stupid: He thinks he's evil but he's really just this.
- Chaste Toons: Averted—he had a wife (divorced) and has joint-custody of his teenaged daughter.
- Creator Cameo: Voiced by Dan Povenmire, one of the creators of the show
- Disproportionate Retribution: Many of his schemes were influenced by stuff that happened to him as a kid.
- Evil Gloating
- Evil Is Petty: All of his Evil Plans. One of them involved mind controlling pidgeons to poop on his older brother.
- Failure Is the Only Option: Subverted few times when he successfully achieved his "evil" goals (Making mountain out of the mole hill and getting rid of the lighthouse), but 99,9% times played straight.
- Foe Yay: With Perry.
- Freudian Excuse: Has a different one in many episodes.
- Friendly Enemy
- Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain
- Informed Attractiveness: Inverted. He's been established as not a very good looking guy(even when he got hit by his 'ugly-inator', it does nothing to him). However, he has a long history with dating women(at least three were confirmed)-not very successful, but proves some things.
- The most obvious point is that he was married, and has a beautiful daughter.
- Harmless Villain
- Hilariously Abusive Childhood
- Kavorka Man
- Large Ham
- Literal-Minded: His schemes include: Using Norm the Giant Robot Man, because "The enemy of a platypus is man", Making mountain out of the mole hill by enlarging moles and leaving giant carbon footprint via making giant foot of the carbon paper
- Mad Scientist
- And he has a beautiful daughter, too.
- Morality Pet: Vanessa. He really does try to be a good father.
- Multiple Choice Past: Not all his stories about his childhood fit with each other, especially the one where he was raised by ocelots.
- My Name Is Not Durwood (in "Ain't No Kiddie Ride".)
- Overprotective Dad: In his and Monogram's DVD commentary for "The Chronicles of Meap", he mentions that he doesn't trust Ferb and therefore dislikes the idea of him dating Vanessa.
- In "Vanessassary Roughness" some random biker hits on her, apparently thinking that she was older and Doofenshmirtz was her boyfriend. Doof simply yelled "SHE'S SIXTEEN!" and teleported him to another dimension.
- Pet The Cat: Perceived when he saves a cat, and later adopts another one and then gives it back to its real owner. (It had been causing him so much trouble that he had to get rid of it anyway, and then the kid came up to him...)
"I'm going to have to do the right thing, aren't I?"
- Poke the Poodle
- Punch Clock Villain
- Raised By Ocelots: He claims in one episode, after his birth family disowns him.
- Sibling Rivalry: A one-sided one with Roger.
- Spell My Name with an "S": There is no C in his surname.
- Thinginator: Basically everything he invents.
- The Unfavorite
- Unfortunate Names: "Doof" is German for "Stupid".
- Villain Song: Plenty of them.
- Villain With An F In Evil
- Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Even if he knows she's really a male platypus.
Suzy Johnson
"I am, and always will be Jeremy's favorite girl!"
Voiced by: Kari Wahlgren
- Annoying Younger Sibling
- Big Brother Attraction: Creeepy!
- Creepy Child: Though only Candace and Buford recognize her as one.
- Deliberately Cute Child
- Enemy Mine: Sort of, Candace once has to babysit her and the two of them wind up teaming up to try and get Phineas and Ferb to bust themselves.
- Enfant Terrible
- Ping-Pong Naivete: In most of the episodes which feature her, she's frighteningly intelligent, manipulative, and (in a way) mature. Then, in Nerds of a Feather, she gets frightened by an Alien-esque exhibit and seeks a hug from a cuddly costumed character from her favorite cartoon.
- Punch Clock Villain: When Suzy doesn't have the opportunity to embarrass Candace in front of Jeremy, she's acting civil towards her. She even uses the phrase "I'm off the clock".
- Yandere: Take that Big Brother Attraction and make it creepy and you have Suzy in a nut shell.
The Drill Sergeant
Voiced by: Clancy Brown
- All Just a Dream
- Big Bad
- Disney Villain Death: Thank you, Perry.
- Drill Sergeant Nasty: However, he acts more like an Evil Overlord than a drill sergeant.
- Evil Feels Good: He calls Phineas and Ferb his "greatest success stories".
- Hey, It's That Voice!: It's Mr. Krabs!.
- Clancy Brown also played a sadistic prision guard in The Shawshank Redemption.
- Knight of Cerebus
- No Name Given
- Oh Crap: He and his dogs get one when Perry is about to knock them into the ravine.
- Right-Hand Attack Dog: He has a pack of hounds go after Candace and the boys when they attempt to escape.
- Surrounded by Idiots: When he tries to prove his guards about Candace's Paper-Thin Disguise, he puts it on himself. They buy it.
