< Villain Song

Villain Song/Animated Films

Samwise the Strong: BEHOLD... THE GARDENS OF MY DELIGHT! So shall I transform... the WORLD!

Chorus: "HAIL SAMWISE THE STRONG! THE SUN SHINES FOR THEE ALONE!"

Bake and toast 'em, fry and roast 'em!
till beards blaze, and eyes glaze;
till hair swells and skins crack,
fat melts, and bones black
in cinders lie beneath the sky...
SO THE DWARVES SHALL DIE!

granny: we have to do something!
wolf: I know. The song was catchy, but the choreography was terrible.

  • "B Movie Show" and "Cutting Edge (More More More)" from The Brave Little Toaster both have elements of the Villain Song.
    • "Cutting Edge" is more of a direct Villain Song, as the appliances in the parts shop prove that Dark Is Not Evil.
  • South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut arguably has three examples. The most typical is "I Can Change, which Saddam Hussein sings to convince Satan not to conquer Earth without him. Satan himself as "Up There", but while it gives his motivation it's actually a poignant "I Want" Song about how he dreams of escaping Hell to live on Earth. The Mothers Against Canada also have "Blame Canada", though they're arguably more Anti Villains, especially near the end.
  • "(Money Is Such) A Beautiful Word" from Tom and Jerry: The Movie. It's not an outstanding number, but hey, it's got Tony Jay in it.
  • Easily the worst villain song is the Villain song by Marvin McNasty from Pound Puppies and The Legend of Big Paw. It's just him screaming a bad parody of 'Hoochie Coochie Man'. Then a random Jazz Elvis thing happens, tears of hysteria rolled down from the viewer's eyes at how bad it is.
  • "The Money Cat" from Gay Purr-ee.
  • "Toxic Love" from Fern Gully the Last Rainforest. Done by a certain Tim Curry, also known as Dr. Frank-N-Furter, as the character Hexxus, whose behavior exhibits an obvious homage to Curry's aforementioned role.
  • "My Name Is Mok" in Rock and Rule. Noteworthy because the producers somehow got Lou Reed to sing it.
  • Of course Shrek subverts it every way it can. The main villain of Shrek 2 gets not one, but two songs: The first one is the self-titled "Fairy Godmother Song", a cheerful upbeat ditty about how she wants to help everyone; the second comes complete with an ominous orchestra and backing choir.... except the song in question is "Holding Out for a Hero".
    • There's a reason it was that song, considering it's the background music for some dramatic heroics from Shrek, Donkey and Puss.
      • Played straight in the Broadway musical, which gives Lord Farquaad two songs: "What's Up Duloc?", where he sings about his plans to conform the kingdom to his ideals, and "The Ballad of Farquaad", where he sings about the turbulent relationship with his father and his mother's death that led to where he is. Of course, being Shrek, it was all very tongue-in-cheek: turns out Daddy was Grumpy.
    • There's also a completely ridiculous song as performed by "Monsieur Hood" and his merry men. Now, why Robin Hood is French I'll never know...
      • Possibly a case of Shown Their Work, as Sir Robin of Loxley was a noble before turning bandit; which at the time would have made him more than likely to be of Norman (French) heritage. And considering that the Normans would have been seen as invading villains by the predominantly Saxon and Celtic populace...
        • Ah, except most versions of Robin Hood that pay attention to the Norman/Saxon rivalry use Robin's older origin of being a poor forester or a servant before being outlawed.
  • "When I'm the King of Wonderland" in The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland. (Watch out for the Wizard's Deranged Animation face at 2:05! You have been warned!)
  • "Who is the Boss?" from Felix the Cat: The Movie. Not sung by the villain himself, but it's sung to praise how much of powerful man the Duke of Zill is. Plus he introduces the song by saying a few interesting lines. Have your fun, as long as I let you have fun!
  • The closest thing to a villain song in The Phantom Tollbooth is "Don't Say There's Nothing To Do In The Doldrums" performed by the Lethargians, a group of lazy, monotonic, slimy creatures who encourage Milo to be lazy like them so they can eat him.
  • The Titans from The Xena/Hercules Animated joint had their own song about how they where gonna get revenge and cause chaos and how they where "the best". It's even annoying to characters IN the film!
  • A Veggie Tales movie, one about Daniel and the Lion's Den, where the wisemen (played by three Scallions) sing a song called "Oh No!" where they plot Daniel's downfall. Their techniques get sillier as they go on, and they're soon talking about using him as a "table to play Scrabble on" which leads into a great rhyme of Babylon.
    • Then there's "The Bunny Song" in "Rack, Shack, and Benny", about idolizing a chocolate rabbit. This one caused a lot of controversy, and the creators use a rewritten version of the song on CDs and sing-along tapes. Amusingly, the back up singers have the same verses, with the main baddie scolding them and warning that they'll get tummy aches.
      • And then they clumsily Bowdlerized the real thing when they re-released the video. Darn it, you guys.
      • Well, what do you expect? It's a children's series that tries to teach them about Christianity; would they leave it un-Bowdlerized if they were going to be showing it out of context, with the main plot line providing no guidance back to the right thing? Picture what would happen if they did; not a pretty sight for kids who took it too seriously.
    • The French Peas taunt the Hebrews in the desert with the catchy "Keep Walking" in "Josh and the Big Wall."
    • The villainess of Larry-Boy and the Rumor Weed get her own self-titled song in which she explains her nature to the citizens of Bumblyburg, who oddly still readily believe the rumors she spreads.
    • In "Esther, the Girl Who Would be Queen", Haman sings to the king about the supposed threat of the Jews in a surprisingly dark song.
  • Ruber gets a self-titled song in Quest for Camelot where he proclaims Camelot as his while standing behind a glowing green pit. During the song he throws his minions and weapons into the pit, combining them into partially metallic monsters with weapons for hands.
  • Barbie and the Diamond Castle's villain's song, "Wonderful Me" may be short (less than a minute), but it manages to not only get across her motive but her Large Ham tendencies in one swoop. The extended version throws in some Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad for good (bad?) measure.
  • In the Blinky Bill singalong special the main villainess sings "I Hate Koalas".
  • Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol has its own representation with We're Dispicable sung by the grave robbers.
  • The first Pippi Longstocking animated film has "A Bowler and a New Gold Tooth" sung by Thunder-Karlsson and Dunder-Karlsson.
  • "Intelligence" from Help! I'm a Fish. For bonus points, it's sung by Alan Rickman.
  • "Two Heads Ain't Better Than One" from Gallavants.
  • The parts of this song that the Queen Bee sings and "Tough Guys" from Katy the Caterpillar.
  • The Thief and the Cobbler has one near the beginning, during the introduction to the villain Zigzag. It's only three lines long, but it sticks in your head quickly:

Have no fear/have no fear/Zigzag the grand vizier is here!


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  1. (loosely based on a scene from the book!)
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