- Vile Villain Saccharine Show
- Villain Ball: If he keeps the true colors of Smile-Away a secret, why does he show them on a talk show on national television? Wouldn't a parent (or Candace) see what was happening to their loved ones and try to get them out?
- Would Hit a Girl: Implied.
They're mine...and so are you!
- Would Hurt a Child: He sprays the boys with water whenever they attempt to reach their tools and sentences them to a Clockwork Orange-esque brainwashing.
Queen La
Live-action films
Judge Doom
"Remember me, Eddie?! When I killed your brother, I talked just... like... THIIISSS!"
- All There in the Manual: According to The Resurrection of Doom (a sequel graphic novel published a year after the movie's release), his real name is Baron Von Rotten, and he was a Toon who frequently played cartoon villains until an accident on the set rendered him thinking he was truly villainous.
- Ambiguously Human
- Ax Crazy
- Badass in a Nice Suit: A black fedora, a black trenchcoat and don't forget the cane which has a sword hidden inside it.
- Bad Boss: He generally slaps the Weasels around
- Big Bad
- Conspicuous Trenchcoat
- Fantastic Racist: Really looks down on toons, even his henchmen despite (or because of) being one himself
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Doom. Do I need to say more? ...I thought so.
- Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: If you didn't freak out when he killed that adorable Toon shoe or when he revealed his Toon form and almost punched the fillings out of Eddie you definedly were a Creepy Child
- Hanging Judge
- Hoist by His Own Petard: Created "Dip", a concoction of turpentine that could actually kill toons at the slightest touch. At the climax he gets spray with it and melted into nothing.
- Sinister Shades
- Toon
Hector Barbossa
"Now you see, Jack, that's exactly the attitude that lost you the Pearl. People are easier to search when they're dead!"
- Affably Evil
- Heel Face Revolving Door: To the point of Wild Card status, but without Captain Jack's guarantee of doing the right thing in the end.
- Anti-Hero: A Type V in the third movie. More a Type IV in the fourth.
- Anti-Villain: In the first movie.
- Cool Sword: In the fourth movie, two of them. Firstly, he poisons his usual weapon to give him the edge against Blackbeard due to losing his leg in their first encounter. After this gambit pays off, he takes the Sword of Triton as well as the Queen Anne's Revenge as the prize, gaining with it many of Blackbeard's magical powers.
- Death by Irony
- Death Is Cheap
- The Dragon: In the fourth, he becames this to King George II. Although, he doesn't want to work for him at all, and the only reason he agreed to look for the fountain is because he wants to find Blackbeard, and have his revenge on him.
- Dual-Wielding: During his fight with Blackbeard, he dual wields his poisoned sword and crutch! It pays off for a while, then he loses the crutch and nicks him with the blade while he's otherwise distracted.
- Disproportionate Retribution: (Says Barbossa.)
- Enemy Mine: Pretty much his whole role in the third movie consists of teaming up with Will, Elizabeth, and Jack (all of whom he has reason to hate) to stop Beckett. He does seem to have at least parted with the former two on friendly terms, but convinced Jack's crew to mutiny (again) to help him go after the Fountain of Youth. But even then, this time he leaves Jack in Tortuga with wenches rather than on a deserted island alone. Does this once again in On Stranger Tides, where he teams up with Jack for a chance at Blackbeard, who took the Pearl.
- Epic Fail: Barbossa and his big ideas...
- Evil Counterpart: To Jack. The writers' and director's audio commentary for Curse of the Black Pearl at one point refers to Barbossa as "the dark side of Jack Sparrow".
- Evil Laugh
- Handicapped Badass: Loses a leg in On Stranger Tides, though is still a very effective combatant.
- Horrible Judge of Character: Part of the reason Barbossa loses in the first film. He does it again in the third film with bad results.
- I Gave My Word (Though only the letter, not the spirit)
- Large Ham: His attempt at getting Calypso back to goddess form: "CA-LYP-SO! I RELEASE you from your human bonds!!" If that's how a lover says those words, one wonders how many ladies went deaf after meeting Barbossa.
- Ham-to-Ham Combat: "NO! WHAT ARRRRRRRR YE DOING?!"
- Life or Limb Decision: The reason why he has a peg leg in movie 4. Blackbeard took the Pearl from him and did his thing that made the ship attack the sailors, with the result that Barbossa's leg was caught in the rigging. He sliced it off to show he was master of his own fate.
- Meaningful Name: Barbossa can be read as Latin for "Bony Beard".
- Not in This For Your Revolution: Implied in regards to his "loyalties" to the crown. He doesn't actually care about preventing the Spaniards from using the Fountain of Youth as much as he only worked with the British navy as an excuse to exact revenge on Blackbeard for the latter stealing the Black Pearl which also cost him his leg.
- Not So Different: In the fourth movie, Barbossa gets to experience exactly what it felt like to Jack Sparrow when he marooned the latter and stole the Black Pearl in the first film, and desiring revenge against him.
- Pet the Dog: Becomes this in the third movie. Shows open sadness at the passing of the Age of Piracy, gently consoles Jack Sparrow as he realizes meeting with the Brethren Court is the only way to ensure their freedom, and graciously marries Will and Elizabeth during battle. Leaves Will and Elizabeth on good terms, and maroons Jack Sparrow at Tortuga with wenches, rather than on an abandoned desert island.
- Pride
- Privateer: In the fourth movie. It turns out he "sold out" to the Crown only to get a chance to make even with Blackbeard, and he tears his letter of marque at the end.
- Rules Lawyer: Moreso than any other character, and it blows up in his face.
- Screw Destiny: Makes several statements along these lines in the third and fourth films.
- The Starscream: Barbossa to Jack before the events of the first film.
- Surrounded by Idiots: Barbossa's temptingly simple schemes tend to attract morons.
- Talk Like a Pirate
- Trademark Favorite Food: Apples.
- Villain Protagonist: Movies 3 and 4.
- Warrior Poet: Well spoken and eloquent (for a pirate), show open sadness at the passing of the Age of Piracy symbolized by the death of The Kraken, and is romantic (or at least, gracious) enough to be genuinely happy for "Mrs Turner" AKA Elizabeth in the aftermath of the final battle and marrying her with Will.
Cutler Beckett
"It's nothing personal, Jack. It's just good business."
- Angst Coma
- Aristocrats Are Evil: Lord Cutler Beckett, is it now?
- Big Bad
- Catch Phrase ("It's just good business")
- The Chessmaster (Word of God confirms he's one of, if not the, smartest characters in the series. As of the end of Dead Man's Chest, he's holding all the cards.)
- Corrupt Corporate Executive
- Did You Actually Believe?
- Evil Brit: He's stereotypically (and inaccurately for the time period) English enough that he stands out in a cast of English, and other British, characters.
- Evil Gloating
- Famous Last Words: "It was just... good business..."
- Gory Discretion Shot : After the explosion on HMS Endeavour, we see from the water-perspective how his surprsingly still-in-one-piece body falls onto a EITC flag (that is floating in the water), where we can see his silhouette. Fortunately, we never see his body directly, because seeing what kind of explosion it was, it probably wouldn't be a pretty sight.
- Horrible Judge of Character
- Knight of Cerebus: Unlike Barbossa, Beckett is played completely straight and never for laughs; when he takes center stage in the third film, it's worked in as part of the transition to the epic format.
- The Man Behind the Man
- Manipulative Bastard ("And so you see, Mr. Mercer, every man has a price he will willingly accept- even for that which he hoped never to sell.")
- The Napoleon: Being teeny-weeny doesn't stop Beckett from trying to take over the Caribbean and beyond.
- Non-Action Big Bad: While Beckett is allegedly a skilled duellist, he seems to consider actually getting his own hands dirty to be beneath him, and always works through his minions in the films.
- Noodle Incident: His first run-in with Captain Jack Sparrow, wherein he branded Sparrow a pirate and was given an unmentioned mark in return. The films never elaborate on what went down between Sparrow and Beckett.
- It has, however, been explained elsewhere. When Jack was working for the East India Trading Company, Beckett ordered him to deliver a cargo of slaves. Jack set them free instead. "People ain't cargo, mate." This unauthorized disposal of Company 'property' gave Beckett grounds to brand Jack as a pirate, forcing him into an outlaw lifestyle. What mark Jack left on Beckett is a blank for the audience to fill in- Beckett's expression when asked about it indicates it's a touchy subject.
- Odd Name Out merged with Names to Run Away From Really Fast: By the standards that the other characters have normal 17th-18th century names Cutler isn't a name you'd expect to run to. Now, replace the 'l' with another 't' and read his name again.
- Reality Subtext : The real life British East India Company was The Aggressive Drug Dealer that introduced opium to China.
- Rules Lawyer
- Smug Snake
- Villainous BSOD: "It's just good business..."
- Wicked Cultured
- Would Hurt a Child
Davy Jones
"Life is cruel. Why should the afterlife be any different?"
- Anti-Villain
- Badass Beard: 'Natch. Just look at the picture!
- Beat Still My Heart
- Big Bad: Of the second film.
- Combat Tentacles: Jones uses his tentacle beard to kill Mercer via facial Orifice Invasion.
- Cthulhumanoid: His current appearance is actually the result of Jones not performing his duties to Calypso as expected.
- The Devil
- Deal with the Devil: "Do you fear death?"
- Disney Villain Death: Sorta. He's already dead by the time the body falls.
- The Dragon: Jones becomes The Dragon for Beckett in the third film. However, when things begin to turn sour for Beckett's side Jones becomes Dragon-in-Chief and he kills Mercer Beckett's first Dragon.
- The Dreaded
- Even Bad Men Love Their Pets: He is shown to be visibly distraught over Cutler Beckett forcing him to kill the Kraken.
- Fake Nationality: The Scottish Davy Jones is played by the English Bill Nighy (though Nighy himself claimed Jones is Welsh.)
- Fantastic Romance / Interspecies Romance: With Tia Dalma, who is actually the sea goddess Calypso.
- Flying Dutchman: Literally.
- Ghost Pirate
- Hero-Killer: Literally, too. He does in Will by his own hand and Jack and Norrington by proxy, though admittedly only one of those stuck.
- Karmic Transformation
- Large Ham: Mostly due to the way he accentuates certain wordsuh. He's played by Bill Nighy, after all.
- "Let no joyful voice be heard! Let no man look up at the sky with hope! And let this day be cursed by we who ready to wake... THE KRRRAAAKEN!"
- "HARRIDAN! You'll see no mercy from me!"
- Love Makes You Evil
- Mobile Menace: As a part of his power over the seas, Jones is able to teleport from ship to ship and phase through objects on the ship (as can his crew). Not only that, but the Dutchman moves faster against the wind and is functionally a submersible.
- The reason the Dutchman can move faster against the wind has to do with the five staysails that it is rigged with.
- Motif: His locket's song. This is shared with Tia Dalma on her own identical locket.
- Nigh Invulnerable: The only way to kill him is stabbing his heart.
- Which isn't even in his body - "Did you forget? I'm a heartless wretch!"
- Ominous Pipe Organ: He plays it with his beard.
- Apparently the organ had been grown from the coral in Jones' quarters.
- Psychopomp: Davy Jones (although he neglected his duties).
- Soul Jar: the Dead Man's Chest
- Star-Crossed Lovers: Jones and Calypso. His anger at being spurned is perhaps justifiable, but in the third film she calls him on it, telling him he would not have loved her in the first place if she were not as fickle and unpredictable as the sea itself.
- Together in Death: As he dies, he reverently whispers her name, before falling into the sea's embrace.
- The Starscream: Davy Jones to Cutler Beckett in the third film.
- Verbal Tic: Davy Jones-ah.
- What the Hell Is That Accent?: Originally Gore Verbinski wanted Jones to have a Dutch accent (considering the ship's name), but Nighy could not do one. So Nighy instead opted for Welsh, but thought it didn't sound threatening enough and switched to a harsher, somewhat Scottish accent.
The MCP
The Sark
Clu II
Rinzler
Queen Narissa
Other animated films
The Magnet
- The Speechless
- Conveyor Belt of Doom
- The Grim Reaper: Re-watch "Worthless" as an adult and you'll see it's a pretty obvious stand-in.
- Punch Clock Villain: Though, despite merely doing its job, it's still pretty evil, as it has no qualms about dropping a human being onto the conveyor belt.
- Villain Song: "Worthless", sung by its victims.
- Super-Persistent Predator: Despite ruling over an entire junkyard, it seems to have a fixation on the main protagonists...
Oogie Boogie
"What's that you were sayin' about luck, ragdoll?"
Voiced by: Ken Page
- Cold-Blooded Torture
- Evil Laugh
- Faux Affably Evil
- For the Evulz
- The Gambler
- I Am a Humanitarian: His plan consisted of cooking and eating Santa Claus
- Large Ham
- One-Scene Wonder: Not really one scene, but he only gets about ten minutes of screentime in the original movie. Yet he still made enough of an impression to reappear in Kingdom Hearts and other spinoffs.
- Plot Irrelevant Villain: Awesome though he may be, he doesn't really have anything to do with the plot of Halloweentown taking over Christmas.
- One-Winged Angel / Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: In Oogie's Revenge.
- Quirky Miniboss Squad: Lock, Shock, and Barrel.
- Scary Black Man
- Villain Song
- Triumphant Reprise: Sung as a duet with Jack Skellington during the final battle of Oogie's Revenge.
- What Could Have Been: The original draft had him as Dr. Finklestein in disguise.
- The Worm That Walks / The Swarm
And these are only half of 'em!